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Will New Battery Technologies Smash The Old Order? (telegraph.co.uk)

"The world's next energy revolution is probably no more than five or ten years away," reports The Telegraph. "Cutting-edge research into cheap and clean forms of electricity storage is moving so fast that we may never again need to build 20th Century power plants in this country..." Slashdot reader mdsolar quotes their article: The US Energy Department is funding 75 projects developing electricity storage, mobilizing teams of scientists at Harvard, MIT, Stanford, and the elite Lawrence Livermore and Oak Ridge labs in a bid for what it calls the "Holy Grail" of energy policy. You can track what they are doing at the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). There are plans for hydrogen bromide, or zinc-air batteries, or storage in molten glass, or next-generation flywheels, many claiming "drastic improvements" that can slash storage costs by 80pc to 90pc and reach the magical figure of $100 per kilowatt hour in relatively short order.

"Storage is a huge deal," says Ernest Moniz, the U,S. Energy Secretary and himself a nuclear physicist. He is now confident that the U.S. grid and power system will be completely "decarbonized" by the middle of the century.

One energy consultant predicts the energy storage market will be worth $90 billion in 2025 -- 100 times larger than it is today.

254 comments

  1. Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Research into battery storage has been intense for 20 years. We've had promises of drastic improvements, and we have seen some significant improvements. Yes, R&D has picked up even more but improvements are more likely to be incremental than breakthrough.

    1. Re:Its a continuation by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Insightful

      *The world's next energy revolution is always more than five or ten years away.*

      How far "Beyond 2000" was all that stuff supposed to be?

      Tomorrow
      Tomorrow
      I love you, tomorrow
      You're always a day awaaaaaay...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't battery storage. This is like "filling a reservoir with water" and then running the hydro-electric dams for peaks. Solar and Wind only operate under certain conditions, so when those conditions are optimal, you use energy from it instead of your hydro-electric dams.

      With batteries, you want batteries that don't use a chemical reaction to generate energy, because you can't "recharge" those without wearing down the battery. Instead you want things closer to how capacitors work (which is a function of surface-area) to be available to store regenerative electricity for vehicles like cars and buses, and only charge/discharge the battery when the capacitors are empty.

      Most solutions today are straight-up battery systems, and as a result there is a lot of wear going into systems that have the opportunity to charge based on kinetic energy (Eg watches and mobile phones) before using the battery.

    3. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I admit to having little knowledge about them, but I think flow batteries have great potential.

      The numbers are probably exaggerated, but these guys claim a range of 1000km in a car with a total of 350 liters of fluid storage. That would mean an energy density of roughly 1/7th of gasoline. That isn't stellar, but it's also far from 'useless crap'-territory. It would be fine for at least industrial energy storage (from renewable sources), it seems.

      Let me reiterate this, though: I'm far from an expert on these things.

    4. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Powerful, efficient, fast charging, long lasting batteries. ...the NEW Fusion!

    5. Re:Its a continuation by rbrander · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Something can look incremental but actually be pretty dramatic. We're kind of spoiled by Moore's Law having a doubling time of just a few years.

      Increases in battery life have been "incremental" but also exponential - the increase has been something like 7% per year on the average, a ten-year doubling. And of course, we ate most of it with higher power consumption in most battery-powered devices: the phones, tablets and laptops. But look at how long something simpler like an iPod lasts now compared to 2001 and it's dramatic.

      Electric cars are going get much more serious after one more doubling, and while the car companies would pay billions to have it happen overnight, it's still going to happen in 10 years even with the "incremental" progress.

    6. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We used to call them fuel cells....

    7. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      flow batteries are nothing new , they have been around a long time. They are actually a good example of the incremental progress I was speaking to. They are interesting for certain applications, but are a long way from practical. The recycling part of the process becomes a factor, along with electrolyte recycling. But carrying about 350 litres of liquid doesn't make sense unless we are talking about some sort of large truck for transport. I don't know how well they perform as they discharge more than half their potential. I don't think it is as steady as a lithium ion battery, but might be mistaken.

    8. Re:Its a continuation by David_Hart · · Score: 5, Informative

      Something can look incremental but actually be pretty dramatic. We're kind of spoiled by Moore's Law having a doubling time of just a few years.

      Increases in battery life have been "incremental" but also exponential - the increase has been something like 7% per year on the average, a ten-year doubling. And of course, we ate most of it with higher power consumption in most battery-powered devices: the phones, tablets and laptops. But look at how long something simpler like an iPod lasts now compared to 2001 and it's dramatic.

      Electric cars are going get much more serious after one more doubling, and while the car companies would pay billions to have it happen overnight, it's still going to happen in 10 years even with the "incremental" progress.

      The majority of improvement of battery life in electronic devices have been due to energy efficient circuit designs, power management (being able to put components to sleep), and shrinking of electronics (i.e. more room for a bigger battery in the same case).

    9. Re:Its a continuation by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For transport, they are impractical. They may have a role in grid scale energy, storing up excess from renewables to be used on demand.

    10. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      But carrying about 350 litres of liquid doesn't make sense unless we are talking about some sort of large truck for transport.

      Why? I think the Tesla S batteries have a comparable volume and weight and those certainly seem to make sense.

      Also, given that we're talking about liquid 'refueling', range becomes much less of a problem (for cars, at least).

    11. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      350 liters of liquid is about 6 times the typical gas fuel tank. That is a lot of liquid to carry around. Give it some air space and now you have shifting fluid affecting maneuverability. Just no need to have that much in a car.

    12. Re:Its a continuation by r0kk3rz · · Score: 2

      I admit to having little knowledge about them, but I think flow batteries have great potential.

      It would be fine for at least industrial energy storage (from renewable sources), it seems.

      I agree, it's a shame that for now the membranes used in flow batteries are rather difficult and expensive to manufacture, which is the main thing limiting their use in industry today, once that is sorted the tech should scale very nicely. Need more capacity? No problem add more tanks, need more throughput? add more pipes and membranes, simple.

      As someone who works on Oil Depot systems, I think that aside from their locations (usually near docks) they would be perfect to convert into flow battery grid storage, since its all about pumping liquids around in big tanks, throw in some load prediction expertise from power companies and you're good to go.

    13. Re:Its a continuation by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I can see you are 'baffled' by science...controlling fluid motion in a container isn't exactly a new thing.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    14. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      It can be managed but not eliminated. There is really no good reason to pursue a path that requires so much liquid to begin with. Flow battery technology has not demonstrated the benefits to 'outweigh' the cons. That is why nobody is seriously pursuing it in the auto industry.

    15. Re:Its a continuation by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      https://www.quora.com/Is-it-tr...

      Leigh Christie's post on this is great.
      After tons of useful graphs and information...

      "Note: I have not actually done a curve fit, so I can not comment on the exact percentage. But given that it's doubling roughly every 9-14 years, I'd say 5-8% sounds about right!"

      Batteries are continuing to improve in dramatic ways. Dropping in price by about 5-8% per year, increasing in capacity about 5-8% per year.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    16. Re:Its a continuation by akozakie · · Score: 2

      Battery-powered devices are not the most important application. The current batteries are good enough to make them usable. It's not the real goal of this research. Just look at the list - can you imagine a flywheel-powered phone?

      The real goal is large-scale energy storage. Cheap per kW solutions with a long life (no, a few thousand charge cycles is not good). That's when "decarbonization" becomes possible. The goal is storage which scales to MWh locally and GWh globally, making unreliable power sources actually useful.

      Currently the production and consumption in the grid must match. This is difficult and costly. Burning stuff is the only way to build large powerplant which can quickly adapt to changes in demand. You need to be able to compensate when the demand rises, when it drops it's even worse. That's why solar or wind power are so difficult to add to the system on a large scale. In dynamic systems terms - not enough I in PID...

      Large storage is the solution. We have some now - I'm not sure about the English name, but these are hydro plants with pumps (pump at oversupply, dump when demand rises). Problem is, they do not respond that quickly, cost a lot and waste a lot of energy.

      Now imagine battery stacks large enough to power a large part of the grid for, say, an hour, or smaller ones at each generator, providing stable output for at least several minutes even when production stops. Suddenly you can run eg. entirely on solar and wind as long as the average production per hour in the entire grid is higher that the average demand per hour even at peak times. Transfer, even on long distances, is easier too - you can plan it, build local reserves over time where the need is expected in a few hours, etc.

      That's the holy grail of power grids. And yes, we can actually do this now, it's just much, much too expensive to build solutions that survive long term heavy use, don't explode easily, don't contain lots of acid, etc.

    17. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ONLY way any of all this research is ever going to be of ANY use is the day I see products on the shelf that relpace the old tech. Like new-on-the-inside AA, AAA batteries that last years, not days/weeks; like a car battery that is 70% lighter, 30% smaller and packs the same performance for my regular car (not having to buy a whole new car - that is silly). I would love to see a really efficient solar array (new "tech" announced every 6 months the past 12 years) and these new batteries - so I can take everything off-grid ... like tomorrow isn't too soon. But the reality is we hear about this all running in some lab, but never a single product of use. Oh, but the new tech batteries are in the iDiotfone 7.3 - so what, I don't need one.

    18. Re:Its a continuation by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Tell that to a fuel truck driver

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    19. Re:Its a continuation by Tough+Love · · Score: 2

      ...improvements are more likely to be incremental than breakthrough.

      Practical lithium-air would be breakthrough.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    20. Re:Its a continuation by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      You forgot flammable and explosive. That part has been achieved.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    21. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      Give it some air space

      Why would you do that?
      If I'm not mistaken flow batteries are a closed system when in operation: the liquids are not used up (like gasoline).

      Just no need to have that much in a car.

      Unless you want to use a flow battery as a local energy source. Which is kind of the thing we're discussing here.

    22. Re:Its a continuation by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Large tanks exist and have existed in various cars/trucks. It isn't a useful tech mostly because of the energy density gas/diesel and it's cheap cost. That last part is changing since the true cost of using it is starting to come due.

      Such changes can make other unworkable solutions into workable solutions.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    23. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Regarding air space, I believe there is typically some gassing space, but I could be wrong. As far as flow batteries in cars, I don't know what shift you are trying to make, but the discussion was clearly a flow battery in a vehicle.

    24. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I am talking about typical vehicles. Yes, there are some with very large tanks for various purposes, but you'll need 6 times the volume for the same range as a tank of gas if you use the info from the OP. The benefits of Flow Batteries aret't so great as to warrant hauling around all that weight.

      Regarding changes making unworkable solutions into workable solutions, well, there are some big changes still required to make flow batteries practical and economical for cars. Like I said, there are good reasons why auto makers are not seriously pursuing flow batteries.

