Power companies going the way of the landline by 2030?

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  • Sunking
    Solar Fanatic
    • Feb 2010
    • 23301

    #46
    Originally posted by DanKegel
    I think the figure of merit for batteries alone is ESOI, not EROI.
    According to http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/artic.../ee/c3ee41973h
    Li-ion batteries have an ESOI of 32, and compressed air storage has an ESOI of 797..
    You are misinterpreting the data presented. First and foremost they are basing an opinion on technology that does not exist yet which is what I keep trying to tell you, but some reason do not want to hear. The model is not telling ESOI or EROI of a lithium battery is 32. All their opinions are based on a lithium battery that does not exist. No such thing as a lithium battery that has 10K to 20K cycles to 80% DOD. There is no such thing as a 40 to 75 year battery.

    What the article is discussing is Solar and Wind do not produce power when there is demand, thus it has to be shut off or what they call curtailment. Solar EROI is so poor it is not even discussed and focused on Wind power using TX as the model because TX is the largest RE energy producer in the world. So large you can add up all other states production and they still come in second place. However most of the possible Wind Energy is just turned off because there is no demand for it or put another way any place to send it too. So they turn it off aka curtailment as a code word.

    The model is based on using batteries that do not exist to store that excess energy when there is no place for it to go and be stored to be used during peak demand times. Keep in mind al that wind energy is in the TX high plains hundreds of miles from where it is used in DFW. Commercial wind and solar is only feasible in very small geographic area located a considerable distance from population densities.

    What it boils down to is wind is economically possible to supplement the grid in certain areas of the country if a battery existed to store the energy. Solar no matter where located or what battery exist is not feasible or usable. A solar panel in AZ has an EROI of 3 to 5. That same solar panel in TX is on the order of 2 to 4, in yankee country less than 1, in the Pacific Northwest is a joke of less than 1. You cannot apply an EROI for solar in AZ to the world. Solar and Wind are geographically limited and Wind has the largest area, solar is on a very small area where it can be used in places no one wants to live.
    MSEE, PE

    Comment

    • DanKegel
      Banned
      • Sep 2014
      • 2093

      #47
      Originally posted by Sunking
      All their opinions are based on a lithium battery that does not exist. No such thing as a lithium battery that has 10K to 20K cycles to 80% DOD.
      You seem to be misreading the paper. They say straight off that current lithium ion batteries have about a 6,000 cycle lifetime, and that
      an increase of cycle life to 10,000–18,000 (2–20 times present values) is required for pairing with wind ...
      to increase EROI of the wind - storage combination above that of wind alone.

      But solar's easier; even with current batteries, they say
      All storage technologies paired with solar photovoltaic (PV) generation yield EROI ratios that are greater than curtailment
      i.e. when there's too much solar power for the grid, batteries can usefully store it to deliver to the grid later... presumably in a few hours.

      I'm not sure why you think an EROI of 8 is useless.

      Comment

      • Sunking
        Solar Fanatic
        • Feb 2010
        • 23301

        #48
        Originally posted by DanKegel
        You seem to be misreading the paper. They say straight off that current lithium ion batteries have about a 6,000 cycle lifetime
        Please enlighten me and show me one. There is no such thing as a 6000 cycle Lithium battery today or even on the drawing boards. They are making things up which do not exist and likely will never exist. Lithium battery shelf life depending on chemistry is 2 to 8 years. The highest cycle life claimed is with LiFePo4 batteries of 2000 in which none have ever seen 2000 cycle yet because a LFP battery has a shelf life of 5 years at best with what is out on the market today. High output lithium cells are on the order of 500 cycles in which would be needed for utility scale batteries. If such batteries existed you would see EV as mainstream vehicles. So how many cycles are there possible in 5 years?

        What they are using to base conclusions with does not exist. Look in CA classified adds. Hundreds of used Tesla roadsters for sale. All need new batteries. Look at the trouble Nissan Leaf is having with batteries. No such battery exist.
        MSEE, PE

        Comment

        • inetdog
          Super Moderator
          • May 2012
          • 9909

          #49
          Originally posted by Sunking
          So how many cycles are there possible in 5 years?
          Depends on whether you are using them for solar, or other 24 hour time cycle application or for charging and discharging the battery several times per day.
          In the sense you are looking at (common sense for RE), less than 2000.

