Mart wrote: ↑Sun Oct 30, 2022 12:37 pm
For fun, sticking with the 30GWh Tesla factory, and just assuming 10 such factories in Europe, though of course actual production will scale way, way past that, then we have an annual production of 300GWh pa, which if used for grid storage (purely an example for the purposes of the discussion), again cycling once per day, then we have ~110TWh (109,500GWh), or about 3.3% of annual consumption, so ~10yrs of production would provide for 1/3rd of the energy to be stored where demand and supply don't match.
Bad form I know to reply to myself, but I've just read an article looking at research in Australia, and whilst it is simplified, it finds that with existing hydro, plus 60% wind, plus 45% solar (so clearly some overcapacity (as I mentioned reports tend to suggest this as the cheapest solution)), it finds that only 10% of energy is via storage, 90% is supplied directly.
[I used an upto 50% in my examples, but suggested it should be much lower, so my offshore wind RE + (RE + storage) figure of £98/MWh, would at 10%, be about £58/MWh, v's the current £114/MWh for HPC (before storage costs).]
Using a live stream of electricity data from Opennem, he adjusted inputs to see what would happen if there was enough wind and solar energy to supply 60% and 45% of demand respectively. He added enough short-term storage, likely to be in the form of batteries, to supply average demand for five hours.
The results are encouraging. They suggest close to 100% of demand – 98.9% over a 61-week period – could be delivered by solar and wind backed by existing hydro power and the five hours of storage. Nearly 90% of demand was met directly by renewable energy and 10% had to pass through storage. Achieving it would require a major expansion of transmission, as proposed by Labor under its Rewiring the Nation policy.
Rather than an endlessly reheated nuclear debate, politicians should be powered by the evidence
And going back to the numbers provided by @Swwils, as they are so useful for context here, we have the EU annual energy figure of 3,300,000GWh, and as a great example, the planned annual battery capacity just from a single BEV factory, of 30GWh.
Applying the findings from the report, 5hrs of storage would be 1,883GWh.
So just ten factories of that size, producing stationary storage, would reach the required figure in only 6yrs.
Tbh, those numbers are far better than I'd expected, but I think I'll continue using pessimistic calculations in my waffle, as it's better to hope for the best, but plan for the worst.
I truly hope that all of these numbers, reports, articles etc, and my ramblings, are helpful, and place the issues we face into context. All the best.