Posts

What if every home had a small-scale storage unit? [28]

Summary of the Article: If household‑scale batteries became as common as broadband routers, power systems would gain a massively distributed, fast‑responding buffer that: (1) absorbs low‑cost surplus (midday solar, off‑peak generation) and returns it at peak , (2) hardens resilience against growing outage risks, and (3) enables virtual power plants (VPPs) to provide grid services at scale. The timing is favorable: lithium‑ion pack prices fell ~20% in 2024 to ~$115/kWh on a global average, with stationary storage rack prices around $125/kWh , improving household unit affordability and VPP business cases. [about.bnef.com] , [renewablesnow.com] International experience demonstrates momentum. Germany added ~600,000 home batteries in 2024 , taking the installed base to ~1.8 million units (≈15.4 GWh residential capacity) , while South Australia’s Tesla‑led VPP has orchestrated thousands of Powerwalls to deliver grid services and social‑housing bill relief—now being expanded under utili...

What if gravity storage became mainstream? [26]

Summary of the Article: If gravity energy storage (GES) — beyond pumped‑hydro — scaled to mainstream adoption, power systems would gain a long‑lived, low‑degradation storage class that complements batteries and pumped storage across the 4–12‑hour band, with selective ability to stretch to multi‑day where topography, mine shafts, or rail grades are available. Early commercial proof points (e.g., Energy Vault’s 25 MW/100 MWh EVx in Rudong, China; ARES’s rail‑based GravityLine in Nevada; shaft‑based collaborations like ABB–Gravitricity ) indicate that gravity platforms can provide fast ramping, frequent cycling, and long asset lives (30–40+ years) with minimal performance fade — provided civil/mechanical risks and permitting are well managed. [businesswire.com] , [enlit.world] , [new.abb.com] Mainstreaming would require: (i) bankable RTE and LCOS at scale (target 70–85% RTE; LCOS converging toward ~$110–160/MWh in high‑utilization use cases); (ii) site archetypes (towers, rail g...

What if nuclear plants used molten salt thermal storage? [27]

Summary of the Article: Pairing nuclear reactors with molten‑salt thermal energy storage (TES) creates a decoupled “heat → storage → power” architecture that lets reactors run steadily at high capacity factor while the plant dispatches electricity flexibly (and at higher peak output) to follow volatile net‑load and price signals. The concept is no longer theoretical: TerraPower’s Natrium demonstration (a 345 MWe sodium‑cooled fast reactor with molten‑salt energy storage able to boost to ~500 MWe ) is under construction at Kemmerer, WY, with regulatory milestones and a DOE cost‑share under ARDP—establishing a commercial‑scale reference case for nuclear‑with‑storage. [world-nucl...r-news.org] , [neimagazine.com] For existing light‑water reactors (LWRs) and upcoming SMRs , multiple U.S. national‑lab studies outline practical TES couplings (e.g., two‑tank sensible molten‑salt systems) that can time‑shift nuclear heat for multi‑hour to inter‑day delivery and enable cogeneration (hy...

What if hydrogen storage became cheaper than batteries? [25]

S ummary of the Article: If hydrogen storage (H₂S) were to undercut batteries on cost , the power system would reorganize around electrolytic production + cavern storage + flexible conversion (fuel cells and H₂‑turbines) as the dominant form of long‑duration and seasonal storage—while lithium‑ion would remain the workhorse for short‑duration (sub‑8‑hour) tasks. The combination of terawatt‑hour‑scale salt caverns , rapidly scaling electrolysers (driven by policies like the DOE Hydrogen Shot and EU hydrogen market reforms), and grid‑forming H₂‑to‑power would (i) soak up VRE overbuild at low marginal cost, (ii) firm multi‑week deficits (“wind droughts”), and (iii) reshape market design to value energy shifting and adequacy over weeks/months rather than hours. However, for this scenario to be durable, round‑trip efficiency (RTE) penalties in power‑to‑hydrogen‑to‑power (PtHP) must be offset by very low storage and hydrogen production costs, alongside policy that internalises resour...