          But even if the results of accelerated cycling are acceptable, it would be hard to get more than maybe 10 cycles per day in testing using a 1C rate. And the published figures are probably not for a 1C rate application.
          Even then a 6000 cycle test of a brand new battery design will take close to two years.
          SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.

          Comment

          • pleppik
            Solar Fanatic
            • Feb 2014
            • 508

            #50
            Originally posted by Sunking
            Easy to find if you want to.

            Germany Solar PV is so far the highest at 3.5 which is way below the minimum 7. Common Logic ought to tell you if Solar PV Active is at best 3.7, and once you throw in th eefficiency of batteries and those energy inputs drop EROI to less than 1. It is just a well documented fact the Greenies do not want anyone to know about.

            Reference 1
            IEEE
            Stanford University which wil lead you to many studies that will also say batteries are a looser.

            .....

            Go look for yourselves but you are not going to find much telling you what you wish was true. No scientific reviewed material support an EROI even coming close to 1.
            Those links you gave all cite a paper by Weissbach from 2013, which uses solar data from Germany and concludes than in Germany, the EROI for PV is 3.8-4.0 for poly-Si without battery storage, and 2.3 with some amount of battery buffering (see table 2). The author also notes that in southern Europe the EROI is about 1.7 times higher because Germany is a cloudy place.

            2.3 is nothing to write home about, but last I checked it was still greater than 1.

            --- Moderator approved at 1824 PDT 10 April
            Last edited by inetdog; 04-10-2015, 09:26 PM.
            16x TenK 410W modules + 14x TenK 500W inverters

            Comment

            • pleppik
              Solar Fanatic
              • Feb 2014
              • 508

              #51
              Originally posted by Dapperjman
              Hey Pleppik,

              What would be your solution for utilities to satisfy solar customers while also providing fair prices to everyone else?
              So I take one evening to go to a concert and this thread I started explodes. Serves me right I guess.

              ANYway, IMHO this is the real fundamental question. Even if you think that the EROI of PV+batteries is less than 1 today, the technology will probably exist in the not too distant future to make some sort of PV plus storage option a viable competitor to the grid. Since we probably don't want people abandoning the grid in large numbers, this is something that needs to be addressed.

              And I don't have any answers, I just know there's unanswered questions. But a few things seem more-or-less self evident to me:
              1. No matter how cheap it becomes to go off-grid, there will still be a need and demand for grid power.
              2. The more people go off-grid, the more expensive the grid becomes for everyone else.
              3. There is a price you can pay for exported power which will make staying on-grid more attractive than going off-grid (even if batteries are almost free).
              4. The more expensive grid power becomes, the more you can afford to pay for power exported from PV producers to induce them to stay on-grid.

              This is an interesting list, since it suggests that there is a way to keep the savings for going off-grid below the cost of batteries (you just have to pay enough for exported power and not penalize people for staying on-grid with solar), and that doing so is going to be a net benefit to everyone, both PV and non-PV customers.

              Successfully navigating this change will probably require power companies to think of themselves as power exchanges with millions of buyers and sellers, rather than power sellers will millions of buyers. But I don't think it's intractable.
              16x TenK 410W modules + 14x TenK 500W inverters

              Comment

              • DanKegel
                Banned
                • Sep 2014
                • 2093

                #52
                Originally posted by Sunking
                Please enlighten me and show me one. There is no such thing as a 6000 cycle Lithium battery today or even on the drawing boards.
                http://bosch-solar-storage.com/the-b...thium-battery/ claims 7000 cycles.

                http://www.neces.com/assets/Microgrids-p154vFINAL1.pdf claims 8000 cycles.

