Saturday, 13 September 2014
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THE CATCH-22 OF ENERGY STORAGE
Written by
Dr John Morgan, theenergycollective.com/
Read more at theenergycollective.com
Pick up a research paper on battery
technology, fuel cells, energy storage technologies or any of the advanced
materials science used in these fields, and you will likely find somewhere in
the introductory paragraphs a throwaway line about its application to the
storage of renewable energy.
Several recent analyses of the inputs
to our energy systems indicate that, against expectations, energy storage
cannot solve the problem of intermittency of wind or solar power. Not for
reasons of technical performance, cost, or storage capacity, but for something
more intractable: there is not enough surplus energy left over after
construction of the generators and the storage system to power our present
civilization.
The problem is analysed in an
important paper by Weißbach et al.1 in terms of
energy returned on energy invested, or EROEI – the ratio of the energy produced
over the life of a power plant to the energy that was required to build
it. It takes energy to make a power plant – to manufacture its
components, mine the fuel, and so on. The power plant needs to make at
least this much energy to break even. A break-even powerplant has an
EROEI of 1. But such a plant would pointless, as there is no energy
surplus to do the useful things we use energy for.
There is a minimum EROEI, greater
than 1, that is required for an energy source to be able to run society.
An energy system must produce a surplus large enough to sustain things like
food production, hospitals, and universities to train the engineers to build
the plant, transport, construction, and all the elements of the civilization in
which it is embedded.
For countries like the US and
Germany, Weißbach et al. estimate this minimum viable EROEI to
be about 7. An energy source with lower EROEI cannot sustain a society at
those levels of complexity, structured along similar lines. If we are to
transform our energy system, in particular to one without climate impacts, we
need to pay close attention to the EROEI of the end result.
The EROEI values for various
electrical power plants are summarized in the figure. The fossil fuel
power sources we’re most accustomed to have a high EROEI of about 30, well
above the minimum requirement. Wind power at 16, and concentrating solar
power (CSP, or solar thermal power) at 19, are lower, but the energy surplus is
still sufficient, in principle, to sustain a developed industrial
society. Biomass, and solar photovoltaic (at least in Germany), however,
cannot. With an EROEI of only 3.9 and 3.5 respectively, these power
sources cannot support with their energy alone both their own fabrication and
the societal services we use energy for in a first world country.
These EROEI values are for energy
directly delivered (the “unbuffered” values in the figure). But things
change if we need to store energy. If we were to store energy in, say,
batteries, we must invest energy in mining the materials and manufacturing
those batteries. So a larger energy investment is required, and the EROEI
consequently drops.
Weißbach et al. calculated
the EROEIs assuming pumped hydroelectric energy storage. This is the
least energy intensive storage technology. The energy input is mostly
earthmoving and construction. It’s a conservative basis for the
calculation; chemical storage systems requiring large quantities of refined
specialty materials would be much more energy intensive.
Carbajales-Dale et al.2 cite data asserting
batteries are about ten times more energy intensive than pumped hydro storage.
Adding storage greatly reduces the
EROEI (the “buffered” values in the figure). Wind “firmed” with storage,
with an EROEI of 3.9, joins solar PV and biomass as an unviable energy
source. CSP becomes marginal (EROEI ~9) with pumped storage, so is
probably not viable with molten salt thermal storage. The EROEI of solar
PV with pumped hydro storage drops to 1.6, barely above breakeven, and with
battery storage is likely in energy deficit.
This is a rather unsettling
conclusion if we are looking to renewable energy for a transition to a low
carbon energy system: we cannot use energy storage to overcome the variability
of solar and wind power.
In particular, we can’t use batteries
or chemical energy storage systems, as they would lead to much worse figures
than those presented by Weißbach et al. Hydroelectricity is
the only renewable power source that is unambiguously viable. However,
hydroelectric capacity is not readily scaled up as it is restricted by suitable
geography, a constraint that also applies to pumped hydro storage.
This particular study does not stand
alone. Closer to home, Springer have just published a monograph, Energy
in Australia,3 which contains an extended discussion of
energy systems with a particular focus on EROEI analysis, and draws similar
conclusions to Weißbach. Another study by a group at Stanford2 is
more optimistic, ruling out storage for most forms of solar, but suggesting it
is viable for wind. However, this viability is judged only on achieving
an energy surplus (EROEI>1), not sustaining society (EROEI~7), and excludes
the round trip energy losses in storage, finite cycle life, and the energetic
cost of replacement of storage. Were these included, wind would certainly
fall below the sustainability threshold.
