The looming
threat of global warming has nearly everyone
- except perhaps those bickering
with each other in the Whitehouse - scrambling for lower carbon energy
sources. Intermittancy remains a
stumbling block for several of the lower-carbon renewable energy sources,
particularly wind and solar energy systems.
To be a serious contributor to grid-connected power systems these energy
sources need utility scale batteries that can store energy when the sun is down
or winds have died away. Unfortunately,
with current technology the cost of such battery capacity increases the
levelized cost of energy (LCOE) of renewable systems to an uncompetitive price
tag.
As a refresher,
LCOE is a measure of the average total cost to build and operate a power-generating
asset over is lifetime relative to the total energy output over that lifetime,
i.e. total costs divided by total output. Typically expressed as cost per kilowatt
hour, it is handy for comparing different methods of electricity generation on
a consistent basis. The more bells and
whistles a system requires to produce power
- and meet environmental
standards - the higher the LCOE per kilowatt hour.
Let’s get back
to those batteries that could help make wind and solar ‘grid-attractive’. Lithium ion batteries have been the most
talked about battery storage technology in recent years. Unfortunately, lithium ion batteries do not
have a particularly long useful life, lasting only a few hundred
charge/recharge cycles. As a consequence,
batteries using lithium ion technology could add as much as $0.33 per kilowatt
hour to the LCOE for wind or solar power systems with a storage component.
Flow battery
technology is considered a viable alternative to lithium ion batteries for
stationary power sources. Flow
technology converts chemical energy into electricity by pumping electrolytes
through a stack of electrochemical cells.
First, as tested so far, flow
batteries show promise for numerous charge/discharge cycles. Some flow batteries can last through as many
as 10,000 cycles. Second, flow batteries
rely on a fluid electrolyte that can be replaced, reducing the overall cost of
operation. Thus it is expected that flow
batteries will present a far lower LCOE contribution - a
factor that makes it more appealing for wind and solar system operators.
There is a
gaggle of developers with flow battery projects underway or with commercial-ready
battery products. Vanadium has been the
preferred material for several years and several vanadium-based storage systems
are already in operation. Zinc bromide
runs a close second. The most recent innovation is based on iron, which offers
the benefits of better safety and lower operating cost. Iron-based flow batteries are also considered
to be more environmentally friendly than those relying on strong acids like
vanadium.
The next few posts will take a closer look at the
utility-scale battery developers and producers.
Company Name
|
Symbol
|
Flow Technology
|
Status
|
American
Vanadium
|
AVCVF: OTC
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Arotech
(Electric Fuel Energy)
|
ARTX: Nasdaq
|
Iron
|
Development
|
Gildemeister
(Cell Cube)
|
Private
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Energy Storage
Systems
|
Private
|
Iron
|
Development
|
EnSync Energy
Systems
|
ESNC: NYSE
|
Zinc bromide
|
Commercial
|
Imergy
|
Private
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Primus Power
|
Private
|
Zinc bromide
|
Development
|
RedFlow
|
RFX: AX
|
Zinc bromide
|
Commercial
|
UniEnergy
Technologies
|
Private
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Sumitomo
|
SSUMY: OTC
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Vionx Energy
|
AVCV: ASX
|
Vanadium
|
Commercial
|
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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