February 07, 2024
By Kavya Balaraman
Battery
storage plus hydrogen can enable a reliable, cheap clean energy
transition
A
Stanford University report found that transitioning to clean energy
could enable many countries to reduce annual energy cost by around 61%.
Image: Pixabay
A combination
of battery storage and hydrogen fuel cells can help the U.S., as well
as most countries, transition to a 100% clean electricity grid in a
low cost and reliable fashion, according to a new report from Stanford
University.
The report,
published in iScience, took a closer look at the costs involved
with ensuring a reliable grid in 145 countries, that used renewable
energy – including solar, wind, hydroelectric and geothermal resources
– to power their grids, transportation, buildings, industry,
agriculture, forestry, fishing and the military. The main energy
storage options it took into account included hydropower, batteries
and green hydrogen, which is produced using renewables.
The study found
that transitioning to clean energy could enable these countries to
achieve overall annual energy cost reductions of around 61%.
“The first step
is to electrify all energy sectors as much as possible… the efficiency
of electricity over combustion reduces energy demand by 38.0%,” when
averaged over 145 countries, Mark Z. Jacobson, the author of the study
and professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford
University, told pv magazine USA.
The second step
is to provide the electricity with just wind-water-solar sources and
storage, and eliminating energy to mine, transport, and refine fossil
fuels and uranium saves another 11.3% of all energy worldwide, he
added. End-use energy efficiency improvements beyond business-as-usual
reduce energy requirements another 6.6%, and a forecasted reduction in
the cost per unit of energy of about 9% results in an overall annual
cost savings to a country of 61%.
The study will
help electricity system planners create a more efficient and
cost-effective future energy system based on clean, renewable
electricity, Jacobson said.
“The results
provide countries with concrete evidence and the confidence that 100%
clean, renewable grids not only lower costs but are also just as
reliable as the current grid system,” he added.
The study
employed three kinds of computer modeling: a “three-dimensional global
weather-climate-air pollution model, a spreadsheet model and a model
that matches electricity, heat, cold, and hydrogen demand with supply,
storage and demand response assuming perfect grid interconnection,”
according to a statement.
It found that
while existing hydropower and batteries can ensure grid reliability,
adding green hydrogen to the system can reduce the energy costs in
some regions, although a combination of hydropower and green hydrogen
with no batteries is always more expensive than a combination of the
three. This is because every region with a highly renewable grid will
need short-term bursts of power, such as that provided by hydropower
or batteries, but not every region necessarily needs the long-term
energy storage provided by hydrogen.
Green hydrogen
storage can absorb excess electricity when there is too much wind or
solar on the grid, and then provide storage on scales of hours to a
few days, when wind and solar are not available and hydropower and
batteries are depleted, Jacobson said.
But the
technology still faces challenges; like any storage type, up-front
cost is always an issue, although the cost benefits are large in
comparison, he added. Policy makers can help address these challenges
by focusing funding on solutions like battery storage and green
hydrogen, rather than on carbon capture, direct air capture, blue
hydrogen, non-hydrogen electro-fuels, small nuclear reactors, and
bioenergy, Jacobson said.
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