The development of energy
storage technology is going to be one of the defining features of the
21st century’s energy landscape.
It will allow nations to decarbonise
their economies by integrating renewable energy into their grids, reduce
peak power demand and make all forms of power generation more
efficient. It is going to be a huge market and it is going to render the utilities business unrecognisable within a few decades.
Up to now, battery technology has been grabbing the headlines, even
though 99% of the world’s energy storage capacity is currently in the
form of pumped hydro-electric power. There is a good reason for this –
thanks to the spread of electric vehicles, the amount of battery
capacity is increasing rapidly and costs are starting to come down,
making the technology increasingly viable.
Meanwhile, most of the places that are suited to pumped hydro already
have it, new facilities are not cheap and there are geographical
limitations to where you can put them – more than three quarters of Europe’s pumped storage capacity sits in just eight countries.
But batteries are far from being the only new energy storage
technology out there and one of the more obscure and unlikely
initiatives has just received a massive vote of confidence from GE. A tiny UK company called Highview Power
stores energy by using cheap, off-peak energy to cool air to -196°C
using a conventional industrial refrigeration plant, turning 700 litres
of ambient air into a litre of “liquid air” that can be stored in a
simple insulated tank. When you need the energy, you simply open the
tap, the liquid air turns back into a gas, expands in volume, drives a
turbine and creates electricity. If you add heat when you release the
gas, you make the process more efficient.
Highview says liquid air energy storage (LAES) has advantages over
other emerging storage technologies in that it uses well-established
technologies and doesn’t require any inputs such as the lithium that
batteries need – the most exotic material involved in the process is
stainless steel, the company says, while the extra heat can come from
the process of cooling the air or from the waste heat of other
industrial processes, including power stations. It is not geographically
constrained like pumped hydro, it is long-lasting unlike many battery
technologies and there is an existing global industrial gases
infrastructure it can tap into. And unlike for a gas such as hydrogen,
the storage tanks do not have to be specially reinforced or highly
pressurised.Energy storage technologies allow you to get the most out of renewable energy resources such as wind, which often produces more power than is needed at night that at the moment just goes to waste. But they can also make conventional plant more efficient, too, while captured waste heat can be used to provide heat and hot water for homes and offices. According to the International Energy Agency, “to support electricity sector decarbonisation, an estimated 310 GW of additional grid-connected electricity storage capacity would be needed in the United States, Europe, China and India. Significant thermal energy storage and off-grid electricity storage potential also exists.”
Peaker power plants, as the name implies, are used only at times of
peak demand. Because they have to stop and start as required, they are
far less efficient than baseload plants that produce power all the time –
and, like all fossil fuel power plants, they produce a lot of waste
heat. Highview’s technology will help GE’s peaker plants in two ways –
by releasing the stored energy it will make them able to respond more
quickly to demand surges, cutting start-up times from 10-20 minutes to
between 2 and 5 minutes. “It’s like a turbo-charged ramp-up time because
our system provides power while the peaker plant warms up,” says
Matthew Barnett, head of business development at Highview.
LAES will also make the peaker plants more efficient, allowing the
plants to produce more power for the same amount of fuel because the
Highview unit will be able to produce power alongside the peaker plant,
using the gas-fuelled plant’s waste heat in its own processes. “It will
work a bit like a hybrid car, where you have a smaller engine alongside
an electric motor,” Barnett adds.
And there is no reason why liquid air storage can’t be retrofitted on
non-peaker power stations to make them more efficient too, opening up
the potential of huge markets in China and India. It’s not GE’s first foray into energy storage – the company is also
using battery storage alongside some of its wind turbines that enable
the turbines to store power if the wind speed increases quickly and the
grid cannot absorb all the power produced. The turbines can then use
this stored power to continue providing energy when the wind is not
blowing, to smooth variations in power and provide frequency regulation.
But Barnett isn’t worried that Highview’s LAES technology will lose
out to batteries – or to other options such as ultracapacitors and
flywheels. “There is space for all the different technologies – they
often work on different time-scales. There could even be hybrid projects
where you see liquid air alongside batteries or flywheels.”
With both Germany and Japan having introduced support schemes for
energy storage, as have both New York and California, one thing is for
certain – energy storage as a central part of the power system is coming your way – and it’s closer than you think
http://www.forbes.com/sites/mikescott/2014/03/21/ge-taps-into-the-coolest-energy-storage-technology-around/?ss=business:energy
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