    25. Re: Its a continuation by mandy2tom · · Score: 1

      Well I couldn't get a hold of a tesla power wall so I bought 4 Trojan re batteries made for solar $1600. a wonderful learning experience . clearly batteries are the future with Solar if all homes have batteries and most Will soon, at least in the form of electric car then there will be very little transmission line infrastructure to build out maybe only to tear down. I can see a future were appliances are all sold with 24 hours worth of battery built in, the TV the refrigerator have a battery enough to run them through the night from the solar they store during the day and the grid will basically be a backup generator The only way power goes out at my house as if the grid goes down and it's cloudy for four days and that's because I don't own a generator Batteries and solar are awesome!

    26. Re:Its a continuation by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Increases in battery life have been "incremental" but also exponential - the increase has been something like 7% per year on the average, a ten-year doubling.

      Pack safe!

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    27. Re: Its a continuation by mandy2tom · · Score: 2

      Batteries and solar power make net metering irrelevant The revolution is here there nothing to wait for, most people are still hashing out a 10-year-old argument. the collapse of the price of solar panels is astounding and people don't seem to believe it. their building solar farms of under four cents a watt next year will be under 2 cents.

    28. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The corollary is we will run out of oil in 10 years. Of course, neither predictions of doom nor of nirvana are likely.

    29. Re: Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Oh great, our grid will be so unreliable that we'll have to put batteries in our appliances. How wonderful.

    30. Re:Its a continuation by skids · · Score: 1

      Well, it's no longer news, but NiMH rechargeables that take over a year to self-discharge pretty much made alkalines obsolete for all uses but things you don't maintain every year. Consumers have yet to realize this, apparently, but you've been able to buy them for over a decade now.

    31. Re:Its a continuation by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      The majority of improvement of battery life in....

      Don't forget the 6-7%/year energy density increase in Li-based battery chemistries! I haven't done the math but if say one improvement such as battery energy density accounts for 40% of battery life improvement and you list 3 things that account for the other 60% then you're just being a debbie downer.

    32. Re:Its a continuation by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      *The world's next energy revolution is always more than five or ten years away.*

      The trick is to put yourself into suspended animation (or go off-grid on a desert island) for 5-10 years. That way, when you come back, you'll appreciate everything that has changed while you were away.

      If you keep up with every days' minor incremental progress, it's easy to lose sight of the overall progress that the increments have added up to.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    33. Re: Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to forget that micro evolution cannot possibly lead to evolution...

    34. Re:Its a continuation by dbIII · · Score: 2

      To get some perspective I suggest you consider how much fuel is in a large airliner and how there are greater consequences of shifting fluid affecting maneuverability. So while you have perceptively identified a potential problem you are on page one while many others are 500 pages into dealing with the problem.

    35. Re: Its a continuation by untoreh+ · · Score: 1

      You forgot cool batteries (no heating)

    36. Re:Its a continuation by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      350 liters is a lot, but the batteries in current electric cars take up a lot of space, too. Admittedly, batteries can more easily be shaped in weird ways, such as making a "skateboard" chassis with the batteries in the floor. Then again, maybe that could work for a fuel tank, too. The low CoG is nice, in either case.

      But those 350 liters are for a 1000 km. My current car does about 700 km on a full tank, but it wouldn't be a major issue for me if an electric car with a flow battery only did 500 km or maybe even 250km, as long as refilling it still only took 5-10 minutes like with gasoline.

      250 km would mean ~87.5 liters, if everything scales linearly, which is the size of the gas tank in a lot of cars today.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    37. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      As far as flow batteries in cars, I don't know what shift you are trying to make, but the discussion was clearly a flow battery in a vehicle.

      What?

      You were the one that said this: "Just no need to have that much in a car."
      That is nonsense, which was my point. Read it again.

    38. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inertial dampers aren't really "science" though. I know a few truck drivers who'd like to know how to control fluid motion in a container. Solved, you say?

    39. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Only a flow battery is not simply a fuel tank. Its has internals that keep two fluid separated by a membrane with maximized surface area. This is not a structural membrane that would serve well as a bafle. Changing the internal configuration affects performance. Also, its common knowledge that fuel weight is a major factor in airplane performance, which was part of my original point. Maybe I'm guilty of oversimplification of the problem, as you have oversimplified the solution. Over simplification of solutions is pretty common here on /.

      I stand by my overall point, the pros of flow batteries are not sufficient to outweigh the cons wrt powering cars, and there is lttle reason to think that will change.

    40. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Flow battery configuration requires two fluids to be separated by a membrane, which isn't structural,and other internals so like you say, there may be some restrictions on the overalll shape of the unit. That's a thoughtful point.

      Remember that in a gasl fuel tank, the amount of fuel weight goes toward zero as you use up the fuel, so you are not hauling the full weight alll the time as you would be with a flow battery. Lithium Ion batterries are also heavy, but they have pros that make them the best choice at present. The infrastructure to drain and replace flow battery electrlyte would be much more complicated and cost than simple chargers, and might not be practical for the garage.

    41. Re:Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have some of these and they're not bad. We mostly use them in the TV remote where they last about a month vs about 6 months with alkalines. They are cheaper but less convenient.

    42. Re:Its a continuation by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Sadly your overall point is you see a problem you do not know how to solve, think others don't know either and have not noticed the evidence that others have solved far more difficult problems of the same type.
      You've grasped at a straw to push an agenda and it doesn't fit. I suggest either you try another or try an approach other than pushing an agenda for the sake of it.

      It may help if you think of industrial uses instead of just a knee-jerk "but it's green so I must attack it to be a good Party Comrade" approach. This stuff really isn't "green" it's just extra machinery to make things run better in the modern world. It's only seen as "green" because British Petroleum and other major donors get money from things that it competes with.

    43. Re:Its a continuation by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      The two big energy storage targets are the car and home, strictly domestic. The big problem with battery engineering is the commitment to a major plant, there is real fear of attempting to go to production and market with a battery that turns out to be far inferior to the newest one on the market and your plant going bankrupt before it can pay for itself. Major storage facilities is nothing but corporate greed, wanting to keep a strangle hold on that inherent monopoly market, simply wont happen.

      For domestic energy use, the typical family will create and store their own electricity using their energy infrastructure and only use the mains for backup. Now that represents real problems for high density residential, commercial and industrial because under normal rich sticking it to the poor rules, the domestic market, out of the pockets of the poorest hugely subsidises the energy delivery costs to the richest users. There is a good chance people with more reliable energy creation and storage systems will cut themselves off from mains power to save money, unless they get paid sufficiently to put their surplus back into the grid.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    44. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

      You just said a lot of nothing. If you have a fliow battery design solution for vehicles that is practical , which you seem to think is straightforward, please supply it to the industry, or let us know what it is. I never claimed problems were unsolvable, only that they exist and don't appear to have practical solutions on the way anytime soon. Facts you'd prefer to ignore. But problems don't get solved when you can't even admit they exist.

    45. Re:Its a continuation by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      Are you jesting?

      Oil production hasn't peaked yet.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    46. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Read up a bit further. My posts were in response to this; https://slashdot.org/comments....

      Clearly we were discussing use in vehicles, and not 'local energy sources'. The usefulness for stationary power is completely different and none of my statements necessarily apply.

    47. Re:Its a continuation by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      But now you know the difference?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    48. Re:Its a continuation by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Who will be a very well trained, experienced and certified driver because of the extra hazards involved with hauling a tank that big. Even if the tank didn't contain flammables.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    49. Re:Its a continuation by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      The liquids are in two states, energized or not. Two tanks or one tank with a moving divider.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    50. Re:Its a continuation by dbIII · · Score: 1

      FFS there were pre-WW2 aircraft that pumped stuff between multiple tanks without the pilot having to deal with it.
      The industry has already had it since before your parents were born,

      You picked a really weird "con" to justify your dislike of something you see as "green". It's just a fucking maching - don't overlay your politics and emotional bullshit on it.

    51. Re:Its a continuation by akozakie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're probably right. Still, no difference - the major goal is not portable batteries, but large storage, enough to stabilize the grid. Whether it's at big plants, individual generators or at individual homes, factories, etc. is secondary.

    52. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      I clearly meant: "Unless you want to use a flow battery as a local energy source [in a car]".
      The addition of 'local' was to preempt attempted pedantry from people saying "batteries are not energy sources!"

      I have to say that your lack of reading comprehension is exhausting.

      I will reiterate: "Just no need to have that much in a car." is nonsense, as I have shown.

    53. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Whatever...nothing in your statement applies to using flow batteries in vehicles, the topic of this thread. Seems like you are the one heading off on emotional tangents, your last sentence being proof.

    54. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      You said "Unless you want to use a flow battery as a local energy source. Which is kind of the thing we're discussing here."

      It was not the kind of thing we were discussing here, and you seem to agree. Maybe you should write what you mean instead of blaming others for not reading what you meant despite your words.

    55. Re:Its a continuation by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      Maybe the battery can be charged relatively slowly when at home, but have the fluid replaced relatively quickly when out and about? I haven't researched whether that would actually be a possibility, but it could be worth pursuing.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    56. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      True, I believe you can slowly charge more like a normal battery, not sure either what that entails. Good point.

    57. Re:Its a continuation by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      Wrong.
      "Just no need to have that much in a car [...] unless you want to use a flow battery as a local energy source, [then there is currently clearly the need for that amount of liquid in a car]. Which is kind of the thing we're discussing here."

      You do understand that a car needs a local energy source to be able to achieve motion, don't you?

      Anyone with half a brain understood what I meant. The statement "Just no need to have that much in a car" was and is a ridiculous thing to say, which is what I was pointing out.

      Goodbye.

    58. Re:Its a continuation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      WTF are you trying to say? I was talking about a flow battery installed in a vehicle from the start. If you want to confuse people and call that a 'local energy source' so be it. A 'local energy source' could mean anything, such as one installed in the home that is local to the car owner. Its a meaningless descriptor that adds nothing to the conversation but confusion. A flow battery, installed in a car, is the energy source for that car... plain and simple.

      So, if I am talking about a flow battery installed in a car as the energy source, why would you say "Unless you want to use a flow battery as a local energy source"? 'Unless' implies you mean some other application.... you said it not me.

    59. Re:Its a continuation by dbIII · · Score: 1

      A concrete example is a lot of nothing but unfounded doubts are not?
      That sounds like an emotional instead of a rational choice to me.

    60. Re:Its a continuation by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      Yes, but people have been making the claim for decades. He was highlighting the fact that people have been making bullshit predictions like this for a very long time.

    61. Re:Its a continuation by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      ah! I got whooshed ...

    62. Re: Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buzzzzzzkilll... TROLL!!! Just because we don't have EVs that can cover 500 miles on a charge does not mean we have made truly significant strides. You remind me, of that jackass at the L.A. Times, Eric (Ig) Noble, who famously predicted that the "religion of EVs are a fad, and like Jonestown, will

    63. Re: Its a continuation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trolllllll!!!! BUZZKILL!!!! Take your negativity and crawl back under your rock. No one wants you around.

