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Under Current Policies, Residential Batteries Increase Emissions In Most Cases (arstechnica.com)

schwit1 shares a report: Another year, another reason to take the promises of residential home batteries with a grain of salt. This month, a group of researchers from the University of California San Diego (UCSD) published a paper in Environmental Science and Technology reporting that there are very few cases in which operating a residential home battery reduces overall emissions -- assuming that households are economically rational and trying to minimize costs.

Of course, if the battery is only discharged during periods of peak emissions and only charged when fossil fuel use is low, then a household might reduce emissions. But across 16 representative regions, operating a battery this way ended up being costly. "There may be good reasons to decentralize the grid through ubiquitous installation of small RES [Residential Energy Storage], but cost-effective emissions control is not one of them at the moment," the researchers write.

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  1. Re:A battery without solar is missing 1/2 the poin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Payoff on panels for me is about three years. Admitted lots of sun but no spectacularly good deals on the tariff. Payoff for batteries would be so long they'd be unlikely to ever break even.