Why Giant Batteries Can’t Fix Wind & Solar’s Natural Unreliability

The truly deluded reckon that by adding a few giant lithium-ion batteries we’ll soon be running on nothing but sunshine and breezes

Those that (often grudgingly) concede wind and solar’s weather-driven (ie perfectly natural) unreliability, claim that storing wind and solar power when the sun’s up and the wind is blowing, just right, and releasing it when the sun sets or calm weather sets in, is a cinch.

The laws of physics and economics, say otherwise. As Van Snyder details below in a Substack article.

In Grid-Scale Storage of Renewable Energy: The Impossible DreamEnergy Matters (November 20, 2017), Euan Mearns used a full year of data from England and Scotland, with one hour resolution, to calculate that to have firm power, it would be necessary to have 390 watt hours of storage per watt of average demand.

In Is 100 Percent Renewable Energy Possible? (May 25, 2018), Norman Rogers performed a similar calculation for Texas and concluded that 400 watt hours would be necessary.

I obtained data from the California Independent System Operator with one hour resolution from 1 January 2011 until 30 November 2020, and five minute resolution thereafter. The situation for California is much worse than Mearns calculated for Britain, or Rogers calculated for Texas.

The details of the calculation method are explained in Storage Situation is Worse than Mearns and Rogers Calculated.

The graph shows the accumulated difference between generation by renewable sources, and demand, that is, how much would be accumulated into or discharged from storage, assuming average generating capacity is equal to average demand.

The notional capacity of renewable generators is much larger than average capacity; the capacity factor for solar generators is around 25 percent, and around 30 percent for wind.

The “Equal Increase” line assumes all renewable generation sources are magnified by the same amount, so that all demand is satisfied by renewable sources. It is unlikely that biomass and geothermal can increase as much as solar and wind. Activists want to remove dams, so hydro might well decrease.

The “Weighted Increase” line increases each renewable source by its average growth in output during the period of analysis, which depends upon weather conditions. The California Energy Department predicts total demand, but does not predict growth of supply, either in toto or separately by generation technology.

The storage capacity necessary to avoid blackouts is the difference between the maximum surplus and the deepest deficit. Between 1 April 2015 and 13 January 2023, the greatest surplus is 873 watt hours per watt of average demand on 27 July 2022, and the deepest deficit is 2003 watt hours per watt of average demand on 28 February 2017.

To avoid blackouts, a capacity of 873 + 2003 = 2876 watt hours per watt of average demand would be necessary, precharged to 2003 watt hours per watt of average demand on 1 April 2015.

Activists insist that an all-electric United States energy economy would have average demand of about 1.7 TWe. Assume California average generating conditions from 2015 through 2022 apply to the entire nation, and therefore 2876 watt hours of storage per watt of average demand is adequate (this is optimistic).

The total cost for Tesla PowerWall 2 storage units, not including installation, with 2876 × 1.7 terawatts = 4.89 quadrillion watt hours’ capacity would be 4.89 quadrillion × $0.543 = $2.66 quadrillion, or about 133 times total US 2018 GDP (about $20 trillion).

Assuming batteries last ten years (the Tesla warranty period), the cost per year would be 13.3 times total US 2018 GDP.

The cost for each of America’s 128 million households would be about $2,075,000 per month.

This analysis assumes 100 percent battery charge and discharge efficiency. They’re closer to 90 percent (81 percent round-trip), so the necessary capacity and cost would be about 25 percent more.

Elon Musk would have more money than God.

If average renewables’ generating capacity were to have been increased to three times average demand, and 12 hours’ storage were provided, as is claimed to be sufficient by many environmentalists, power would have been available 97.5 percent of the time, i.e., blackouts 2.5 percent of the time.

The industry definition for “firm power” is 99.97 percent availability, or about two hours and forty minutes per year without power. 2.32 gigawatt hours of output — 134 percent of total demand or 42 percent of average capacity — would have been dumped.

The cost for only twelve hours’ storage, for an all-electric 1.7 TWe American energy economy, would be $11 trillion, or about $1.1 trillion per year. The cost per American household would be about $721 per month (for batteries alone). And electricity would still be available only 97.5 percent of the time.

Renewables provided 36.6 percent of California electricity between 2020 April 1 and 2022 December 15. Electricity satisfies about one third of total California energy demand.

