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by Dennip 475 days ago
Can't you just burn up the power, e.g. with water->hydrogen conversion, water desalination, pumped hydro, etc. Whenever the grid isn't demanding 100% for your power you throw it at some other profit-generating venture.

Granted you then have to built of of those power-using-things and only run it when grid demand drops.

3 comments

> Can't you just [store the power]

If you find a cheap solution to power storage, you can make a lot of money. This is the key enabler for a 100% renewable grid.

We already do electricity -> hydrogen generation, the hydrogen is then stored in underground pumped storage (empty gas wells), and can be used in place of natural gas.

Although presumably if you set up one of these facilities you need it running 24/7 to be profitable not just when there is a lull in demand elsewhere.

you'd be the first trillionaire.
> e.g. with [...] pumped hydro

That's done a lot in France, but there's a limited amount of pumped hydro available in the end.

Until recently, countries with lots of available nuclear energy didn't really need to produce fresh water, and non-gas-produced hydrogen is still a WIP.

Relatedly, I've read a couple of neat articles on using mine shafts as gravity batteries: https://bigthink.com/the-future/coal-mines-gravity-battery-e...

Major footnote here that I'm wayyyy out of my wheelhouse on this stuff, so there may be reasons that this doesn't work. I invite correction if that's the case so we can all learn some stuff :)

Gravity batteries have horribly low energy densities. There's usually a better option.
I'd say that there is always a better option. Can someone point to a case where a gravity battery would definitely be better than all the alternatives?
Pumped hydro is a form of gravity battery. It doesn't have great energy density, but it has fantastic power density and responsiveness. That's where its strength lies. We have also probably already built most of the ones that could possibly be built.
Closed loop pumped hydro can be built anywhere there's a hill, there's tons of available expansion capacity there
There are 86 large pumped storage sites in the world. It does work, but you need the right geography. You need two good reservoir sites at considerably different levels close to one another. That's somewhat hard to find.