It’s important to understand the
nature of this EROEI limit. This is not a question of inadequate storage
capacity – we can’t just buy or make more storage to make it work. It’s
not a question of energy losses during charge and discharge, or the number of
cycles a battery can deliver. We can’t look to new materials or
technological advances, because the limits at the leading edge are those of
earthmoving and civil engineering. The problem can’t be addressed through
market support mechanisms, carbon pricing, or cost reductions. This is a
fundamental energetic limit that will likely only shift if we find less
materially intensive methods for dam construction.
This is not to say wind and solar
have no role to play. They can expand within a fossil fuel system,
reducing overall emissions. But without storage the amount we can
integrate in the grid is greatly limited by the stochastically variable
output. We could, perhaps, build out a generation of solar and wind and
storage at high penetration. But we would be doing so on an endowment of
fossil fuel net energy, which is not sustainable. Without storage, we
could smooth out variability by building redundant generator capacity over large
distances. But the additional infrastructure also forces the EROEI down
to unviable levels. The best way to think about wind and solar is that
they can reduce the emissions of fossil fuels, but they cannot eliminate
them. They offer mitigation, but not replacement.
Nor is this to say there is no value
in energy storage. Battery systems in electric vehicles clearly offer
potential to reduce dependency on, and emissions from, oil (provided the energy
is sourced from clean power). Rooftop solar power combined with four
hours of battery storage can usefully timeshift peak electricity demand,3 reducing
the need for peaking power plants and grid expansion. And battery
technology advances make possible many of our recently indispensable consumer
electronics. But what storage can’t do is enable significant replacement
of fossil fuels by renewable energy.
If we want to cut emissions and
replace fossil fuels, it can be done, and the solution is to be found in the
upper right of the figure. France and Ontario, two modern, advanced
societies, have all but eliminated fossil fuels from their electricity grids,
which they have built from the high EROEI sources of hydroelectricity and
nuclear power. Ontario in particular recently burnt its last tonne of coal,
and each jurisdiction uses just a few percent of gas fired power. This is
a proven path to a decarbonized electricity grid.
But the idea that advances in energy
storage will enable renewable energy is a chimera – the Catch-22 is that in
overcoming intermittency by adding storage, the net energy is reduced below the
level required to sustain our present civilization.
BNC Postscript
When this article was published
in CiA some readers had difficulty with the idea of a minimum
societal EROI. Why can’t we make do with any positive energy surplus, if
we just build more plant? Hall4breaks it down with the example
of oil:
Think of a society dependent
upon one resource: its domestic oil. If the EROI for this oil was 1.1:1 then
one could pump the oil out of the ground and look at it. If it were 1.2:1 you
could also refine it and look at it, 1.3:1 also distribute it to where you want
to use it but all you could do is look at it. Hall et al. 2008 examined the
EROI required to actually run a truck and found that if the energy included was
enough to build and maintain the truck and the roads and bridges required to
use it, one would need at least a 3:1 EROI at the wellhead.
Now if you wanted to put something in
the truck, say some grain, and deliver it, that would require an EROI of, say,
5:1 to grow the grain. If you wanted to include depreciation on the oil field
worker, the refinery worker, the truck driver and the farmer you would need an
EROI of say 7 or 8:1 to support their families. If the children were to be
educated you would need perhaps 9 or 10:1, have health care 12:1, have arts in
their life maybe 14:1, and so on. Obviously to have a modern civilization one
needs not simply surplus energy but lots of it, and that requires either a high
EROI or a massive source of moderate EROI fuels.
The point is illustrated in the EROI
pyramid.4 (The blue values are published
values: the yellow values are increasingly speculative.)
Finally, if you are interested in
pumped hydro storage, a
previous Brave New Climate article by Peter Lang covers the topic
in detail, and the comment stream is an amazing resource on the operational
characteristics and limits of this means of energy storage.
References
1. Weißbach et al., Energy 52 (2013)
210. Preprint available here.
2. Carbajales-Dale et al.,
Energy Environ. Sci. DOI: 10.1039/c3ee42125b
3. Graham Palmer, Energy
in Australia: Peak Oil, Solar Power, and Asia’s Economic Growth;Springer
2014.
4. Pedro Prieto and Charles
Hall, Spain’s Photovoltaic Revolution, Springer 2013.
Bio: John Morgan: John is
Chief Scientist at a Sydney startup developing smart grid and grid scale energy
storage technologies. He is Adjunct Professor in the School of Electrical
and Computer Engineering at RMIT, holds a PhD in Physical Chemistry, and is an
experienced industrial R&D leader. You can follow John on twitter
at @JohnDPMorgan. First
published in Chemistry in Australia.
This calls for Octopus Diagrams, as in
ReplyDeletehttp://altenergymag.com/emagazine.php?art_id=1673
Meanwhile, I had a look again at the Huber & Mill's TYGER book "The Bottomless Well" and suggest another way of accounting for energy transformations in the form of IOU=I/U as in http://tinyurl.com/obhq3w9
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