DailyTech recently covered Beacon Power's flywheel
mechanical power storage system for grid leveling. Grid leveling, an
uncharted field is exploding in terms of interest, but much work remains to be
done.
The promise
is intriguing. Current power in terms of infrastructure is crude – it’s
a simple in-out system. If power leveling technologies were modestly
adopted it could make the power grid equivalent of RAM, able to handle varying demand
without crashes (brownouts). In time, serious power storage adoption
could equate to long-term storage driving down prices during times of peak
consumption or high commodity prices, similar to a hard drive, to use the
computer analogy again.
Another key advantage of the technology is its ability to make wind and solar
power technology -- variable sources -- make more sense from an economic
standpoint fueled by the demand for continuous power. These points were
among the thoughts aired at a recent industry expert’s panel meeting for the
New England Clean Energy Council. The council, which is intimately knowledgeable
with consumer power industry, says that power storage technologies have
tremendous potential, but are held back by tech risks and expenses.
The council hopes that nonetheless the technologies will slowly be
adopted. This way "peak shaving", using stored energy to offset
demand peaks during the day, can be employed as an alternative to having to
build more power plants. However, much work must be done to transform the
grid to make such practices commonplace.
Says Ric Fulop, co-founder and vice president of business development at
lithium-ion battery company A123 Systems, which is among the companies focusing
on storage technologies, "Buying power at night and then selling it during
the day--something like that will happen maybe in 30 or 40 years when storage
technologies are one-tenth the costs they are today. I think we will see
a lot of deployments in the next few years that will change how the grid
works. Then we'll see utilities jump on the bandwagon."
Fulop has a dedicated team of over 100 engineers working on the problem.
While his business focuses primarily on power tool batteries and plug-in hybrid
batteries, the grid storage division is growing.
The need for grid storage is becoming alarmingly clear. In an area of
Texas supplied mostly by wind power a Texas utility earlier this year had to
cut customers off of power, according to Lawrence Gelbien, vice president of
technology at utility NStar. Says Gelbien, "If you could take the
wind power, store it in batteries, and discharge when the wind starts again,
then that's a fine application of storage."
Currently, the grid storage industry is valued at $2.4B USD per year and is
growing 3.3 percent per year. Key technologies include exotic battery
chemistries, ultracapacitors, and flywheels. However, all these
technologies are mainly for storage time of less than an hour. The long
term storage market is even wider open and may use technologies as wild as
"flow batteries" and compressed air storage. A ten percent
adoption of long term storage by wind power plants could generate a $50B USD
market, according to analysts.
Compressed Air Energy Storeage (CAES) typically involves pumping air
underground to store energy and later releasing it. Currently two such
plants are in operation, but many more companies are considering them.
General Compression is among the companies jumping on this trend. Flow
batteries, chemical vats with charge generated by chemical flows are currently
being tested on the grid by other startups. Finally many solar plants are
already implementing long term chemical driven storage in the form of molten
salt vats to allow nighttime generation.
While these technologies are all promising, they won't be adopted
overnight. Rather, they will likely creep into the market as their need
increases and they mature. It is exciting, though, to see so much
enthusiasm and creativity in the field.