      You remind me of that prince of jackasses, Eric (Ig) Noble of the L.A. Times, who showed just how wrong he could be by professing that "this is the religion of EVs, and like Jonestown, will come to pass".

      The GM EV1 was one of the first EVs of modern times... it was powerful, silent and popular among celebrities including Tom Hanks, Danny de Vito, Martin Sheen and others. This was despite the fact that its heavy lead - acid battery packs could only provide about 70 miles range per charge. Since then, battery tech has improved significantly every year, so that now the battery packs are far lighter, and provide five times as much range per charge, and continue to improve and to get cheaper.

      The Tesla Model S is a seven-passenger sedan that can put Lamborghinis, Ferraris, and Porsches to shame: stripped down two-seater sports cars costing three times as
      much. And the Telsa costs just a tiny fraction as much to operate as those sports cars, which can cost thousands of dollars just for a tune-up.

      There is a reason the cost of gasoline rose steadily for decades, and then shocked everyone by dropping a couple of years ago, and continues to drop steadily-- OPEC realized that whenever gasoline prices rose even briefly, it caused the sales of EVs to spike--- and, once gasoline prices dropped back down again, those EV drivers did not return back to ICE cars. Those drivers realized just how much more powerful, quieter, far more efficient and less hassle EVs are--- no oil changes, tune-ups, smog checks... even brake jobs are very rare due to "regen" braking.

      OPEC countries get their oil cheaper than anyone in the world, yet solar power and battery storage for use overnight has become even cheaper than their own oil--- which is why all the OPEC countries have been installing vast tracts of solar panels to replace natural gas power plants.

      If OPEC finds solar power more efficient than their own fossil fuels, there is no reason we need to continue using yesterday's power supply.

      Tesla's gigantic Gigafactory battery plant near Reno, Nevada, is the largest footprint building in the world, and is nearing completion, but is already producing new battery packs. When completed, it will be able to dramatically reduce the cost of batteries due to economies of scale.

      OPEC can only reduce the price of crude to a certain point before they can no longer make a profit, and as EVs, their battery packs and solar panels continue to drop in price there will eventually be a point where their petroleum is no longer of value for anything but plastics and other non-fuel purposes.

  2. Unfair to bash nuclear by Elledan · · Score: 0, Troll
    The author of the article seems to have an issue with Hinkley Point, which is understandable, but to use it as 'proof' that nuclear is not viable, here's a counter-article, also from the Telegraph:

    "Until now, the absurd story of Hinkley has been as vivid an example of the self-deluding power of groupthink as could be imagined. All those ministers swept along by it, such as Ed Miliband, Chris Huhne and Ed Davey, should hang their heads in shame. This culminated in that humiliating spectacle last year (as also noted by Mr Timothy in April) when David Cameron and George Osborne invited the President of China to London, to beg him to lend us billions of pounds towards buying a reactor design so flawed that it could almost certainly never be built.

    Nothing should have brought this home more forcefully, as I noted last year, than the contrast between the Hinkley project and the way South Korea is building four nuclear reactors for the United Arab Emirates, to an already proven design and at only a fraction of the cost.

    Although the UAE only began talks with Korea in 2009, the year we began negotiating with EDF for its two 1600 megawatt (MW) reactors at Hinkley, the four 1400MW reactors for the UAE (hence their name APR1400s) are already under construction, with the first due onstream next year and the rest to follow by 2020. For £15 billion, they will thus supply 5600MW of electricity, much more than Hinkleyâ(TM)s 3200MW, so grotesquely subsidised that even Decc admits its cost could eventually be £37 billion."

    Saved in the Nick of time from the worldâ(TM)s most expensive power station

    To then bet on power storage to save solar and wind (both white elephants in their own right), seems rather comical.

    --
    Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    1. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's an mdsolar production, bashing nuclear is part of the game

    2. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Sique · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Hinkley Point C secured about 10 billion pound in subsidies, nevertheless EdF tries to get out of the building contract as they doubt they will make any profit. The original estimation for the price of an EPR at this size was 3 billion pound, now we are talking about 24,5 billion pound for the construction. The whole cost of Hinkley Point during its operation is estimated at 37 billion pound. At current energy prices, the warranties given for the price of energy coming from Hinkley Point C are estimated to cost close to 30 billion pound.

      There are enough reasons to be in doubt about Hinkley Point C.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    3. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      The original estimation for the price of an EPR at this size was 3 billion pound, now we are talking about 24,5 billion pound for the construction. The whole cost of Hinkley Point during its operation is estimated at 37 billion pound.

      Hinkley Point is the "F-35 of power plants". At least with Theresa May, Britain finally has someone with enough sense to pull the plug.

    4. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Elledan · · Score: 1

      The article bashed nuclear in general, which is unfair. Bashing Hinkley Point is however totally fair. No idea why making this point suddenly got my post modded 'Troll', but ah well =/

      --
      Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    5. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Exactly. Give me a CANDU 6 plant that's actually reprocessing its "waste" any day of the week and twice on Sunday. It's safe, reliable, and oodles of power coming from a small footprint. But no, instead we'll elect to dump all our R&D into new tech that uses tons of rare Earth elements, uses huge amounts of space, isn't dependable (due to weather), can't handle base load, requires lots of toxic chemicals to produce, has to be replaced every other decade, destroys ecosystems housing endangered species, and basically just fucking sucks.

      We have a solution to power requirements that doesn't cause any major issues. Replace all coal, oil, solar, and wind power with CANDU 6 power plants and reprocess the "waste" until it's so low energy that it can't hurt anyone. You'll end up with a relatively tiny amount of low-energy waste and a whole lot of fairly cheap, reliable, safe electrical power. If we made it a national priority, we could go 90% nuclear in 10 years in the US, but we'd have to wipe out a whole bunch of local government NIMBY regulations that do absolutely nothing to make anyone or any thing any safer.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    6. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      It's mdsolar; they won't submit an article that doesn't bash nuclear power. It could be an article about Python, but it better have something about how nuclear power is bad and dangerous or mdsolar won't submit it.

      Still waiting to see if mdsolar will ever respond to the fact that - per kwh generated - nuclear power is safer (causes less human deaths) than solar.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    7. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by gweihir · · Score: 0

      ... and reprocess the "waste" until it's so low energy that it can't hurt anyone.

      That is actually not possible. You have no clue what you are talking about.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    8. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we'd have to wipe out a whole bunch of local government NIMBY regulations that do absolutely nothing to make anyone or any thing any safer.

      So states' rights except when it's something I want to do, right?

    9. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      . If we made it a national priority, we could go 90% nuclear in 10 years in the US, but we'd have to wipe out a whole bunch of local government NIMBY regulations that do absolutely nothing to make anyone or any thing any safer.

      Great! Lets do just that! A good place to start would be implementing your foolproof method of uniting all US citizens behind you. Make sure you use data and experts and jesus to prove your point.

    10. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Give me a CANDU 6 plant that's actually reprocessing its "waste"

      Need material for your nuclear weapons program but can't get the right isotopes?
      CANDU
      India did that after all.
      That's as far as the "reprocessing" goes with that reactor.

      For general high grade waste processing, no it's not going to work with current reactors running today. There's a thorium based design that looks like it will come closer than anything before but there is no magic yet that will reprocess everything in fuel rods let alone other nuclear waste.

    11. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except that CANDU reactors are not weapons proliferation resistant. See: India's nuclear weapons program, all because of CANDU.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    12. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      CANDU has pretty solid safeguards against weaponization, but it's not like enrichment is all that difficult. Calutrons are fairly simple and old tech you can build in a garage (though you may not want to actually start processing material there if you enjoy being alive for long). You won't get amazing stuff out of them, but if all you're looking for is a uranium gun device, they'll do the job. If you're going with a plutonium based device, the synchronized, symmetric implosion is really your long pole anyway. Getting the plutonium will never be the real challenge there and an unlimited supply won't help you if it just blows itself apart prior to criticality.

      CANDU designs are already prepared for MOX fuel cycles (and theoretically, they'll run on thorium as well but nobody's ever actually implemented it to the best of my knowledge), but you'll want to take that into account when actually building the plant or you'll be in for some expensive refitting later. They don't do it in Canada for the same reason we don't in the US: policy says don't do it. But they've reprocessed used fuel in Europe, Russia, Japan, and other places around the world for a long time. You can actually also feed weaponized material from decommissioned nuclear weapons into these reactors as well (a process the US Department of Energy is looking into, since we have a whole lot of that stuff sitting around now thanks to START, START II, etc).

      That cuts a significant amount of your high level waste. You feed the rest into a fairly small number of fast neutron reactors. Yes, they'll be more expensive to run, but they're serving a greater purpose (turning dangerous waste into power and vastly less dangerous waste with significantly diminished time to reach non-hazardous status). House them in very safe, stable places like the US, Canada, and western Europe. We'll take what's left of the reprocessed material that the CANDU plants can't use anymore and extract most of what's left of its energy until there's just a tiny amount of waste with very little remaining energy. What remains is very easy to safely store and there's not much of it anyway.

      And before you tell me the fast neutron reactors are a pipe dream of the future, EBR-II ran for 30 years (until Congress pulled its budget in 1994 - thanks GOP!) without issue. Not only did it work and actually produce electricity, but it was truly passively safe (tested in 1986 in a complete pull-the-plug test with all emergency systems offline - the physics of the design itself caused it to shut down naturally on its own in the absence of the systems that normally run it). The design was commercialized, but hasn't yet been picked up - largely due to NIMBY and the economic and political problems it creates with state and local governments. So we already have the tech developed and tested; we're merely choosing not to implement it via incompetence and ignorance.

      None of this is politically feasible. It would require human beings behaving rationally and in the interests of the species as a whole. People on the right (no, not all of them) don't want to buy into the idea that fossil fuels are bad for the environment (even in cases where it's unquestionable that they are like towns buried under radioactive coal slurry) and people on the left (no, not all of them) have an irrational fear of radiation that rivals the anti-vaccine hysteria. Between that and the international cooperation it'd take, plus all the money required to get it kicked off, plus the coordination required, bureaucratic red tape to cut through, corruption to deal with, general incompetence, etc, it isn't going to happen anytime soon. But there's no technical reason we couldn't do it if we suddenly starting thinking and acting rationally in the best interests of our own species.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    13. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Two issues there: 1) CANDU actually is proliferation resistant (meets international standards for resistance anyway) and 2) No, India did not get it from there; they got the material from the CIRUS research reactor at Trombay that the US and Canada provided them under an agreement that it would only be used for peaceful purposes. So you're batting 1.000 somewhere, but unfortunately, this is Earth. :-)

      But neither of those things really matter anyway for a simple reason: most of what you're getting out of a CANDU plant is easy to get if you have the technical understanding to actually build a working weapon out of it. If you're going for a uranium device and you want enriched uranium, build calutrons and get your uranium. They're old tech that's well understood and documented. A group of decent engineering grad students with a few hundred bucks could build one in a garage and get decent materials out of it (though anyone operating it likely wouldn't live too long). But most of what the CANDU plant is going to give you is plutonium and you aren't building a working device out of that without serious know-how. North Korea's been trying to make that work for decades and they can't do it. Plenty of others have also tried and failed many, many times. In that case, the plutonium is the easy part; making a weapon that can bring it to criticality is the challenge.