To provide all California energy from renewable electricity sources whose average generating capacity is three times average demand would require a capacity increase of 2460 percent above the capacity to satisfy all current California electricity demand.

Increasing hydro at all, or increasing biogas, biomass and geothermal by 2460 percent, is unlikely. With solar and wind alone, blackouts are frequent.

Other analyses might reach different conclusions in detail, but probably not overall.

There is a significant problem with increasing generating capacity above average demand, or indeed building enough capacity. This was explained in The Great Green Energy Transition Is Impossible: The amounts of materials necessary to build the “technology units” demanded in the Great Green Reset dreamt of by the International Energy Agency simply do not exist.

Six times more copper is needed than humans have so far extracted from the Earth, or about five times more than is known to be recoverable. The situation for other metals, such as nickel and cobalt, is worse.

The bottom line is that an all-renewable energy system is simply not possible. If it really is necessary to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions arising from energy production (and there are real scientists who have doubts about this necessity), the only way forward is to switch to natural gas in the short term, and nuclear power in the long term.

Fortunately, nuclear power is the safest thing humanity has ever done. In the entire civilized world, it is safer than Teddy Kennedy’s car.

If the inherently unsafe, unlicensed, and incompetently operated Chernobyl reactor, built in a country that had neither safety culture nor licensing criteria is included, the death toll from nuclear power increases to 28. Nothing like the Chernobyl reactor will ever be built again.

Is anything safer than nuclear power?

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Comments (5)

  • Avatar

    Tom

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    Of course like ALL batteries, these giant storage batteries will last forever. What about replacement costs?

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Howdy

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      Battery overall lifetime, that is, ability to store and supply power by the active materials over time, not run time per charge, will reduce at an accelerated rate where the duty cycle increases. This is the case for any cell/battery you come across. High charge rates, high discharge rates, and maximum depth of discharge are key players. The depth of discharge in particular is very damaging.
      If say, a phone is hammered every day and the battery used to a few percent, then rapid charged, it will suffer earlier demise of the cell than one that is used more gently. Li-ion should be opportunity charged, like lead-acid, which should not be allowed to fully deplete, with the more the capacity still available at charge time, the better. but Li-ion additionally suffers stress from being fully charged. In the above use case though, full charge is allmost certainly not going to be attained, so the stress is minimized by the constant use.

      Batteries are the last thing to use, but I guess the most convenient. How about a large flywheel in a case containing a vacuum and drive spin-up motors just like pumped water? As ludicrous as it sounds, it’s no more ridiculous than the current thinking.

      Perhaps go back in time like the millstone wheels, and have the undesirables in society operating generators to earn their keep. This is a generation of slaves after all.

      Reply

      • Avatar

        Paul

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        For some time, I’ve favoured raised weights. Either using lift shafts in unrented high rise towers, or disused mine shafts. Suitably low techish and defo recyclable Swags of large 3 phase motors around or suitably large diesel generators that could be re-purpoised. Buy shares in wire rope now!

        Reply

  • Avatar

    ewfihr

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    Modifying the topic slightly: There is lots of confusion of watt hour and watt. This article is much better than most.
    Fossil fuel sources are rated in Watts. But only because it is already known that all of them can run 24 x 365 hrs. Solar can’t. So if a solar source is rated in watts it needs to be scaled in some manner to compare them to fossil fuel sources. For my state multiply the peak solar watt rating by 4 hours x 250 days. Multiply the peak fossil fuel watt rating by 24 hours x 365 days. The ratio is 1/7th. Therefore, a 100MWatt solar source is equivalent to a 14MWatt fossil fuel source. In my state we generate about 40,000 MW. 40,000/14 = 2,860 100MWatt solar sources. A 100MW solar facility is about 1 sq mile. So we would need to cover 2,860 sq miles of land with solar panels. That is about 5% of my state. Are the environs going to be supportive to covering up 5% of the state where nothing can grow? Not to mention how much more has to be covered for batteries. I suspect another 5%. And if all the cars go electric then double everything.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Daniel

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    Yes, and how many nuclear accidents happen in the U.S. NAVY? Next to none. In fact, I think none. All our big ships and submarines are nuclear and they only have to be fueled once every 30 years!

    Reply

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