OwenEverbinde

@OwenEverbinde@lemmy.myserv.one

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OwenEverbinde,

… and maybe that’s why it was “previously active”?

OwenEverbinde, (edited )

Wait! Never mind. I should have done a simple web search before posting this question.

I found a video on it.

England already has two oversea electric cables that connect it to France on the one side and Scandinavia on the other. They have more than paid for themselves already, indicating that this a solution already being implemented in parts of the world… At least for short distances.

OwenEverbinde, (edited )

Oh thanks for the link! This is a good one. According to the article we’re already using:

  • Pumped hydroelectric
  • Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES)
  • Flywheels
  • Supercapacitors
  • And just plain batteries

And the article ends with,

“The price of storage is coming down. The price of solving the problems in other ways is going up. Pretty soon, these prices are going to cross,” notes Boyes, suggesting cost could spur the addition of storage to the grid.

OwenEverbinde, (edited )

Australia too, according to a video I found.

OwenEverbinde,

Yeah, the 450 mile one – the North Sea Link – is the “longest subsea interconnector in the world.”

I think over land, you can manage longer distances (China’s transmission projects go thousands of miles), but even those aren’t going the full 3310 miles it would take to cross the Atlantic.

OwenEverbinde,

Which is, I’m assuming, the reason that hydrogen use and production are expected to vastly increase in the next 30 years.

OwenEverbinde, (edited )

I believe the article is arguing that we need to scale them up. Although: it mentions that the Tennessee Valley Authority already uses pumped hydroelectric storage at the foot of Raccoon Mountain (side-note, I know nothing about Tennessee, but somehow naming a mountain “Raccoon Mountain” confirms all of my stereotypes about the state), to supplement its grid during low-production hours.

OwenEverbinde,

That said, R.J. Gumby was able to give a fantastic link about the storage technology currently in use.

OwenEverbinde,

So we heavily incentivize industrial sites to shift operation to hours during which power production exceeds demand?

OwenEverbinde, (edited )

The only way I can make sense of Lurker’s comment is:

maybe Lurker didn’t realize my edits to the post came after some people’s comments (my edits definitely came after your comment, derf). Lurker may have assumed you were dismissing the practicality of the Asia-Australia Power Link, mentioned in my edit but not in the original post.

Assuming the above, this is a miscommunication.

Assuming anything else, Lurker’s comment doesn’t make that much sense.

OwenEverbinde,

Ahhh… okay, yeah. That also makes sense.

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