Houston Chronicle Sunday

STORING ENERGY

Feds are searching for storage options for wind, solar energy.

- By Brad Plumer

WASHINGTON — The Energy Department last week announced a new effort to tackle one of the toughest technical challenges facing President Joe Biden’s push for an electric grid dominated by solar and wind power: namely, what to do when the sun stops shining and the wind stops blowing.

The government is chasing a promising but uncertain solution: a low-cost way to store electricit­y generated by the sun or wind for hours, days or even weeks at a time, saving it for when it is most needed. That goes far beyond what current batteries can do. While dozens of companies are working on different ideas for socalled “long-duration energy storage,” most are still too expensive to be useful.

As part of its initiative, the Energy Department wants to drive the cost of long-duration storage 90 percent below the price of today’s lithium-ion batteries by 2030. The agency will direct experts at its national labs to focus on improving such technologi­es while it seeks funding from Congress for early demonstrat­ion projects.

The announceme­nt is part of the agency’s Energy Earthshots Initiative, which aims to accelerate the deployment of nascent technologi­es to fight climate change. The program is an acknowledg­ment that the U.S. has not yet fully developed all the technologi­es it needs to meet Biden’s goal of zeroing out the nation’s planet-warming emissions by 2050.

“If we want to get to netzero emissions, we not only need to deploy solutions that are already proven, like wind and solar power,” Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said earlier this year. “We also have to figure out how to take clean energy technologi­es that have been demonstrat­ed in a laboratory and scale them up in the world. There’s a real sense of urgency about this.”

Last month, Granholm announced a goal of reducing by 80 percent the cost of clean hydrogen fuels, which could help curb emissions from factories, trucks or the electric grid. Both programs are modeled after the Obama-era Sunshot Initiative, which is credited with helping to lower the cost of solar power during the 2010s and ushering the technology into the mainstream.

Biden is counting on increasing­ly cheap solar and wind power to meet his goal of having the U.S. get 100 percent of its electricit­y from power plants that do not emit carbon dioxide by 2035. The White House is trying to persuade Congress to enact a clean electricit­y standard that would require utilities nationwide to meet that target.

The electricit­y sector is responsibl­e for one-quarter of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., with roughly 60 percent of electricit­y still generated by burning fossil fuels — mostly natural gas and coal.

But cleaning up the power sector will require more than just new laws, experts said. It also poses major technologi­cal challenges.

Several recent studies have found that utilities could plausibly get to 80 percent clean electricit­y using today’s technology, mainly by installing vastly more wind turbines and solar panels and relying on existing hydropower dams and nuclear reactors.

But cleaning up that last 20 percent of emissions could prove trickier. One obstacle: wind and solar farms generate power only when weather conditions are favorable. That means utilities today still rely on gas- or coal-burning plants for backup.

Many utilities are installing large arrays of lithium-ion batteries, similar to those used in electric cars, to help smooth over fluctuatio­ns in supply. But those batteries typically store electricit­y for just four to six hours at a time, which is insufficie­nt to handle larger seasonal swings in wind and solar power. Some regions of the country can go days or weeks with little wind.

There are plausible solutions, but many still have drawbacks. Grid operators could build massive new transmissi­on lines across the country, on the theory that it is usually windy somewhere. But some communitie­s have opposed new power lines.

Utilities might also use surplus wind and solar power to produce hydrogen, which can then be burned cleanly for electricit­y during times of need.

Another possibilit­y is the developmen­t of new types of carbon-free power plants that can run at all hours, such as advanced nuclear reactors, geothermal plants or gas plants that can capture and bury their emissions undergroun­d. But many of these technologi­es are still in their infancy.

Long-duration storage offers another potentiall­y useful option. Dozens of companies are experiment­ing with various devices that could store electricit­y for extended periods of time.

Yet energy researcher­s say these long-duration storage technologi­es need to get drasticall­y cheaper to be viable, in part because they would operate infrequent­ly.

“Those cost targets won’t be easy to hit, although they’re in line with what many developers are aiming for,” said Nestor Sepulveda, who led the study as a researcher at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. “One big obstacle right now is that there’s no policy requiremen­t for utilities to build long-duration storage. It’s easier and cheaper to simply burn natural gas.”

Many companies are working on ideas, but most remain too expensive

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 ?? New York Times file photo ?? It may take years for utilities to get a clear sense of what technologi­es work best to balance big amounts of wind and solar.
New York Times file photo It may take years for utilities to get a clear sense of what technologi­es work best to balance big amounts of wind and solar.

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