      So what's the risk? A country that already has everything it needs for a bomb has one additional avenue, maybe, if they can bypass the safeguards? Nobody's joining the nuclear club because of CANDU - they're doing it because they've decided to do so and it really isn't that hard if you aren't trying to do the super cool shit.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    14. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      My point was not that it's a politically feasible plan. My point was that it's a technically feasible plan. The fact that it requires foresight and a supermajority of human beings actually thinking and acting rationally and in the best interests of the species as a whole (i.e. it'll never happen) does not negate the fact that there is no technical impediment to successfully implementation. Further, we'd all be far better off for it. But none of that matters because people - as a whole - won't agree to do things that make sense for everyone.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    15. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by dbIII · · Score: 1

      CANDU has pretty solid safeguards against weaponization

      You are saying that NOW after India used it to make nuclear weapons? Seriously?

      None of this is politically feasible

      China and a pile of other places don't give a shit about "politically feasible" so that excuse for a lack of a golden age of magic new nukes is getting a bit old.

      towns buried under radioactive coal slurry

      Oh come on now, do you think the readers are really that stupid? Alex Gabbard pushed that line and the bullshit about terrorists building nukes from ash but he was getting paid to lie when he did it. It's no more real than his novels about hillbilly moonshiners.
      It's as radioactive as fucking sand because that's what the stuff that becomes ash was before it ended up as impurities in coal.

    16. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      You are saying that NOW after India used it to make nuclear weapons? Seriously?

      Well, first of all, they didn't. They used the CIRUS research reactor in Trombay. The US and Canada gave it to them under an agreement that it would only be used for peaceful purposes.

      Oh come on now, do you think the readers are really that stupid? Alex Gabbard pushed that line and the bullshit about terrorists building nukes from ash but he was getting paid to lie when he did it. It's no more real than his novels about hillbilly moonshiners.
      It's as radioactive as fucking sand because that's what the stuff that becomes ash was before it ended up as impurities in coal.

      I didn't say anything about building nukes from coal slurry, so that's a strawman. I made the point that coal has real, measurable impacts that one can actually see whether one subscribes to the concept of global climate change caused by human activities (such as burning coal) or not. The idea is that you can readily see severe environmental impacts from coal and oil power plants without having to get into any sort of complex interconnected open system dynamics. You can just see entire towns buried by fucking coal slurry like Kingston, TN and in Martin County, KY.

      Also, coal ash is more radioactive than nuclear waste. But please, don't let facts get in the way of whatever agenda it is you're pushing. You done yet?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    17. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about building nukes from coal slurry, so that's a strawman

      The primary source of all that "radioactive coal slurry" hype (Alex Gabbard a former member of the administrative staff at Oak Ridge Labs) did.
      It's sand that got mixed in with the plant material before coal formation so if someone is using the radioactive hype about it is a very good lie or idiot detector.

      Also, from wikipedia for what it is worth:

      The 1998 Operation Shakti test series in India included one bomb of about 45 kt yield that India has publicly claimed was a hydrogen bomb. An offhand comment in the BARC publication Heavy Water — Properties, Production and Analysis appears to suggest that the tritium was extracted from the heavy water in the CANDU

    18. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      How about another source referring to a more recent Duke study? Further, coal slurry has plenty of heavy metals which are also ugly environmental contaminants that react poorly with human populations, particularly when they leech into water supplies (or just bury your town). In any event, I can't imagine anyone making the argument that it's good for humans or for the environment to have mountains of coal slurry hanging around. Outside of a coal lobbyist, I don't think anyone actually believes it's harmless.

      And you have to admit the Wikipedia linked info about Shakti is pretty damn thin. An offhand comment in a publication appears to suggest that maybe possibly something somewhere could have come from Bill's father-in-law's third cousin twice removed on a stormy Tuesday...

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    19. Re:Unfair to bash nuclear by dbIII · · Score: 1
      News just in - background radiation. How radioactive something is will be the important bit of information. That study into fly ash indicates that elements are present, which is not new information, but fails to describe how much.
      An important line is:
      "This means we can predict how much potential radioactivity will occur in coal ash by measuring the uranium content in the parent coal, which is easily discerned,"
      Coal typically just has silicates in it and rarely has much of anything heavier - "sedimentary my dear Watson" to misquote, since heavy stuff is not so often on shorelines where vegetation is. Those uranium rich coals are rare.
      So if you want a sensible discussion instead of your "radioactive coal slurry" weirdness you should consider that.
      I suggest you read a bit more on the topic and you will understand why the press release from an administrator at ORNL raised so much ire when it was published in Scientific American without any bullshit checking.
      You'll also get an idea why I knew not to take you seriously when you wrote about "coal slurry" - as you learn about the topic you'll see what terms are used and you'll wonder why I bothered replying instead of writing you off as an ignorant idiot fooled by a novelist who spent a bit of time pushing paper at ORNL.

      Outside of a coal lobbyist, I don't think anyone actually believes it's harmless

      I didn't say it was harmless just that the "more radioactive than nuclear waste" thing is utter bullshit. You are getting that from the PR move to try to pretend that nuclear power station waste was nothing to worry about by comparing it with coal in a ridiculous way.

      And you have to admit the Wikipedia linked info about Shakti is pretty damn thi

      I heard it from elsewhere some years ago which is why I wrote "from wikipedia for what it is worth". There was a decent book on the Indian nuclear weapons program a few years back but finding an online thing to link to is a bit more difficult. However you may recall that Turkey was blocked from buying CANDU reactors because of the fear that they would use them to make weapon materials.

  3. Still... by mr_jrt · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...and yet all the gains we get from battery improvements will continue to be squandered on yet more and more layers of JavaScript.

    --
    Boo.
    1. Re:Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, those 250-mile range estimates for Tesla are only when you have Javascript turned off.

    2. Re:Still... by Alomex · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...or JIT compilation for yet another hare brained programming language based on the JVM***

      The JVM motto: slowing down well written code since 1994.

      *** The Android Run Time (ART) compiles java to native code at download time.

    3. Re:Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure whether parent is "funny" because of its outdated misconceptions about Java performance, or because it mentions "Java" and "well-written code" in the same sentence.

    4. Re: Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I modded it because because it had all 3!!!

    5. Re: Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > *** The Android Run Time (ART) compiles java to native code at download time.

      Then they should rename it to the Fast Android Run Time...

    6. Re:Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or JIT compilation for yet another hare brained programming language based on the JVM***

      The JVM motto: slowing down well written code since 1994.

      *** The Android Run Time (ART) compiles java to native code at download time.

      JVM's run code fine, and fast enough without issues. Languages built ontop - agreed. ART.... what a clusterfuck that is.

    7. Re:Still... by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      ...and yet all the gains we get from battery improvements will continue to be squandered on yet more and more layers of JavaScript.

      But if your laptop could use a pumped storage lake for backup power, it could finally run Javascript efficiently.

    8. Re: Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Upgrades OS patch level

      "Now updating application 76 out of 312."

      Aiee...

    9. Re:Still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you do know that java script is Completely different from java. The only thing that is a similar is the name.

    10. Re:Still... by Alomex · · Score: 1

      No we didn't. Please tell us more...

  4. "the magical figure of $100 per kilowatt hour" by pem · · Score: 1

    Umm, no, that's not a magical figure by itself. I want to see below a penny per (kilowatt hour * full discharge cycles).

    1. Re:"the magical figure of $100 per kilowatt hour" by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing (one of) the magical figure is probably $battery pack + motor = $ICE drive train

  5. dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I had a penny for every slashdot article about batteries since the late 90s, I'd...

    1. Re:dream on by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2

      Have a 1600 megawatt tater battery?

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    2. Re:dream on by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If I had a penny for every slashdot article about batteries since the late 90s, I'd...

      Have enough to buy a 4000 mAh mobile battery?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:dream on by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      a 4000 mAh mobile battery

      How nice! A bomb that can finally get through security. *Put your phaser on overload* Do they really make that high pitch squeal before going off?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  6. Waste by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Many of the advanced battery technologies will have toxic chemicals. With huge production volumes, there's going to be a lot of poisonous waste materials. I suspect the environmental damage of new batteries is going to make the claimed damage of carbon seem like happy-fun-day.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    1. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect the environmental damage of new batteries is going to make the claimed damage of carbon seem like happy-fun-day.

      Anyone else remember when the environmentalists were urging all of us to use plastic bags, to save the trees? Maybe we shouldn't be paying as much attention as we do to the tree-huggers?

    2. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm sure you're Concerned, keep in mind that controlling pollution from a few large point sources will always be easier than reducing it from hundreds of millions of tailpipes.

    3. Re:Waste by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Many of the advanced battery technologies will have toxic chemicals. With huge production volumes, there's going to be a lot of poisonous waste materials. I suspect the environmental damage of new batteries is going to make the claimed damage of carbon seem like happy-fun-day.

      No, the current buildup of CO2 in the atmosphere is a slow-motion apocalypse because it leverages the sun's vast energy output to push the entire planet away from the conditions that humans evolved to live within. No amount of run-of-the-mill poisonous chemicals could touch it. (Not that these chemicals would be released into the environment anyway. Utility storage batteries are very easy to track and regulate.)

    4. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but I remember them encoring the use of reusable bags. Why use a one-time product? Ridiculous.

    5. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is why the gigafactory is being built out in the desert where no one will notice massive pollution for decades (and long after Musk has taken his profits and run).

    6. Re:Waste by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Was that before or after California's plastic bag ban caused a whopping 46% increase in deaths from foodborne illness? Why in the world would anyone sane use a reusable canvas bag for carrying food? Ridiculous.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    7. Re: Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been using one for 15 years. I wash things that aren't packaged and wash the bags occasionally. It's not rocket surgery.

    8. Re:Waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the old tech we got rivers spontaneously combusting.

      Your point?

    9. Re:Waste by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because washing vegetables before you eat them is hard.

      You can't fix stupid, especially through legislation.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  7. not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a few of those projects seem to be canceled already. also the solutions proposed sound lame. i mean who's really going to use molten glass to store power. once you can increase the efficiency of the battery in my phone i'll be impressed otherwise keep working on fusion.

  8. And don't forget space-based solar power! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Solaren said they'd have it working by 2016. Well, they have four months left, I suppose.

