SBD wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 4:16 pm
abc wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 3:38 pm
mattblack wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 3:03 pm
Give me a break with your diatribe.
Ever heard of a coal seam fire. Burned for 45 days in 2014. Long term affects on residents of the La Trobe Valley. There are hundreds/thousands around the world uncontrolled.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-n ... tudy-finds
Go find some context.
why do you assume I support coal seam gas?
if you want context maybe start with the fact these batteries generate zero electricity
Correct - they don't
generate electricity. They
store it from times with excess generation to be released at times of excess demand. They also provide various kinds of technical modulation that had traditionally been provided by heavy flywheels. It seems like in a few years time, just about every major substation in the network will have a battery farm next to it. I assume this will improve resilience to adverse events that remove long transmission lines at random such as the big storm a few years ago. I think the batteries have just about taken over the need for the synchronous condensers that were only installed a few years ago to compensate for the loss of spinning "baseload" (always on) generators.
There's actually a great concept there.
If we have enough storage capacity to create an excess 'supply', in times of crisis or unforeseen events with generation, we have supply to keep us powered for a small period while whatever the issue is, is resolved.
When that storm with cyclonic conditions knocked out those towers north of Adelaide, if we had a battery storage system, we could theoretically anyway have kept the lights on in Adelaide.
Now apply this battery storage on a smaller scale for pockets around the metropolitan area, or in towns, connected to the main grid of the city or towns. Even better if we can get the power transmission lines put underground instead of hanging over our heads in our suburban streets.
As I said in an earlier post, if we take out the political bullshit from this, and think of it as a technological leap for humanity, there's no reason not to do it.