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by thechao 2844 days ago
I live in an extremely hilly area, made of soft rock (limestone), but very little water. Carving out a hill to 100m down, with a 100x100m cross section is totally doable—we have larger projects just to make flat land to build houses on. If the weight was only 10m high, it’d be ~200k tons. By your calculation that’s ~54MWh/day, or enough energy to power ~1500 homes. There’s a hill the right size next to my village of ~1200 homes. We have excess wind & solar power.

So... where do I sign up?

1 comments

But what kind of machine do you need to raise a hill up and down by a few meters ? Even if breaking the load in small bits, the cost and maintenance of equipment would likely be a few magnitude higher that the energy stored or saved.
An electric motor moves it up. An electric regenerating break (an electric generator) keeps it from going down too quickly and/or not at the right time. The particulars of maintenance and long term robustness are pretty straightforward engineering efforts. The largest steam hammers are 125 short tons, and they can operate for decades.

Why would the stresses be any greater than burying a turbine electric generator at the bottom of a hydroelectric dam? The forces would be similar, right? That's the whole point: it's just a crap load of "pressure" due to a bunch of stuff piled up on top.

I'd do it with hydraulics. Turn the rock into a giant piston: https://heindl-energy.com/