    1. Re:And don't forget space-based solar power! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If solar power ever isn't generated in space, we'll have even bigger environmental concerns. Ground-level stars are a significant contributor to global warming.

  9. Re:My own prediction by Arnold+Reinhold · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... Government subsidizing the development of new technologies has the universal effect of distorting competition and making any such projects fail. ...

    Like the railroads, airplanes, nuclear power, computers, the Internet, GPS, biotech, all of which had heavy US government subsidy in the beginning.

  10. How we "psych" ourselves out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's kind of interesting the games we play with our own heads and, at a national level, with propagandizing ourselves to flee from the monster in the room without actually looking at it.

    If we can find a way to store solar energy it is going to help, doubtless -- but not NEAR enough. The real problem is not "climate change" but oil, water, and mineral DEPLETION. We're rapidly nearing the point where the energy to extract more fossil fuel will exceed that from the additional fossil fuel. That is the monster nobody wants to talk about -- and God knows our "leaders" don't want to face. I'm not saying global warming isn't an issue, but it's way, way, way, down the list versus actually running out of oil...to purify and pump the water, to fuel the furnaces to smelt the metal, to run the mining equipment, to extract the critical minerals, to fuel the Habler process, to create the fertilizer, to make the plastics, to make the herbicides and pesticides, to grow the fuel. It takes TEN calories of oil to bring one calorie of food to the table. You are not going to run anything remotely resembling today's consumer driven, leaving-on-a-jet-plane, cheap and fast food economy with solar energy. Think about it and do some basic math. And consider that we're being sold a dream...that is propaganda. And oh how we want to believe rather than look at the elephant in the room.

    We've been reading about such storage breakthroughs, along with "dramatic" improvements in solar technology, for something like 50 years now. We've been reading about energy from nuclear FUSION for sixty years -- and the two story lines seem to both be filled with an awful lot of Hopey, urging us to join hands and sing Kumbaya a little louder while the darkness gets a little closer.

    When do we actually turn to reducing energy consumption, reducing importing from China, fighting fewer wars, importing fewer foreign workers, and actually get down to the business of "think global act local"? Just wondering. Hope is not a strategy.

    1. Re:How we "psych" ourselves out by skids · · Score: 1

      We're rapidly nearing the point where the energy to extract more fossil fuel will exceed that from the additional fossil fuel.

      No, without an alternative source of energy it will be economical to extract enough fossil fuel to completely ruin the planet. Civilization will collapse well before we reach fossil resource exhaustion due to agricultural resource exhaustion.

      When do we actually turn to reducing energy consumption, reducing importing from China, fighting fewer wars, importing fewer foreign workers, and actually get down to the business of "think global act local"?

      Half of those things have nothing to do with the energy problem and are just a personal political wishlist.

      Any strategy that relies on a universal sea change in mass behavior is no strategy at all. This has to be fixed supply-side.

  11. Re:how much is needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "seems to" means nothing. Anyone with any practical knowledge of the challenges is quite clear that transmission improvements only help to a point, and once that point is reached, the cost of making incremental improvements is way too much to justify.

  12. Government Is Long on Promises and Short on Result by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sounds like typical government bullshit, the type that some bureaucrat spouts to get or keep funding for his agency. You can be sure of one thing though, if something ever does come of government financed research it won't be the public that reaps the rewards. Some corporation will swoop in, patent whatever it is that the people paid to invent and then sell it back to us at an eye watering markup. Private profits and public loses, same shit different day.

  13. "The world's next energy revolution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Right around the corner again? Just like we're told every few years... no thanks. Articles full of progressive unicorn farts exist just to keep bad writers from starving.

  14. No... Think of the Children! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think of the children of coal miners, you insensitive clods!

  15. Haves / Have nots? by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's the only thing that worries me. The current system requires lots and lots of public infrastructure. That keeps prices down for the poor (economies of scale and whatnot). That's not gonna last If even the upper middle class doesn't want/need that infrastructure. The folks most able to pay for it aren't going to want to. They won't be using it. But it'll mean going back to the dark ages for the lower class...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Haves / Have nots? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If rich people start going to local battery storage, it will be because it's cheaper than our current system of utilities. If it's cheaper, then it means poor people will get it cheaper, too (and poor people mostly live in rented places anyway).

      In general, fear of inequality is not a reason to oppose improved technology.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Haves / Have nots? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      For the rich, if it is cheaper in the long run, they will spend the money. The poor don't have that lump sum to spend.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    3. Re:Haves / Have nots? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of people willing to loan money at low interest rates, just like now for cars.
      Again though, my apartment complex has a better water heater system than most private houses, so it's really only an issue if you own a house. Apartments are already required by law to have electricity in most states.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:Haves / Have nots? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      UMM, most people who are poor do not qualify for low interest car loans.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    5. Re:Haves / Have nots? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If they don't, then they won't be able to buy their own house, either.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:Haves / Have nots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vimes - "Boots Theory"

      http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/72745-the-reason-that-the-rich-were-so-rich-vimes-reasoned

  16. battery cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $100 per kilowatt hour is about what the ordinary car lead-acid battery costs.

  17. Re:how much is needed? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Depends on who you are rooting for; transmission works great for the entrenched utilities, but batteries work better for off-grid and micro-grid. Long term, batteries are likely to prove better for distributed generation as well.

    From an engineering, policy, and economic perspective I prefer distributed generation and emphasis on micro-grids; it works very well for everything but city cores, but those cores should be focusing on district heating and cooling, which might make them take longer to leave carbon and nuclear fuels.

  18. Zinc-Air batteries? by Khyber · · Score: 2

    Good luck with that until you solve Zinc's whiskering problem. Powergenix thought they had it solved with Nickel-Zinc batteries. Nope. 1.6V 2300 mAh is nice but not when you get less than 150 charge cycles due to whiskering.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    1. Re: Zinc-Air batteries? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you obliterate the whiskers in the same way you can with nicd?

    2. Re: Zinc-Air batteries? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Using an overvolt/overcurrent to zap the dendrites? Might work since the chemistry is fairly stable but the general problem with that is that the dendrites tend to grow back larger than before. Definitely would not try with any lithium chemistry.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  19. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 0

    Renewable energy is so cheap, it makes transmission worthwhile. Consider the Pacific Intertie or this project that will close Indian Point. http://www.chpexpress.com/econ...

  20. Today, a T-105 battery. Golf cart battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same size as a car battery, is about $105.

    225Ah x 6v = 1.35kwh.

    $105/1.35kwh = $0.78/kwh

    1. Re:Today, a T-105 battery. Golf cart battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wrong decimal place. $77.78/kwh.

    2. Re:Today, a T-105 battery. Golf cart battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong decimal place. $77.78/kwh.

      yeah, if you discharge it once and then throw it away

    3. Re:Today, a T-105 battery. Golf cart battery by fnj · · Score: 1

      Off by 100 times? That makes quite a difference.

  21. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 0

    But if everybody has an ev, and everybody has their old (80% of new capacity) ev battery for stationary storage, does that not cover everything you want to do?

  22. Re:Unicode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    %

    I'm sorry, what?

    I like Slashdot because there is no unicode. It could be why they haven't been hacked like everyone else.

    Unicode is malware, a virus

    I know this is offtopic, but I don't want the admins to be unduly influenced by bad ideas. I have put out a counterpoint. Please, Slashdot, don't ever use unicode here. You'll get nothing but problems, and you will attract many more trolls.

  23. Re:how much is needed? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Germany has plenty of problems with renewable energy, but they have an excellent national grid (much like the rest of Europe). A problem is that conventional plants cannot always ramp up or down quickly enough to cope with highly variable renewable power, and having a good national grid doesn't always solve that problem. You end up buying extra power at inflated prices, or are forced to dump power and sometimes even pay for the privilege. The grid manages but the economics fail. And that is where power storage comes in: it doesn't just balance the load but also prices.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  24. Hello "EditorDavid"; please stop quoting "mdsolar" by Bearhouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As many have posted here, his lack of objectivity is annoying and unhelpful.
    Thanks.

  25. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    But only a little may cover the situations that worry you and used EV batteries may provide all that is needed.

  26. One of many reasons to stop worrying... by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

    ...and wait for technology to catch up. At some point cost efficient storage has the capability, as TFA notes, to dramatically alter the utility and (especially) the cost-efficiency of intermittent renewable sources. The other critical point is energy transportation -- moving e.g. PV solar energy from Arizona or Texas to Maine without dropping half of it along the way. In the meantime, can we stop panicking and wasting huge amounts of money IMPLEMENTING immature technologies while they are -- immature?

    rgb

    --
    Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  27. Re:how much is needed? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    For how long, and what is the usage cycle for these 'used EV batteries' ??

    I can envision a future where there are piles of depleted/partially depleted 'used EV batteries' everywhere, and most of the value has been squeezed out of them. There they sit, with their seals deteriorating, and the lithium in them igniting.

  28. EOL considerations? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2
    Why is it never or rarely mentioned how long the batteries will last, and how they can be properly disposed of and/or recycled?

    .
    I remember when nuclear power was touted as being "too cheap to meter." No one ever talked about its by-products.

    1. Re:EOL considerations? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      well, because the only way for these to be economical, is to have either extreme cheapness, OR extreme long life.
      As it is, companies like EOS Energy have a flow battery that will last 30+ Years.
      Then we have Tesla which will provide Li-ion batteries for homes/small businesses that will last ~10 years.
      The question becomes, how economical are they? Both appear to have their place used in the right area. EOS Energy is great for large businesses, and utility scale. Tesla for small situations.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  29. That has to be the stupidest statement ever by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    to push the entire planet away from the conditions that humans evolved to live within

    Wow, in fell fell swoop you not only show that you know zero abut the history of the Earth's climate, but also that you actually believe evolution works exactly the opposite of the way it really does!

    Humans evolved over time to work within whatever climate they were given which changed dramatically over time - historically it's already been way warmer than it will be from the latest round of climate change, and vastly colder as well (which it will be again someday, not a cycle we can stop). They did not evolve through thousands of years just to mesh with the environment we have today (and which humans evolved "correctly" then, given that some live in very warm climates and some in very cold?), which is itself nothing but a transitory state that was never going to last.

    So even if it gets warmer humans will do what they always have done - adapt co conditions as the change.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re: That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, sorry, you have no idea how warm the latest round of climate change will get.

    2. Re: That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither do you, so what's the point?

    3. Re:That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's about as hot as it's been since humans arrived right now, and it's going to get much hotter. Not in evolutionary timescales, but within a couple of generations.

      Evolution would probably work in the long run, but don't forget that sometimes evolution works by wiping out almost every member of a given species leaving only a tiny handful of "fit" survivors. That hardly seems like a better choice than just switching our primary energy sources ASAP.

