STANFORD, Calif.
Pumped-storage hydropower projects may be the best means of storing
solar and wind energy on the electrical grid, according to a paper
published recently by Stanford University researchers.
The study, titled, "The energetic implications of curtailing versus storing solar- and wind-generated electricity",
examines various options in dealing with excess power produced by
intermittent renewables and the cost effectiveness of energy storage
systems. Curtailment -- or the practice of shutting down solar and wind
generating systems to reduce the production of surplus power -- seems
wasteful, the researchers noted, though their study showed existing
battery-based storage systems (lead-acid, lithium-ion, sodium-sulfur,
vanadium-redox and zinc-bromine) do not offer an attractive solution in
terms of their "overall energetic cost".
The study defines the "overall energetic cost" as being the total
amount of fuel and electricity to both operate and build an energy
storage system, which, the researchers said, means the adverse
by-products of large-scale battery production could actually negate the
wind and solar farms they are meant to serve.
Pumped-storage hydropower offers not only one of the highest ratios
in terms of "Energy Stored on Invested" (ESOI) of any storage system
examined in the study, but also provides a number of ancillary benefits
that make it an attractive means of capturing excess energy.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/11/pumped-storage-hydropower-projects-attractive-means-of-storing-excess-energy-stanford-study-says
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