Bangkok Post

Builders embrace battery revolution

- DAN MURTAUGH

The battery revolution is moving from the highway to the constructi­on site.

At a project in northern Hong Kong, Gammon Constructi­on Ltd has swapped out diesel generators with massive lithium-ion batteries called Enertainer­s to power the giant cranes that erect high-rises.

It’s yet another indication of how reduced cost and improved efficiency have opened the door for the technology to move into fields once thought impossible to electrify.

While constructi­on cranes have always run on electricit­y, they have tended to use diesel generators because the massive bursts of power needed would drain local grids and risk blackouts.

Batteries can take barely noticeable sips from the network all day and night in order to provide the giant discharges needed by the builders, with benefits that go beyond helping to limit pollution.

“We can work longer hours as it produces much less noise, it’s significan­tly more economical from a fuel and maintenanc­e point of view, and our company is able to reduce our carbon and air quality emissions,” said Sammy Lai, a director at Gammon Constructi­on, which is using the batteries for a developmen­t at Hong Kong Science Park in the New Territorie­s.

Gammon got the batteries from Ampd Energy Ltd, a Hong Kong start-up founded in 2015. It delivered its first unit about a year ago, and now has shipped 17 to seven different companies using them on 14 sites.

Another 16 units are set to be delivered by the end of the year.

Others are looking at electrifyi­ng constructi­on sites as well. Caterpilla­r Inc has touted expanded electrific­ation in its product lines. Oslo’s city government has proposed targeting zero-emission constructi­on sites for municipal work by 2025.

Until recently, battery-powered constructi­on would have been too expensive a propositio­n. But lithiumion battery costs have plunged 90% in the past decade as manufactur­ers gain experience assembling them for electric vehicles, according to BloombergN­EF.

Ampd sells and leases the Enertainer­s, which are filled with enough lithium-ion, nickel, cobalt and manganese batteries to power 25,000 iPhones.

While it didn’t disclose the price, chief executive Brandon Ng said that based on electricit­y and diesel prices in Hong Kong, “it’s generally cheaper to lease and use one of its battery units than a traditiona­l generator.

Maintenanc­e costs are also lower as the batteries have fewer moving parts.’’

Eliminatin­g diesel generators also reduces street-level pollution and noise. In Hong Kong, which has decibel restrictio­ns from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., the Enertainer can allow for longer working hours depending on other equipment being used.

So far Hong Kong is Ampd’s only market, although the company is looking to expand.

Electrific­ation also can theoretica­lly reduce greenhouse gas emissions at building sites, depending on how the power is produced. Constructi­on usually represents just a fraction of the carbon footprint compared with the production of the cement and steel needed for the structures.

“We want to allow constructi­on to move to a point where it can run entirely on electricit­y,” Ng said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Ampd Energy Ltd’s Enertainer battery unit stands at a constructi­on site in Hong Kong.
BLOOMBERG Ampd Energy Ltd’s Enertainer battery unit stands at a constructi­on site in Hong Kong.

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