There is an obstacle looming over the future of clean energy. It’s called curtailment, and
it’s the biggest obstacle to weaning the world off fossil fuels. Curtailment
actually happens when we produce too much wind or solar power at certain times
of the day and we have to just — shut it down.
But what if
we sent that extra electricity into giant batteries, to use when the sun goes
down or the wind stops blowing? That day just might be coming sooner than you
think.
The easiest
way to curtail curtailment would be a massive explosion of energy storage.
Ideally: batteries. But there is still a problem to be faced. Price of batteries is still too high in this matter.
Take a place
like Texas. A quarter of the electricity from the Lone Star state comes from
wind. When the wind dies down, Texans just fire up a natural-gas power plant to
make up the difference. Battery prices would have to drop by half in order to
compete with those Texan natural gas plants.
Nowadays, less
than one tenth of 1% of the world’s electricity spends any time in a
storage battery, and even by 2040 the best forecasts say that batteries will
make up just three percent of the world’s power supply. But consider the
experience curve.
Renewable
energy is a technology, not a fuel, so prices follow what economists call an
experience curve: the more solar panels we make, the better we get at making
them. In fact, every time the number of panels in the world doubles, the cost
to make them drops by 28 percent.
Solar power
just recently became the cheapest electricity in the world, and it’s only going
to get cheaper. And it turns out, the same thing is happening with batteries.
As many companies build more electric vehicles and power storage — the price of
batteries plummets. It's already dropped 80 percent in the last decade, and
could do the same in the next. Boom. At those prices, battery storage in a
place like Texas suddenly becomes a no-brainer.
We’re
already starting to see it happen in places where electricity is expensive. In
Hawaii, the rainforest island of Kauai swapped its fossil-fuel power for
solar-plus-batteries, And Tesla has made deals in California and Australia to
install the world’s biggest battery fields.
The battery
baron – Elon Musk says his newly built, massively populated gigafactory will
spit out batteries ‘faster than bullets from a machine gun,’ It will
single-handedly double the global supply. And he wants to start building at
least two more Gigafactories in 2018.
But Musk is
in for an arms race. Chinese companies say they’ll build capacity for about
three gigafactories worth of batteries by 2021. Samsung, LG Chem and others are
also joining the fray.
Now, this is
not a done deal. If the battery revolution is going to work, tens of millions
of people must switch to electric cars over the next decade to feed the
experience curve. But there are also new technologies coming soon like silicon
anodes, solid state batteries, and lithium air that could skip us ahead on the
experience curve by more than a decade, making battery-powered trains, ships
and even airplanes possible.
So, imagine
a world where city skies are clear of pollution, and where electricity is cheap
and abundant. It’s not crazy to assume that 20 years from now, over half the
world’s power will come from nature, backed by batteries. And it all might be
happening sooner than you think.
Renewable Energy- The Way People Get Energy Is About to Change
Reviewed by Richard A
on
March 08, 2018
Rating:
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