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by michaelt
4137 days ago
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If they're willing to sell power for $X now and willing to buy
it later for $Y, what does it matter the method?
In the UK, to encourage adoption of residential solar panels there is a scheme of "feed in tariffs" where you can generate renewable energy and receive a guaranteed, above-market-rate price for it. The goal of this is to reduce carbon emissions.For example, you can buy residential electricity for 15p/kWh [1] but sell energy from your small hydro installation for 19p/kWh [2]. Obviously, the goal of reducing carbon emissions would not be achieved if people simply charged batteries at 15p/kWh and sold it back at 19p/kWh! Of course, this issue only arises because feed in tariffs are subsidised. [1] https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachm...
[2] http://www.fitariffs.co.uk/eligible/levels/ |
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Lead acid batteries cost about $100/kWh of nameplate capacity, more like $200/kWh of usable storage. At a 50% depth of discharge you're going to get about 1000 cycles out of the battery.
http://www.mpoweruk.com/images/dod.gif
So assuming 100% charge, discharge, charger and inverter efficiency (reality is more like 60% through that whole cycle) a person stands to make about $0.06 per kWh per cycle (in the UK anyhow) and they can only get 1000 cycles.
$0.06 * 1000 = $60 per kWh per battery lifetime
That's only 1/3 of the cost of the batteries, completely neglecting the capital cost of the charger and inverter and the time spent to set the whole thing up. Further, once you take the realizable efficiencies into account, it's more like $40 not $60 so they're losing money even faster.
This is a problem that -- at least for now -- LITERALLY solves itself.