                Comment

                • inetdog
                  Super Moderator
                  • May 2012
                  • 9909

                  #53
                  http://bosch-solar-storage.com/the-b...thium-battery/ claims 7000 cycles.
                  Renowned independent institutes have calculated that the lithium-ion batteries used in the system last 7000 charge and discharge cycles. In plain text:
                  I would say that a large part of the difference between your and Sunking's acceptance criteria hinges on the difference between calculated and tested.

                  http://www.neces.com/assets/Microgrids-p154vFINAL1.pdf claims 8000 cycles.
                  Here the squiggles in the DC impedance line on the graph in Figure 1 lead me to believe that it represents actual test measurements for 100% DOD cycling of an individual cell.
                  If they are in fact using the 1C rate for both charge and discharge, that test could actually be done in only 833 days.
                  But as Sunking notes, there is a big difference between high discharge rate cylindrical cells and the larger prismatic cells commonly used.
                  However, A123 seems to indicate that their large battery banks are composed of just such cylindrical cells.
                  SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.

                  Comment

                  • Sunking
                    Solar Fanatic
                    • Feb 2010
                    • 23301

                    #54
                    Originally posted by pleppik
                    Those links you gave all cite a paper by Weissbach from 2013, which uses solar data from Germany and concludes than in Germany, the EROI for PV is 3.8-4.0 for poly-Si without battery storage, and 2.3 with some amount of battery buffering (see table 2). The author also notes that in southern Europe the EROI is about 1.7 times higher because Germany is a cloudy place.

                    2.3 is nothing to write home about, but last I checked it was still greater than 1.
                    Again you are not getting it. They are talking about Lithium batteries that DO NOT EXIST. It is fantasy. But for giggles let's say there is a Lithium battery that has 15,000 cycles and a calendar life of 45 years. It would be a Economic Disaster even with a EROI of 4. You would get more energy and losse less money buy just burning dollar bills.

                    But a commercial solar system is not what we are talking about. The commercial model is to charge batteries fully during the peak sun hour, and send excess power from the panels to the grid to be utilized. Then when the sun fades dump all the power in the batteries to the grid to be utilized during peak demand. Repeat cycle next day.

                    That is not how a residential system operates, nor do residential users use make believe lithium batteries of the future. Not do residential off grid users utilize all the power that the system can generate. Over the life time you would be lucky to use just 40%. The rest is never used or utilized and lost forever.

                    Now what you can conclude from the articles and studies Solar with or without batteries is not doable and an economic disaster. An EROI of less than 7 and you would never make one penny or what is really important NO ROI. Wind and hydro are the only two renewables that can generate an ROI of 1 or greater. EROI is meaningless without ROI.

                    So as a business or investor which deal do you take?

                    Deal #1. Invest $1000 today in Mr Green Jeans Energy and ten years later they give you back give you back $500.

                    Deal #2 Invest $1000 toady in the Utility, they pay you 7% quarterly interest, and in 10 years if you want can cash out at $3000

                    I know Ian will take deal #1 every time because he is smart business man. I am stupid and take deal #2.
                    MSEE, PE

                    Comment

                    • DanKegel
                      Banned
                      • Sep 2014
                      • 2093

                      #55
                      Originally posted by Sunking
                      Again you are not getting it. They are talking about Lithium batteries that DO NOT EXIST. It is fantasy. But for giggles let's say there is a Lithium battery that has 15,000 cycles
                      Nobody said there was. Let's stick to what's actually on the market.
                      http://bosch-solar-storage.com/the-b...thium-battery/ is a system that's currently on the market, and claims 7000 cycles.
                      A 4.4 kwh system goes for AUS$17700 or USD$13700, or $2 per cycle. (http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/2271620)
                      (I think that includes the cost of the inverter.)
                      And with the 30% federal tax credit, that's $1.40 per cycle.
                      $1.40 for 4kwh... well, that's not going to be economical in normal service,
                      but if it prevents a huge demand charge, I suppose it might be worth it for
                      some people. Let's say it cuts your peak demand by 4KW; that's a savings
                      of something like $1.40/day under APS's Combined Advantage tariff.
                      Hey, presto, it's right on the cusp of breakeven. I'd love to hear what
                      the real figures are -- mine were just crazy estimates.

                      So it seems like storage systems are indeed on the verge of making sense for PV in some places.

                      Not sure why this is such an emotional topic for some people.

