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upsuper | 2 years ago
In many places in Australia, we have so many solar panels installed that's enough to power everything in the day time, but when the sun sets, coal still has to be burnt regardless.
I'm quite skeptical to grid-scale battery projects. Every such project has a total capacity of like 2hrs, making them only useful at some short peak time in the day, rather than overnight or over a cloudy rainy week. The only power storage that makes a difference to me is pumped hydro like our Snowy 2.0. But it's constrained by its location, and it's taking a decade to build.
I'm not sure what's the way forward. Maybe more wind farms can complement solar, but I guess that probably means we should really be deploying more wind farms rather than solar at this point.
cbmuser|2 years ago
We're burning coal or gas. At least that's what happening in Germany which had to reactive 19 coal-fired power plants with a total capacity of 7.3 GW after shutting down 8.4 GW of nuclear capacity.
See: https://www.smard.de/home/rueckkehr-von-kohlekraftwerken-an-...
Don't be like Germany, support nuclear!
thecopy|2 years ago
This HN thread might interest you [1] "A near 100% renewables grid is well within reach, and with little storage"
From one of the comments:
>That's what is different about this new study. It uses real time supply/demand figures instead of annualized averages. It meets 98.8% of demand with renewables and fills in with fossil power the rest of the time.
1 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32580844
upsuper|2 years ago
The linked article is interesting, and it kinda confirms what I was wondering that it is probably wind farms that we need way more, not solar.
karmakaze|2 years ago
> "in Australia" is an important qualification here. Australia has a very high ratio of available solar and wind energy to population.
"Don't let perfect be the enemy of good." doesn't mean not to think it through. Show me the math.
TheLoafOfBread|2 years ago
Like inventing a car without brakes.
defrost|2 years ago
Currently there's more than 100 concentrated solar thermal plants, generating 7GWh of power, deployed around the world with a another 30 under construction right now in China and a third generation plant being designed here in Australia while the second gen is currently being built and tested after the success of first gen pilot.
https://theconversation.com/batteries-wont-cut-it-we-need-so...
It's happening, it just hasn't yet arrived at scale.
In parallel we're also seeing the rise of solar -> green hydrogen | ammonia | methanol for use in heavy primary industry (mining and transport) which is a decent chunk of fossil fuel use to be displaced.
Kon5ole|2 years ago
That said sure, we need to build storage, and I think the first and most important step is to remove the political obstacles currently in place to prevent people and companies from generating and storing their own electricity.
cinntaile|2 years ago
hef19898|2 years ago
brucethemoose2|2 years ago
Energy storage is a big part of that, but really boring, non headline grabbing things like better/more transmission lines and slightly more sane usage patterns make up the low hanging fruit.
izacus|2 years ago
What's been happening now in Europe - the electricity prices go negative during the day and in the evenings the gas plants are turned on and start burning fossil fuels again to make up for the demand.
Luckily in some places it's supplanted by wind (when available - e.g. Germany), but a lot of EU countries just burn gas in those examples.
Kon5ole|2 years ago
How long batteries last is controlled entirely by how long you want them to last. A 2 hour installation is made to last 2 hours, if you attach it to half as many consumers it will last 4 hours, if you double the size as well it will last 8 hours. Some modern EV's can power a single home for several days.
Another interesting option is to synthesize gas. Australia could for example power Sydney from solar+batteries+synthesized gas by the end of this decade if they wanted to, construction could start tomorrow.
It seems that worldwide, the main obstacle really is "Wanting to". Everybody says they want to but there are so many economic structures closely tied to the status quo that actual change is quite slow.
data_maan|2 years ago
After an initial "WTF I have to go to sleep now, because there's no electricity?!", people would get crazy innovative and find new solutions, and -to some extent- adapt.
Unfortunately law makers are not keen on making people suffer a little now, in order to avoid a whole more of suffering later, once climate change effects hit irreversibly and tangibly.
cbmuser|2 years ago
You cannot enforce innovations. That's not how it works, really!
unknown|2 years ago
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mstipetic|2 years ago