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the fossil fuel cars would be twice as polluting as electric cars
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 11/04/2021 01:19:18But that's missing the enormous mineral elephant in the room; the huge pile of mineral oil that the fossil car burns over its life! That pile is an order of magnitude bigger than the car and cannot be recycled.Er, no. The energy required to make the average family car, from mining to roadside, is about the same as it consumes in its working life. That's the weakness of the "all electric now" argument - you have to burn an awful lot of fuel to replace the existing stock of perfectly adequate vehicles.
But that's missing the enormous mineral elephant in the room; the huge pile of mineral oil that the fossil car burns over its life! That pile is an order of magnitude bigger than the car and cannot be recycled.
You're assuming that the energy used to recycle a car is fossil fuelled, why?
they're more expensive to run
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 11/04/2021 19:58:03You're assuming that the energy used to recycle a car is fossil fuelled, why? As I write, less than 10% of UK electricity is being generated by renewables. Most industries are on short time and at least half of our non-transport energy consumption is direct heat by coal, gas or oil.
Mining for iron, copper and lithium cannot be powered by unreliable energy sources - mines have to be lit and ventilated 24/7, even without drills, explosives , trucks, dumpers...... You might be able to use grid power for some refining processes but that's still subject to a limit of 20% unreliables before the essential conventional backup stations become uneconomic. Then you have to transport the raw material by ship and truck.
Quotethey're more expensive to run Only because of the tax regime. Given that 50 - 90% of electricity is generated from fossil fuel in most countries, at about 50% thermal efficiency, the input energy cost per mile of an electric car at 90% final conversion efficiency is about the same as that of a fossil-fuelled car.
Actual fuel cost in the UK is less than 5p per mile for a hefty family car (2 liter diesel). EDF (the French company that owns most of the UK electricity supply) reckons 4p per mile for an electric car, but this must increase with an infrastructure levy if we are to replace the entire fleet of gas guzzlers with charging points - the motorist, after all, pays for the cost of fossil fuel distribution.
Why would I need to charge it tonight, when I charged it last thursday when the grid was swimming in green electricity?
And there already are far more than 35 million charge points, every 13 amp socket in the UK is a charging point.
Battery storage 30% cheaper than gas peaker plants for firming renewables.The contest is over. Faster, cheaper, more flexible than gas turbines – battery energy storage must be the future peaking energy service provider of choice, according to a new paper by Australia’s Clean Energy Council.
Australia's Clean Energy Council (CEC) says in a newly published paper that large-scale battery energy storage has become the best way to spread energy generated by solar and wind throughout any day, and to instantly respond to peak energy needs in the National Electricity Market (NEM) for long and short durations.The paper compares the levelized cost of energy delivered by a new 250 MW gas peaker plant with 250 MW four-hour and two-hour grid-scale batteries. It finds that overall – when various costs are calculated – that the batteries are 17% (two-hour) and 30% (four-hour) cheaper.Improvements in battery-operating technology mean storage now outperforms gas-fired peaking plants on speed and reliability of response, which was the basis of gas technology’s biggest claim to a place in the future renewables-based electricity system.
To go fully renewable you need to install 5 days total,
Battery technology is not new
Quote from: alancalverd on 13/04/2021 13:32:51To go fully renewable you need to install 5 days total,Or a big enough grid.
Back to the problem of emergency equipment. A gas-powered generating station does not self-degrade with time, and fuel storage is virtually indefinite. Batteries use active chemistry and have finite internal impedance so they self-discharge and self-destruct over time. Cheap today, but how long before you have to replace it? I wonder who funds the "Clean Energy Council"? Probably not the oil or gas industry.
The $200 million “Big Battery”, installed in South Australia in 2017 by Elon Musk’s Tesla company, has almost paid for itself, saving consumers around $116 million in higher power costs in 2019, a study by engineering and project management firm Aurecon has concluded.That figure is nearly treble the $40 million saving in 2018.The Hornsdale Power Reserve (HPR), 230km north of Adelaide, is owned and operated by French renewable energy producer Neoen, and connected to the company’s adjacent wind farm. It holds enough power for 8,000 homes for 24 hours, or more than 30,000 houses for an hour during a blackoutThe lithium-ion battery is partly the result of a 2017 Twitter bet between Musk and Atlassian co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes that Tesla would supply the battery within 100 days or it was free.In November last year, Neoen announced plans to increase the battery complex’s size by 50% to 150MW, to be competed in the first half of 2020. It remains the largest battery in the world.
Quote from: alancalverd on 13/04/2021 11:16:35Battery technology is not newThe relevant bits of battery tech- for example Li ion batteries- are new.It's a bit silly to pretend otherwise.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 13/04/2021 13:36:40Quote from: alancalverd on 13/04/2021 13:32:51To go fully renewable you need to install 5 days total,Or a big enough grid. No, dear. The grid is what distributes the stuff. No matter how many miles of wire, you need to add 5 days' storage for when the wind doesn't blow.
So are all sorts of things like electronic fuel injection. Nobody is pretending anything, and when lithium batteries stop catching fire, self-discharging or degrading with use, I'm sure we'll find a use for them that's almost as versatile as a petrol can. And maybe with 5 times the present energy density and a 200 kW charge rate with no heat problem, like I get from a petrol pump.
The $200 million “Big Battery”, installed in South Australia in 2017 by Elon Musk’s Tesla company, .................. Neoen announced plans to increase the battery complex’s size by 50% to 150MW, to be competed in the first half of 2020. It remains the largest battery in the world.