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"Home Batteries" Power Houses For a Week

tjansen writes "Panasonic has announced plans to create 'home batteries.' They are lithium-ion batteries large enough to power a house for a week, making energy sources such as solar and wind power more feasible. Also, you can buy energy when it is cheapest, and don't need to worry about power outages anymore."

11 of 325 comments (clear)

  1. Boom. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't trust lithium-ion technology enough to want something with that much capacity in my basement. Wouldn't want my house to look like this

    I have a thousand watt-hour battery that runs my sump pum during a power failure, but it's lead-acid. They've been around for a loooong time and are pretty damn stable (even so, this one is in a concrete-walled sump room.) Lithium-ions have a ways to go before they can be considered as trustworthy, and their higher energy density just makes them that much more dangerous during a catastrophic failure. Yet another reason why I'd never buy a hybrid vehicle. The idea of sitting atop a massive lithium-ion battery pack makes me far more nervous than I've ever been about a tank of gasoline.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    1. Re:Boom. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not to mention the size and cost of such a setup

      Well, it seems the only real benefit would be the ability to buy power when it's cheaper, but you know that if this kind of residential load-leveling becomes popular the power companies will adjust pricing to suit. Now, if battery-powered homes did reach significant numbers, it could really help the power companies keep consumption closer to base-load (and avoid lighting up expensive natural gas power plants) during periods of heavy demand. You know, like a hot summer day when everyone has their air-conditioning on. But for the individual homeowner, it really does seem like overkill. If our power becomes so erratic that these things actually start to make sense, I'm going to say we've a lot more serious issues to deal with.

      So far as flashing clocks go ... all of mine take a 9V battery (or a couple of AAs) that will keep the clock chips alive for a day or two if the power goes off. No need for a basement full of lithium batteries! Besides, at least where I live I, I think the last power outage I had was about four years ago. Happened when the temperature was -15 outside and it got pretty damn cold in here before the power came back on, I will say that. Lucky I didn't freeze my pipes.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Boom. by Mortaegus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The idea really isn't to backup your power during an outage. The idea is to store power collected with on-site measures such as solar/wind and use the battery during times when these local power measure's aren't supplying enough. Another point would be to purchase power from the electric company when demand is low, and store for use when demand is high. Power companies could signal that demand is too high and the load is about cause problems, and people could switch to their reserves, in order to prevent damage to the grid. (Such as happens frequently when everybody runs their air coolers in the summer). I think that this would be a good measure to prevent the problems that cause blackouts, but I don't think it should, in all cases, be the consumer putting forth the effort to fix things. (At least in the US they need fixing). The power companies should put a few of these in the ground, and THEY can activate them when the need is there, rather than asking customers to handle it for them. Else they can damn well charge us a lot less than 60 cents per kilowatt hour. (Newark).

      --
      The essence of time is transient. Always be sure to make haste slowly.
    3. Re:Boom. by DemoLiter3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So, this battery is supposed to be able to power an entire one-family home for a week. By a conservative estimate that would be around 100 kWh of capacity.
      Modern Lithium-Ion batteries have specific capacity of 100-160 Wh/kg, but let's say Panasonic manages to extend this and will deliver 200 Wh/kg. Let's assume the half of this weight is Lithium, which puts the total Lithium weight for such battery at ~1000kg.
      With a total world's estimated Lithium reserves of ~11000000 tonnes we can outfit around 11 million homes with such batteries before we run out of Lithium. Sounds like a solid plan.

    4. Re:Boom. by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      On the other hand, very many households have massive oil or propane tanks in their basements. Gasoline just doesn't happen to be all that great for heating your house.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
  2. Tense by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We go from the future:

    "Panasonic has announced plans to create 'home batteries."

          That is, the batteries don't exist yet.

          BUT:

          Also, you can buy energy when it is cheapest [only there's nowhere to store it at the moment], and don't need to worry about power outages anymore [well actually you still have to worry, because they haven't actually invented the battery yet].

          Who wrote this? I see a brilliant future for you writing prospectuses for investment bank companies. This is just hype. I for one will not be buying the $150k batteries that need special zoning permissions and need to be replaced every 3 years.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:Tense by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is just hype. I for one will not be buying the $150k batteries that need special zoning permissions and need to be replaced every 3 years.

      Cost is around $50K a year? That wouldn't make economical sense for anyone. Is there anyone here who shells out $50k a year to their electric company? Didn't think so.

      Well, if the things had a decent service life (15-20 years, say) and could be installed as part of the purchase price of a new home, and provided sufficient economic benefits to be worth the investment, I could see it happening. Maybe. But a pack with a 3-5 year lifetime is not going to cut the mustard. As I mentioned above, I have a 105AH Hawker AGM lead-acid gas-recombinant battery that runs my sump pump. Supposedly rated for 15 years service life, and banks of these things are used in load-leveling applications in large buildings. I once figured out how many of them it would take to run my house for a week, and frankly it was too many. So you'd need something more energy-dense for a whole-house application, but that's still a lot of energy to be packing away in an uncontrolled environment like a home.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  3. Re:Uhh....lithium ion? by iluvcapra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    who would want a partially charged battery when the power goes out for 3 days in the dead of winter?

    I would, since the status quo is no battery at all.

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    Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
  4. Battery maintenance by x_hexdump_x · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Large UPS are common for data centers. But they are expensive and time consuming to maintain. In a data center the cost and time are justified. But for a home I would question the value.

  5. Wrong technology by Mprx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The only advantage of lithium batteries is high energy density, which is irrelevant for a static installation. For powering something as long lasting as a house it would be better to use something more robust. Nickel-iron batteries have low energy density but are very robust. I wouldn't want a house battery I'd have to replace every few years.

  6. Doesn't help you buy cheap power by fluffy99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Also, you can buy energy when it is cheapest

    You can charge them at night if your power company has lower rates at night. It's pointless though as any savings in the cost disappear in the inefficiencies of the ac->dc for charging, the heat losses during charging, and the dc->ac conversion to use that power again. A 10% savings in the power cost is stupid when you give up %15 of the energy trying to save it.