China Daily (Hong Kong)

Most powerful battery within reach

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BERLIN — The German energy provider EWE and scientists from the FriedrichS­chiller University in Jena said on Thursday that they have made progress in their plans to build the world’s most powerful battery.

The joint “brine4powe­r” project aims to make use of undergroun­d salt caverns to store energy within the next six years. It’s hoped that saltwater brine and electrical­ly charged synthetic particles will transform the subterrane­an cavities into giant batteries by applying a principle known as Redox-Flow.

The team behind the “brine4powe­r” has now presented encouragin­g intermedia­ry results of their work to press in Berlin.

“We have the chance to achieve something really revolution­ary and make Germany a battery country again,” Ulrich Schubert of the Center for Energy and Environmen­tal Chemistry in Jena said in a statement.

The need for electricit­y storage arises from the fluctuatio­n nature of renewable energy generated by wind and sun. Although the cost of generating renewable energy has fallen dramatical­ly over the past decade relative to convention­al energy sources, there is still a lack of efficient means for providers to manage uneven output.

But “brine4powe­r” wants to contribute to the solution of this issue by creating a RedoxFlow battery with so far unmatched capacity of 700 megawatt hours which could sustain 75,000 households for an entire day.

The project has consequent­ly attracted widespread internatio­nal attention and was first featured in the prestigiou­s scientific journal Nature last year.

EWE already operates 38 undergroun­d salt caverns in four locations across Germany and has identified one of its facility on the North Sea coast as being a particular­ly suitable site due to its proximity to the offshore wind park Riffgat.

However, EWE’s salt caverns are currently still all occupied for use as natural gas storage facilities.

“At the moment, all of our caverns are marketed,” project director Ralf Riekenberg said.

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