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by ncmncm
1815 days ago
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Since we will not need to rely on batteries for utility energy storage, battery production capacity is no impediment to renewable grid storage buildout. There are plenty of known viable storage methods, which you oddly omit all of except compressed air. There are no impediments to their implementation beyond simply scaling up; no new materials science, no new physics or chemistry, or industrial process barriers need to be solved. It is just not clear which will end up cheapest in each use environment. Other, less mature technologies, e.g. electrically synthesizing ammonia and hydrogen efficiently, need to be developed anyway, and once developed, will also be incidentally useful for storage. Their independent industrial demand will drive fast improvement, so they may come to displace the others. |
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Until one of those storage methods actually becomes viable at scale, rather than in laboratories, we'll be burning fossil fuels.