                      Comment

                      • pleppik
                        Solar Fanatic
                        • Feb 2014
                        • 508

                        #56
                        Originally posted by Sunking
                        Again you are not getting it. They are talking about Lithium batteries that DO NOT EXIST. It is fantasy. But for giggles let's say there is a Lithium battery that has 15,000 cycles and a calendar life of 45 years. It would be a Economic Disaster even with a EROI of 4. You would get more energy and losse less money buy just burning dollar bills.
                        Well, okay, if you say that the analysis you cited is based on hypothetical batteries which don't exist, then do you have some documentation for the actual EROI of PV+battery systems which do exist today?

                        I'm not trying to be difficult, I'm just trying to understand where you are getting an EROI less than one from.
                        16x TenK 410W modules + 14x TenK 500W inverters

                        Comment

                        • Sunking
                          Solar Fanatic
                          • Feb 2010
                          • 23301

                          #57
                          Originally posted by DanKegel
                          Nobody said there was. Let's stick to what's actually on the market.
                          http://bosch-solar-storage.com/the-b...thium-battery/ is a system that's currently on the market, and claims 7000 cycles.
                          A 4.4 kwh system goes for AUS$17700 or USD$13700, or $2 per cycle. (http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/2271620)
                          (I think that includes the cost of the inverter.)
                          And with the 30% federal tax credit, that's $1.40 per cycle.
                          $1.40 for 4kwh... well, that's not going to be economical in normal service,
                          but if it prevents a huge demand charge, I suppose it might be worth it for
                          some people. Let's say it cuts your peak demand by 4KW; that's a savings
                          of something like $1.40/day under APS's Combined Advantage tariff.
                          Hey, presto, it's right on the cusp of breakeven. I'd love to hear what
                          the real figures are -- mine were just crazy estimates.
                          Dan what you are not grasping is resources. Think of it as mpg for gasoline. Imagine two identical cars with different engines. One gets 2 mpg, and the other gets 30 mpg? Which vehicle makes better use of resources? I don't give a dam about your peak demand and what you have to pay for it. That is what California asked for, and they gave it to you. On top of that pain they take what little resources they have and waste it. You guys chose to drive the car that gets 2 mpg when you went green. If California and other like states would have built out generation instead of shutting it down, you would not have high electric rates, TOU, Tier and other such structured punishing rates.

                          Taking commercial Grid Inter-Active Solar with an EROI of 3 to 6, and adding battery to take that down even further is just plain crazy talk and waste resources. What is so hard to understand?
                          MSEE, PE

                          Comment

                          • DanKegel
                            Banned
                            • Sep 2014
                            • 2093

                            #58
                            Originally posted by Sunking
                            I don't give a dam about your peak demand and what you have to pay for it. That is what California asked for, and they gave it to you.
                            Who said anything about California? The high demand charges are from Arizona utilities that, like you, hate solar.


                            Taking commercial Grid Inter-Active Solar with an EROI of 3 to 6, and adding battery to take that down even further
                            You haven't established that PV has an EROI below 8, nor that storage lowers the EROI. Can you?

                            By the way, http://www.pv-tech.org/mobile/news/g..._residential_m is a storage system claiming 10k cycles.

                            Comment

                            • Sunking
                              Solar Fanatic
                              • Feb 2010
                              • 23301

                              #59
                              Originally posted by DanKegel
                              You haven't established that PV has an EROI below 8, nor that storage lowers the EROI. Can you?
                              Your beyond help Dan. Every link provided in this thread clearly states Solar PV is well below 8, just just just don't want to know or hear it. Any idiot would know by adding batteries wil brin gdown EROI because of round trip efficiency. Add batteries and you cut EROI to about half. Since you missed one of the many graphs linked to in this thread, here is one just for you.

                              EROI-Book-Figure.jpg

                              Oh I see you don't like that one. Well here is another one,

                              MSEE, PE

                              Comment

                              • Sunking
                                Solar Fanatic
                                • Feb 2010
                                • 23301

                                #60
                                Originally posted by DanKegel
                                y the way, http://www.pv-tech.org/mobile/news/g..._residential_m is a storage system claiming 10k cycles.
                                Quit being a fool. and buying that car with 2 mpg.

                                What all the links clearly demonstrate from many universities is Solar PV does not and cannot work, the EROI is too small and ROI is negative. The only Renewables that can work is Wind and Hydro. End of story, you lost the debate a long time ago.
                                MSEE, PE

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