    4. Re:That has to be the stupidest statement ever by ultranova · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So even if it gets warmer humans will do what they always have done - adapt co conditions as the change.

      Actually, quite a few civilizations have simply collapsed when faced with changing climate. What makes you think one that already has trouble keeping infrastructure running isn't going to join them?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    5. Re:That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adaptation applies to species, not to individuals. People in old age who are caught in unprecedented heat waves are going to do what they've always done - die.

    6. Re:That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last time there was this much CO2 in Earth's atmosphere was before leafy plants were a thing. Or mammals. Think about that - tens of millions of years. In terms of animal evolution, we are in a territory that has never existed before except during mass extinction events. The atmosphere and climate are simply changing much faster than what evolution can deal with. Sure, there will be a few survivors, but it's not going to be nice.

    7. Re:That has to be the stupidest statement ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the Evolution we have to worry about, it is the natural selection. After an unfit species is culled several times, the oddball survivors are what we call "evolved". Considering the numbers of people that would need to be culled to alter the percentages in the gene pool, the diseases from the dead bodies alone might kill off the rest of the population.

  30. Re:how much is needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What wonderful claims made by the group that selling the project and asking for huge government subsidies.

  31. "Rapidly" - not by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We're rapidly nearing the point where the energy to extract more fossil fuel will exceed that from the additional fossil fuel.

    People have been saying that for something like 50 years... and it's less true than ever before. New technologies like Fracking always come along to keep cost of extraction cheap. The whole reason the price of oil has tanked is exactly because it's so cheap to use fracking to fossil fuels...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:"Rapidly" - not by jbengt · · Score: 2, Informative

      New technologies like Fracking always come along to keep cost of extraction cheap

      Fracking is relatively expensive, and only grew when prices of imported product went up enough to support its costs.

  32. We are 5-10 years out from a breakthrough.... by burtosis · · Score: 1

    That's the same place we were 5-10 years ago. Any improvement in battery technology is far more likely to be incremental than revolutionary. Even when lithium based batteries became mainstream about 12-14 years ago it was an incremental improvement and nothing anywhere close to an order of magnitude or more which would place thier energy density more on par with chemical fuel sources.

    1. Re:We are 5-10 years out from a breakthrough.... by mdsolar · · Score: 2

      But that breakthrough delivered. Now there is a gigafactory.

    2. Re:We are 5-10 years out from a breakthrough.... by ArtemaOne · · Score: 1

      What do you consider a chemical fuel source? I was under the impression that all fuel was a chemical, aside from maybe pure hydrogen.

  33. Re:My own prediction by Sax+Russell+5449D29A · · Score: 1

    I was talking about subsidizing the development of new technologies, not subsidizing the implementation of existing and proven technologies. Rail transport, for example, was an existing technology and not invented in the US.

    But your comment made me dig up a bit about the history of airplanes and it was rather funny in this particular context (from Wikipedia):

    The Flyer cost less than a thousand dollars, in contrast to more than $50,000 in government funds given to Samuel Langley for his man-carrying Great Aerodrome.

    The Flyer was the first airplane made independently by the Wright brothers, and it cost them approximately $1000 to build. The Great Aerodome (name says it all) was a flop, and it received $50 000 in government funding.

    Now I don't really understand why someone would think I'm a troll. These are/were my personal thoughts, which should be apparent in my original post, and they are stemming out of personal experiences in an org that dealt government funding to companies.

    --
    -SR
  34. If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I live in a medium density urban area, I want to go off grid. Not out of some prepper issue, nor are my present rates particularly abusive. I just hate utilities. I hate the people who run them. I hate the regulators who regulate them. I hate that they look at my house and see a guaranteed revenue stream. I want to cut them off and I will pay extra to do so.

    I will even inconvenience myself to do so. I would happily rewire my house so that the LED lighting isn't converting from 110 but from something the batteries were happier providing. I would coat the roof in solar cells, and I would buy a little generator to fill in any gaps. The same with things like my fridge or other power grabbers, they could be 24v or even 12v if needed.

    Here is my dream day. The utility goes to the government and demands that regardless of my being hooked up or not that I still have to pay them for the lines that run past my house, and the regulator says, "NOPE".

    To me it boils down to the utilities should be a public good like roads, and schools. Not for profit should be the rule. Yet I see board members at these utilities making huge multiples of the average person's salary, let alone the heads of the companies, or the investors.

    1. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet I see board members at these utilities making huge multiples of the average person's salary,

      Yet the alternative is to have board members making the average person's salary. Of course that will attract only the absolute dumbest people who are willing to take on the responsibilities and burdens of being a board member while earning what he could as a relatively care-free grocery bagger. Then the utilities will do some hair brained scheme that either endangers the lives of everyone in the city or forces the utility to go bankrupt (or the city's population to pay for the utilities stupidity).

      Board members are paid what they are because of the increased responsibility and stress involved and the demand for people that aren't brain damaged.

    2. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      actually, we need to have storage for homes, businesses AND MICRO GRIDS.
      One the of the things that we did right in North America was build multiple federated grids between America and Canada.
      THe problem is that we stopped improving it long ago. We need to move towards SMALL grids with batteries right at the doorway between the smaller grid and the bigger grids.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    3. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      You will hate utilities until you actually sit down and figure out the costs, construction and maintenance of running your own power source, whatever it may be. I live in one of the sunniest places in the world, and I know three people, all of them well-off and having taken full advantage of the state, federal and utility company subsidies for solar. In each case they were able to zero out their average residential utility bill for two people (though one of them is single) for about $40,000 US in capital cost. Each of them was willing to do a lot of their own tinkering during construction, and are doing as much of their own maintenance as they can to keep the costs down.

    4. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

      I was actually thinking that 100k was my initial high water mark. Building a cottage soon, and it will be an end to end experiment in off grid. The idea is that it is to be something that largely doesn't tick off my wife. Thus with few exceptions it just has to appear to be completely normal and not need endless fiddling. My thinking is that by proper power flow management, it should be pretty good. For instance, pumping water out of the well into the attic during peak sun is the sort of thing that prevents the pump from turning on when it feels like it, which might be a bad time.

      Then other things such as geothermal, lake water cooling, etc.

      One interesting one my friend did was to put a series of air scoop like vents. They open and close as both temperature requires, but also opens and closes the vents that take best advantage of the prevailing wind. The same friend has an interesting furnace that he feeds long logs into. This would be a pain if his place weren't also insulated to an insane level. Thus one long log thrown into the chute will easily heat his place for a winter's night.

      The key seems to also avoid two things: massive power hogs such as an electric clothes dryer which can drain a fairly robust set of batteries quickly, and to also avoid all the stupid little vampires such as xbox power brick.

      But back to the point of this original article, with really great batteries that were cheap and plentiful, a cottage would be perfect as I am away from it for lengths of time where the batteries could nicely store a volume of power. This is both nice to have the solar not throwing away excess power, and that the occasional stupid load (operating powertools) can be accommodated.

      The same goes for eventual home use. I suspect that if I had batteries that could cover something close to a week's normal power that it would smooth out my power usage/ average production to the point where I would need very little excess power generation, and little in the way of backup power generation.

      My hope is that a combination of trailblazers and ever improving technology will mean that the moment the technology crosses the critical cost threshold, that all the bugs will have been explored by people like myself.

    5. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

      I could probably find 100 people more qualified to sit on the board of my local power company who would do it for the public good, if the company clearly existed as a public good. I am talking engineers, businessmen, scientists, etc. They would do it for little to nothing. What these people aren't is politically connected, and deep and corrupt relationships with the regulators.

    6. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      I should have added that for all 3 households in my sample, zeroing out net residential power cost was NOT the same as going off grid. These families sold net usage to the grid during sunny middays while drawing from the grid at night. To go off grid, they would have had to install ore collectors and run Powerwalls (or other equivalent) to save their daytime excess.

    7. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by skids · · Score: 1

      Yet the alternative is to have board members making the average person's salary.

      No, there's a difference between "huge multiples" and "several times", the latter of which is probably palatable. The market is a fool to pay what it does for "executive leadership" -- an educated, talented person who is dedicated and works hard is still just one person, there simply is no justification for outsized salaries.

    8. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Careful what you wish for. In Maryland, if the water company (METCOM) runs a line past your house, even if your house has used a well for 100 years before METCOM was founded, you will be required to pay their maintenance and bond fees. They won't force you to hook up (many thousands of dollars), but they will hit you up for $15 or so a month (FOREVER) to pay back "loans" they took to service your area.

      And if you don't pay, you will get a lean against your house. And eventually they can have your home auctioned out from under you. We had a guy on the radio last year who owed like $800 to METCOM, though he had never used one drop of their water, and they took his house.

    9. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why shouldn't they make the average pay? They do one person's work. And if they think that the work they do is far harder and not worth it without extra pay, they can work on the call centre for the same pay. Nobody is making them work on the board.

    10. Re:If it sticks it to the utiities I am in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason that power lines are 110V and not 12V is the power loss via wire resistance. With 110V you need 12Ga to carry 1500W. With 12V the wire has to be impractically thicker, the chance of fire is higher if you undersize it.

  35. Re: My own prediction by cyber-vandal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Randroids always forget about those and pretend that something like nuclear power, which is incredibly expensive and difficult, would have ever existed without the taxpayer bankrolling it.

  36. Re:how much is needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Germany has also realized they have reached the point where they must slow down renewable growth significantly due to the problems you cited. They have benefited thus far from relying on the conventional generation and transmission of their neighboring countries to help maintain grid stability. They have hit a point where adding more solar and wind costs a lot to manage, and yet some days all that wind and solar doesn't even produce 10% of their demand.

  37. Re:how much is needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not a matter of who you are "rooting for". It's a matter of cost. $100 / kWh is extremely expensive, compared to utilities who can generate for $0.02 / kWh (higher of course during peak times).

    Residential customers pay around $0.10 to $0.12 per kWh, less for large industrial customers. Distributed generation has been promised for more than a generation and has failed to be proven as reliable or cost effective. So I don't see why it would be preferred from an engineering or economic perspective.

  38. Re:how much is needed? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Depends on who you are rooting for; transmission works great for the entrenched utilities

    It also works great for governments trying to collect taxes.

    It is much harder to tax electricity flowing between someone's roof and their kitchen.

  39. One can only hope by OneHundredAndTen · · Score: 0

    However, I have seen so many enthusiastic announcements concerning all sorts of breakthroughs just around corner, which never were heard of ever since, that I will cautious and skeptical until given solid reason to feel otherwise.

  40. Mr Fusion. Drop in some stale beer and a banana by mpercy · · Score: 1

    and you've got enough energy to time travel.

  41. FBI Psychology here---- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    posed as question.. so "NOO we want the NEW ORDER"

    what about the world?

    Yeah, the NEW WORLD ORDER!

