Slashdot Mirror


Tesla Completes World's Largest Battery Project In Half the Time Promised (engadget.com)

Rei writes: Tesla announced the completion of the world's largest battery -- a 100 MW/129 MWh wind-power backup system for 30,000 homes in South Australia. Three times more powerful than any other battery on Earth, the $50 million project had garnered press due to Elon Musk's Twitter boast that it would be completed within 100 days of the contract signing or it would be free. In the end, Tesla took it up a notch: the battery was finished 55 days from the date of contract signing and 99 days from the date of Musk's boast itself.

4 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Now the bad side by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nobody else wanted his batteries so they had plenty of stock.

    Yeah, no one wanted his batteries so much that he was unable to fulfil the order using the existing contractual supplier (Panasonic) or from his existing factory and had to turn to Samsung SDI as an emergency second supplier.

  2. Re: Musk completes largest tax drain on Earth by DCFusor · · Score: 4, Informative

    I read zerohedge too, and it's full of Musk-hate and fake news, or just spun so hard it'll fly apart. Yeah, Musk has gotten some subsidies. More than Boeing and the rest of the MIC who get their own ExIm bank to loan countries with bad credit the money to buy MIC stuff? Which has gone on longer than Elon's been alive?
    Perhaps the haters can explain how the ULA drops out of bidding whenever SpaceX shows up, even though they got more subsidies for longer - and they say that they can't meet the bid price. Or how NASA crows about the huge savings they're now getting.
    Oh, we're talking about cars. So, GM got no bailout or subsidy to make my Volt?
    Haters gonna hate, but damn, check some facts, people.

    --
    Why guess when you can know? Measure!
  3. Re:I'm actually impressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Kinda. He bought the batteries "locally", reducing shipment time by weeks. They were made by Samsung, not Tesla.

    Any sufficiently motivated municipal electrical engineering company could have bolted all the pieces together.

  4. Re:The batteries were sitting around by EnsilZah · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tesla uses different battery chemistry for the stationary storage units.