|
|
|
|
|
by pfdietz
1910 days ago
|
|
I will repeat the reply I gave elsewhere to this argument: Dude. You are falling back to the "if it isn't already being done, it can't be done" argument. Please stop this foolishness. Hydrogen is being stored in a few places. That the storage isn't larger isn't because of any technical obstacles, it's because there's no reason to store it now. In particular, when we can burn natural gas without CO2 charges, using the hydrogen for energy storage is pointless. This doesn't mean hydrogen CAN'T be stored, it just means the market conditions for widespread adoption of an off-the-self technology aren't there yet. |
|
It's not just a question of storage, you can just use a salt cavern for that.
It's also a question of electrolyzing water into hydrogen efficiently.
And converting it back into electricity efficently.
And building all of these systems cheaply.
And deploying all of these systems at massive scale.
We're still on the first phase of that. As per your other comment we still don't even have effective elctrolysers to do this cost-effectively [1].
Will hydrogen storage pan out? Maybe. But until then it's not a solution. It's a potential solution, like fusion, or algae in vats, and thermal storage, and all the other potential solutions being proposed. It's not a solution that has actually demonstrated viability.
!. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26599346