    FBI SLASHDOT again.

  42. Another zero-value mdsolar submission by Loki_1929 · · Score: 0

    Editors, please stop accepting submissions from mdsolar. The articles are always biased and filled with unscientific drivel. Frankly, they're garbage. But they align with mdsolar's agenda of pushing solar and bashing nuclear, so they keep getting submitted.

    Please stop accepting their submissions. It's junk that reduces the credibility and the level of discussion for the site as a whole.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    1. Re:Another zero-value mdsolar submission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod up: funny.

  43. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Strikes me that stationary use is a more stable condition than mobile use. Probably pretty manageable.

  44. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 0

    Subsidies? That's what the nuclear industry is getting. This just makes electricity cheaper.

  45. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    You forgot that batteries are reused. Consider a 10,000 cycle battery.

  46. Re:Unicode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly, I agree. I like text, plain old ASCII text. Introducing unicode support is the first step to having the whole site littered with emojis, because millennials' retrograded brains are unable to comprehend concepts that can't be expressed as pictograms.

  47. Re:how much is needed? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    Only if the EVs are all being charged rather than during the day.

  48. CO2 causes brain impairment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Brain activity decline observed at 600 ppm, 1000 ppm atmospheric CO2.

    Satish U.; Mendell M. J.; Shekhar K.; Hotchi T.; Sullivan D.; Streufert S.; Fisk W.J. (2012). "Is CO2 an Indoor Pollutant? Direct Effects of Low-to-Moderate CO2 Concentrations on Human Decision-Making Performance" (PDF). Environmental Health Perspectives. 120 (12).

    Joseph G. Allen; Piers MacNaughton; Usha Satish; Suresh Santanam; Jose Vallarino; John D. Spengler1Satish U. (2016). "Associations of Cognitive Function Scores with Carbon Dioxide, Ventilation, and Volatile Organic Compound Exposures in Office Workers: A Controlled Exposure Study of Green and Conventional Office Environments". Environmental Health Perspectives. 124 (6).

  49. too bad that ppl are fools by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Seriously, the idea that storage will solve the need for base-load energy is just amazing to me. The reason is that MOST of the AE that is being pushed is from the sun and easily blocked. Many will claim no, but any number of the major volcanos on the west coast, can block 5-20% of our sunlight. That will bring solar AND WIND down quickly. This issue does not include the coming ability to control weather and then force clouds to block the sun elsewhere.
    As such, we NEED clean base-load power. Geo-thermal is great, but limited. H2O is Limited in America. As such, we need Nuclear power. Everybody wants Fusion, but we also need to clean up our current nuke waste. The best way is to build gen 4 reactors and then burn up the majority of that waste.

    And yet, ppl like mdsolar will continue to fight against Nukes, and push an AE ONLY future, even though it can not solve the CO2 problem in time.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:too bad that ppl are fools by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cheap, durable storage will solve MY PERSONAL need. It will allow me to disconnect from the grid. And if I and a few million of my closest friends solve their own personal needs, we will have a collectively large impact.

  50. Troll warning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "not only show that you know zero abut the history of the Earth's climate"

    An attack on the history of Earth's climate, i.e. what exactly shows how bad global warning is.

    Here is your "adapt".

  51. I expect this to happen with Linux, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like I've been writing about clean alternatives for the past 20 years -- as AC, I'm not that important -- only to be mocked by those saying coal will always be cheaper... and now this!

    The same thing will happen to Linux: lot' and lots of mockery and that "year of Linux" thing until articles come up in succession about countries adopting Linux en masse and everybody saying "of course, Linux is better, everyone knows that".

    And I'll just look like an idiot for spending a large slice of my life trying to prove exactly that, not being able to persuade anyone and then have it thrown back at me like it's obvious.

    Good thing that those guys who bet there wasn't man-made global warming lost their money. It's only fair they pay for being idiots on purpose. If only we could get the same with solar energy and Linux...

  52. Re:how much is needed? by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    "Transmission seems to solve almost all the problem with getting renewable energy to match demand."

    So why do Greens protest against transmission lines by reflex action, including those built purely to bring renewable sources to market? Examples are Sunrise Powerlink and the German Stromautobahn.

  53. No - and no and no by xtronics · · Score: 2

    As someone that has worked in the battery industry my whole life -- no - it is just the usual corporate welfare. The improvements are very small 1% and expensive.

    Lithium was a big deal - moving from 2 electrons to 3 - the other stuff is not really important - mostly noise - venture vulture stuff to get investors money.

    What is always missing is the real cost of battery power. A battery has a cycle life - take that number times the capacity of the battery and you get the total amount of power the batter will deliver. With that you can get a cost per kWh .. assuming the electricity to charge is free (it is not) - it is still very very expensive power.

    Now - in a electric hand drill - I am quite willing to pay the high price for that power - but not for running air-conditioners or powering a car.

    1. Re:No - and no and no by fnj · · Score: 1

      A battery has a cycle life - take that number times the capacity of the battery and you get the total amount of power the batter will deliver.

      Incorrect. The units of capacity are ENERGY, not power. Energy times a constant is still energy. The cycle life of a battery is analogous to how many times you can fill a fuel tank. If you could only fill a car's fuel tank a few hundred times before you had to replace it, and if your fuel tank cost $8000-16,000 instead of $100, THEN you would have a situation analogous to the electric car.

    2. Re:No - and no and no by mcswell · · Score: 1

      Given your background, perhaps you can explain what they mean by this "magical figure of $100 per kilowatt hour." Electricity from your local power company is about 3 orders of magnitude cheaper than that. So does this mean $100 to produce a battery that will produce a kw of power for an hour, and can be recharged 1000 times?

    3. Re:No - and no and no by xtronics · · Score: 1

      You did not understand or own a Prius...

      The term battery power is not referring to energy but a mode powering things.

    4. Re:No - and no and no by xtronics · · Score: 0

      I didn't mention anything about $100 - but you have the idea.-- 3 magnitudes cheaper - and similar to using an ICE -- and of course the electricity, distribution, conversion are not really free.. but 3 magnitudes makes it not important. So yes - battery power is REALLY expensive power - magnitudes more than the power-line. or ICE..

      Of course there is a second problem. As batteries wear out - they are typically used until they have 60% of their capacity - Thus the claims are always for a new battery - which isn't the reality.

      There is really nothing on the horizon (other than 'new and improved' lemon scented' BS ) that is going to change this. The battery cars are really a status symbol that minimum wage workers are forced to pay taxes to subsidize even though they can't possibly afford them. The bipartisan socialists that run this country apparently like forcing the poor to subsidize the clueless wealthy elites status symbol hobbies..

  54. Fracking is nothing new by sjbe · · Score: 1

    New technologies like Fracking always come along to keep cost of extraction cheap.

    Fracking has been done commercially since the 1950s so calling it a new technology is not really accurate. There have been some advancements in fracking but what really has made it viable is the worldwide price of oil going north of about $40/barrel. It's more expensive than drilling into big reservoirs of oil like in Saudi Arabia but the technique is nothing new. It's just become economical in the last 20 years as the price of oil has intersected with the cost of fracking.

    The whole reason the price of oil has tanked is exactly because it's so cheap to use fracking to fossil fuels...

    The reason the price has gone down is because there is a temporary oversupply. Fracking is a part of that but a bigger part is countries like Saudi Arabia intentionally pumping out more oil than demand dictates. Too much supply + not enough demand = low prices. It's a mostly a short term supply and demand thing rather something inherent to the cost of pumping. We had the price 2-3X what it is today not long ago for similar reasons. I expect we'll see prices like that again at some point, though not for a few years probably. Good time to buy oil/gas stocks if you're comfortable owning evil companies.

    1. Re: Fracking is nothing new by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      There have been some advancements in fracking but what really has made it viable is the worldwide price of oil going north of about $40/barrel.

      What made fracking viable was the advent of directional drilling.

  55. Re:how much is needed? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    good posting, but slightly wrong.
    You say that micro-grids are the way to go, yet, what is of concern is how to get costs cheap, AND to serve our national SECURITY needs.

    For example, we are about to move to EVs for our transportation. Great. Clean. Cheap. And was a Tesla owner, FAST with great driving.
    BUT, what happens when volcano blows or another nation controls the weather better? Clouds. LOTS OF CLOUDS. ANd a loss of sun, which also drops the wind. So, right when you need the energy, it goes away if we are heavily dependant on solar/wind.
    OTOH, if we have a MATRIX of electricity and we use the grid to move electricity across the nation, it means that if we lose power in one area (blocked sun, attacks, etc), then we can use the grid to help various areas.
    As to economics, a matrix normally is best. If you become dependant on one energy input, then you have to bolster it in some other fashion. It is for that reason that I LOVE Solar over Parking lots, roof tops, but hate it in massive projects out in the desert or other areas. We need to provide cheap electricity to buildings and batteries, so that they form a good chunck of the grid.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  56. Re:how much is needed? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    no. Not even CLOSE. The reason is that if a volcano blows, then we are blocked for weeks or months. And if it is yellowstone, it is for YEARS.
    THe smart society plans for LONG TERM ISSUES. It is because we used to do that, that we had the electrical grids, telephones, railroads, tugs, airports, and even highways put in all around America. It is also why America at one time developed the vast majority of this AE. Nearly ALL OF THIS happened in America. The issue has become that over the last 30 years, we have gone backwards due to the GOP/neo-cons/tea*. BUT that is a different issue.
    Regardless, the smart society PLANS for seucrity issues.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  57. Currently battery Tech is feasible enough ... by Qbertino · · Score: 2

    ... for the time being. It's cost that's currently the main hindrance. And that is being squished big time as we speak, or so a notable amount of credible experts say.

    An modern IC engine has north of 200 moving Parts, required gearbox not counted. A modern electric Car engine has 18 moving Parts and needs no gearbox.
    Once battery prices have dropped beyond a certain threshhold the entire global Auto industry will Flip so fast it will make our heads spin. This is bound to happen in the next 5 years, probably in the next 3, once battery prices are low enough.

    Gasoline in Personal Transport is on the way out, that's pretty much a given. And the advancements in cars will feel like the transition from steam to oil back in the day.
    Or even more significant.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Currently battery Tech is feasible enough ... by fnj · · Score: 2

      Almost all electric cars have a gearbox. ALL those of which I am aware and which are serious transportation do. The difference is that usually, one or two gear ratios are enough for electric. The norm for internal combustion cars is 4 to 6, occasionally more (plus reverse).

      Now, I readily admit that it is POSSIBLE to make a practical electric car which has no gearbox. It can be done using low speed individual wheel motors.

    2. Re:Currently battery Tech is feasible enough ... by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      A modern electric Car engine has 18 moving Parts and needs no gearbox.

      I'm pretty certain that is incorrect.

