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Storing Wind Power In Cold Stores

Roland Piquepaille writes "According to Nature, a European-funded project has been launched to store electricity created from wind in refrigerated warehouses used to store food. As the production of wind energy is variable every day, it cannot easily be accommodated on the electrical grid. So the 'Night Wind' project wants to store wind energy produced at night in refrigerated warehouses and to release this energy during daytime peak hours. The first tests will be done in the Netherlands this year. And as the cold stores exist already, practically no extra cost should be incurred to store as much as 50,000 megawatt-hours of energy. Here are additional details and a picture illustrating this brilliant idea."

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  1. Re:This can be used in many places by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not sure how things are in America right now, but in Australia, they're rolling out a scheme called 'Time of Use'. Meters are automatically read every 30 minutes, or every 15 for large usage sites, and you're charged based upon the time that you use the energy. Currently it's split into 3 blocks.. Peak (business times) shoulder (evenings) and off-peak (nights, weekends) and differing rates are set for each period.

    Energy Australia charge 22c/kwh for Peak, 8c/kwh for Shoulder and 4c/kwh for Off-peak.

    Not as elaborate as your suggestion, but far more suitable for the average home user. It would probably benefit such 'cold stores' too, because I wouldn't imagine it would make much difference whether they're -20 or -40, so they could cool right down during the night, then use less energy during 'peak' hours. I would guess future developments might see small sites charging batteries during the night to power appliances through the day.