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by cupofpython
1342 days ago
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the 95% is misleading. it is barely storing or providing energy but it is a passthrough akin to plugging your phone into the charger 24/7 and saying your phone battery is providing 95% of the energy just because the wall outlet charges the battery first then the battery powers the phone (not an exact metaphor). If you unplug your phone and the phone dies 10 minutes later, you wouldnt say your phone has a good energy storage solution. Pumped storage is great at what it does, no denying that. And what it does is allow energy production to remain near average while demand varies, and consequently allows energy production levels to be adjusted a bit slower. You aren't addressing the raw numbers though. It serves best as a compliment to a continuous energy production system. As an actual battery/storage solution, it is weak. So it will not be the solution used to store a massive amount of energy generated over a short period of time in order to be used over a longer period of time. I agree they should be fully utilized, but I am trying to explain that if you fully utilize pumped storage you are still going to have an incomplete energy storage problem. Of course the water levels dont get near max or min capacity - it is designed to take out exactly what you put in as soon as possible or else there is too much risk. The raw storage capacity is small to medium sized - about 10 hours at max discharge (and max discharge might not be enough to keep up with demand entirely on its own). Basically, the more energy you need to draw the faster you need to drain it and the more energy you want to store, the more massive your reservoir needs to be. These things cannot be made 100 to 1000 times bigger, nor is there capacity to make 100 to 1000 times more of them. We are better off having them vs not having them but it isnt enough, and if we find a better solution it may become obsolete |
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They also don't have issue with storing energy quickly, they can all store energy at a significantly faster rate than they can discharge. We can run pumps as quickly as possible and install as many as you'd like, but the discharge has to be controlled (thus limited) because releasing massive amounts of water at once. So their main use case today is storing massive amounts of energy generated in a short amount of time and releasing slowly across a long period of time.
What the grid actually needs is faster discharge than charging, because that more accurately matches summer energy use patterns. This is what chemical batteries excel at which pumped hydro cannot easily do.
So it's unlikely we'll be able to make them 100-1000x bigger, but they're already 100-1000x bigger than other battery solutions. We should be able to make 100x more of them because the reservoirs already exist and very few of them currently are used as both power sources and energy storage, we simply need to add pumping capability to them in most cases.