      Once battery prices have dropped beyond a certain threshhold the entire global Auto industry will Flip so fast it will make our heads spin. This is bound to happen in the next 5 years, probably in the next 3, once battery prices are low enough.

      While I personally can't wait for this to happen, all indications are that, even if every single new-car shopper from today onwards bought an EV instead of an ICE, it will still be around 2030 before a mere half of the cars on the road are EV.

      The only way to speed up the process will be to stop selling fuel, or raise the price by a few orders of magnitude.

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
  58. Imagine The Issues by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    The new technology is wonderful. And some changes are painful. But we still completely fail to deal with consequences of the rapid changes we are seeing. For example we know coal will be shut down. That means that big coal will have no money to repair damaged areas that are unsafe due to pollution. So is anyone doing anything to force big coal to have cash reserves for future clean-ups? Then we have the displaced workers in the coal industry who often live in areas where no other employment options exist. We simply can not abandon those workers and destroy the economy of states like W. Va..

  59. Re:how much is needed? by dgatwood · · Score: 2

    If the Yellowstone supervolcano blows, it's pretty much game over for most of the human population of the planet. The global cooling and ash deposition would result in worldwide famine for a decade or more. Power production is somewhere near the bottom of the world's concerns in that situation unless and until we build a huge underground cave underneath the entire American south with fertile soil and giant light fixtures.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  60. Re:how much is needed? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    no, it is NOT over for human life. Heck, we have seen other super volcanos blow and life does just fine.
    The last time that Yellowstone went it was at the high end of a VE7, and is expected this time to be at low-end of VE7 or highend of VE6.

    And here you go: But a Yellowstone megablast would not wipe out life on Earth. There were no extinctions after its last three enormous eruptions, nor have other supereruptions triggered extinctions in the last few million years. [Wipeout: History's 7 Most Mysterious Extinctions]
    However, it WOULD be criminal for our politicians to NOT plan for needing electricity since we are about to become very dependent on it. This is why I go after the far left. They continue to ignore facts, logic and science just like the far right and China are doing. Basically, the far left has become complicit in causing as much of the world destruction as the far right and China are doing.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  61. Re:how much is needed? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    In mobile use, the batteries are only used until the cost-benefit of the batteries weight renders them not useful for mobile use. They were well maintained during this part of their useful life and will be designed to contain the energy properly.

    Then, the scenario goes, they are removed from mobile use and put into stationary use. The problem being, in stationary use, they can just sit there indefinitely, and will sit there indefinitely, and deteriorate. Eventually to the point of enclosure voids and lithium fires.

    They could be properly maintained during this part of the life cycle, but does anybody seriously think they will be? The cost/benefit for these batteries implies keeping costs low. There will be scrap batteries over the place being squeezed into use until they are completely depleted, meaning there will be lots of batteries not being properly maintained.

  62. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    These batteries tend to report on their own health.

  63. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Not sure what you mean by this. V2G is interesting for stability but used batteries are the sort of thing you'd use to store solar or wind for later.

  64. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Champlain Hudson Power Express has got support. Maybe your examples are from poorly planned projects.

  65. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    no. Not even CLOSE. The reason is that if a volcano blows, then we are blocked for weeks or months. And if it is yellowstone, it is for YEARS. THe smart society plans for LONG TERM ISSUES. It is because we used to do that, that we had the electrical grids, telephones, railroads, tugs, airports, and even highways put in all around America. It is also why America at one time developed the vast majority of this AE. Nearly ALL OF THIS happened in America. The issue has become that over the last 30 years, we have gone backwards due to the GOP/neo-cons/tea*. BUT that is a different issue. Regardless, the smart society PLANS for seucrity issues.

    I don't see a lot of volcano planning in your examples.

  66. Re:how much is needed? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    There were no extinctions after its last three enormous eruptions...

    I never said extinction. I said dramatic population reduction. The previous eruptions didn't occur in a society where 7 billion people were consuming approximately as much food as we are capable of producing technologically.

    The ash cloud from a Yellowstone eruption would be expected to blanket most of the U.S. In affected areas, crop yield could fall to near zero overnight, and farmers would end up starting over. Given that the U.S. produces over 40% of the world's soybeans and corn, and 13% of the world's wheat, if those three numbers plunged, it would wreak havoc on an already stressed agricultural system. There's a good chance you would see significant famine and death.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  67. Re:how much is needed? by fnj · · Score: 1

    Consider a 10,000 cycle battery.

    Oh boy, where do I get that? Oh ... I can't ...

  68. Re:how much is needed? by fnj · · Score: 1

    Renewable energy is so cheap

    No it isn't. Wind and solar costs considerably more than coal and gas. The "fuel" may be free, but the amortization is anything but free.

  69. Re:how much is needed? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    I know there was a lot of interest in V2G a few years back, as you say primarily for grid stability, but everything I heard at the time indicated that it wasn't really effective, or at least not a game changer. From a utility side, you really need at least 1MW dispatchable on a 69kV circuit to have a meaningful impact. V2G offers distribution grid stability where you have a lot of residential solar, but not much for transmission stability.

  70. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Well, two year old breakthroughs notwithstanding https://www.ornl.gov/content/h...

  71. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Whoosh.

  72. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    My coop goes in for AC control to handle that. They seem to control it wirelessly. I expect water heaters will play a role soon as well.

  73. Yes, they will by drolli · · Score: 1

    technologies are usually "smashed" by newer technologies.

  74. Lots of poor have homes by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    usually mobile homes or manufactured homes but sometimes ones they build or maintain themselves (being blue collar). The houses might be shabby and falling apart, but they own them. In America home ownership is the only way to get ahead if you're not already rich. You lock in a rate (usually a reasonable one) for your housing costs. Rent goes up anywhere from 4-8% a year (they 8% spikes are recent and brought on by a lack of new building because we're running out of land that was developed before we stopped infrastructure spending). My worry is the poor (especially the Working Poor) are either going to be completely shut out of home ownership and trapped in the cycle of increasing rents. Moreso when a $50,000 solar battery system is part of the minimum barrier for entry on a home.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Lots of poor have homes by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      My worry is the poor (especially the Working Poor) are either going to be completely shut out of home ownership and trapped in the cycle of increasing rents.

      That's happening right now lol. Anyway, there are already companies willing to finance solar panels, so I don't think this will be a problem. If it is, we can have some kind of subsidy.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  75. Re:how much is needed? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    They could be properly maintained during this part of the life cycle, but does anybody seriously think they will be? The cost/benefit for these batteries implies keeping costs low. There will be scrap batteries over the place being squeezed into use until they are completely depleted, meaning there will be lots of batteries not being properly maintained.

    If battery maintenance turns out to be a problem (and it's not clear that it actually will be; what sort of maintenance, exactly, would these batteries require?), it seems like it would be easy enough to deal with: Add a $X deposit to the batteries' purchase price, and pay the deposit out when they are recycled. Et voila, now there's an economic incentive to properly recycle any battery old enough to be worth less than $X, rather than just letting it sit until it's worthless junk.

    We've dealt with this problem before (e.g. for 12V lead-acid automobile-starter batteries); solutions are known.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  76. That only works if you can afford it though by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    if you're relying on the savings from home ownership to make up for your stagnant wages and fund your kid's future than adding a $50k mortgage on top of it just so you can have electricity is going to hurt. A lot. If you don't already own a home that $50k is going to put a mortgage out of reach and put you in a exploitative position in relation to landlords who can.... :(.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:That only works if you can afford it though by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      If the mortgage payment is more than the savings on electricity DON'T INSTALL THE PANELS. Duh.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  77. Re:My own prediction by cheesybagel · · Score: 2

    So you are basically dismissing the Manhattan Project here. Even the investment on The Aerodrome was not totally useless. It ended up producing an engine design way better than anything the Wright Brothers had. A water cooled radial engine with 5x the horsepower and less weight. You are also comparing apples with oranges. The $1000 was cost in parts only while the $50000 was parts and labor.

  78. Headlines by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

    Betteridge's Law of Headlines: Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no.

    --
    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  79. Economic viability by sjbe · · Score: 1

    What made fracking viable was the advent of directional drilling.

    If oil is at around $36/barrel. Over 50% of the oil production in the US comes from fracking these days. If oil prices fall below $30 for a sustained period then fracking producers cannot remain in business. Right now the OPEC countries are pumping a lot of oil intentionally to keep prices low and put a squeeze on fracking producers and can do so because of their cost advantage. But this strategy cannot be sustained indefinitely since their oil reserves are finite and the oil that is more expensive to extract is still in the ground. Furthermore most of the OPEC countries set their federal budgets based on oil prices higher than they currently are so there will be political pressure to ease off on pumping sooner rather than later.

  80. The chemistry is "done" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The chemistry is "done" so there will likely NOT be orders of magnitude improvements.

    The slack is in the construction/manufacturing techniques at this point.

  81. They're rechargable. And recyclable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you wonder about how long gas will last and claim it a catastrophe that it goes so quickly? Do you worry that your car's body, made of steel, needs to be "properly disposed" of?

  82. Re:how much is needed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Renewables peak when demand price is highest, so overproduction is sold at high value. Where is germany's problem here?

  83. Re:how much is needed? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    Great! Now point out something that actually uses a lithium phosphorus oxynitride electrolyte outside of a lab.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  84. Re:how much is needed? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    And, it wouldn't even be that new to most of the people involved. It's called a 'core charge' in the automobile service industry - anything that is highly recyclable has one to incentivize getting that recyclable thing back.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  85. Re:Unicode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give it 500 years or so and we'll use stylized emojis, that like strokes of paintbrush don't represent anything in particular but have words associated to them.

  86. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 2

    Strange, TFA is about what is happening in labs.

  87. Re:My own prediction by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    And don't forget space flight. That failed spectacularly too.

    Signed,

    Meteorologists, global communications networks, scientists everywhere, and anyone who watches live TV.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  88. Re:My own prediction by Sax+Russell+5449D29A · · Score: 1

    Are you saying I'm completely wrong, or just partially wrong?

    --
    -SR
  89. Re:My own prediction by Sax+Russell+5449D29A · · Score: 1

    Well, I got to give the Nazis that one. Their war effort advanced rocket technology quite a bit among other things.

    --
    -SR
  90. Re:how much is needed? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    Strange, you replied to someone asking about where to get a 10,000 cycle battery with what is happening in a lab.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  91. Re:how much is needed? by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Which is why I qualified it. I expect tesla has made some but does not yet know which ones.

  92. I missed the utter bullshit link by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Also, coal ash is more radioactive than nuclear waste [scientificamerican.com].

    Look at the comments on that article and about that article - it's utter fucking bullshit derived from the moonshine fiction guy. The citation is a fucking newsletter at oak ridge, circulation under a hundred. It's a lazy example of reporting by press release and Scientific American got a lot of flak for that article.