nano-grids that won’t be economic for a decade smacks of a disconnect with economic reality.
Ten years ago adding solar and wind was the problem- it was too damn expensive. It came down 5x in ten years,
^ cognitive dissonance, disconnect from reality, or intentional "shell game" with terms and facts?
create the demand and the solutions will come and prices will drop post-haste, right?
You are fine with low efficiency utility scale thermal storage, but not low efficiency nano grid storage?
People on the other hand will do things that are in their economic best interest.
buying a Prius fits the bill. How many were sold last year? Prius sales have been on decline every year for the last 10 years in a row.
Toyota Prius Family Sales Figures
despite inflation-adjusted
declining MSRP's.
^ economics and C02 is not driving this behavior.
EV's are also not the solution to C02. Not as designed and implemented anyway. Adding daytime green energy does not change this, and we still don't have a solid plan for storage to shift when green energy can be used.
You're proposing hanging a battery on the wall of your house. By putting it at your house that battery (and the solar that charges it) costs 3x what it would in utility scale. It competes with a ~50% efficient plant burning natural gas (the obvious alternative way to get energy at night). Hence you're pitching an expensive battery against a small amount of cheap fossil fuel.
how about :
it was too damn expensive. It came down 5x in ten years. Do you think this trend will apply to home storage? It seems like you are arguing both sides.
How about you put that EV cars battery in the power plant and you buy a prius to drive, you output the same C02 as an EV on dirty power, and now have a lower electrical generation price too. using your figures it will be way more efficient, and cost a whole lot less to put an EV cars battery at the power plant than to put it in a car and charge at home with home generation or daytime green energy. And remember :
People will do things that are in their economic best interest.
Or perhaps this is all about rationalizing people that want their EV's (and to have others get them whether they like it or not), even if there are "issues" with the grid compatibility and actual C02 production.
Charging cars when the sun shines isn't that hard. But you're making it seem impossible, hence we should sit on our hands waiting for future technologies (or spend a fortune pushing water up hill). The
EV's have been available to almost all of us for over a decade (tesla), and there is still no way to charge at most peoples places of daytime business. Tesla has sold over 1 million cars. If it's not that hard, and we already know how to do it, why has it not arrived? I understand supply/demand cycles will force new supply where there is excess demand. The problem is the lag, and consequences of prolonged excess demand on critical systems (the power grid).
So you don't like the home wall storage idea, how about the same mandated extra storage battery concept, what if the 2nd battery is placed in a near by power plant? it will be cheaper in the long run, and :
People will do things that are in their economic best interest. Simple economics will win this argument every time...
we should sit on our hands waiting for future technologies (or spend a fortune pushing water up hill). The simple economics will win this argument every time...
We should make sure technology B catches up with technology A, or system Z will crash. We are already spending a fortune federally subsidizing growth of technology A, and technology B is still unsettled and mostly "ideas". I care about system Z.