RonPMexico t1_iqsg7gx wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The US's largest ever combined wind+solar/battery electricity plant has opened in Oregon with a generating/storage capacity of 350MW/120MWh by lughnasadh
So why bother with batteries at all? hydrogen storage, conversion between states, and gas delivery systems are all made exponentially trickier by the small size of the molecules. That's not to say it can't be done but it isn't done currently at scale.
[deleted] t1_iqsh43d wrote
[deleted]
RonPMexico t1_iqshx63 wrote
Yeah I think that operations on the grid aren't microsecond time sensitive. There is absolutely no way to predict usage with that granularity. Even then if that is what you are looking for it would make more sense for the batteries to back stop the hydrogen plant rather than the windmills.
terrorist_in_my_soup t1_iqsv9oz wrote
This might explain why. It's a good little article and explains well the nuances of hydrogen. Hydrogen It's a short read, but highly informative.
RonPMexico t1_iqswacr wrote
Right so back to my original point.
invisiblesock t1_iqsx8i1 wrote
... because the hydrogen economy doesn't exist right now.
RonPMexico t1_iqsxsna wrote
I wonder why the hydrogen economy doesn't exist? Hydrogen wasn't just invented.
invisiblesock t1_iqt4gzc wrote
Because much of the infrastructure isn't there or it hasn't been modified to support hydrogen. There will definitely be a hydrogen economy in the future, but that's still in the future.
Renewables need to be funded and built, investments need to be redirected into emerging technologies necessary for the production, transportation and use of hydrogen, e.g., electrolyzers, hydrogen turbines, fuel cells, hydrogen storage, subsidies and policies need to be created to make hydrogen appealing to hard-to-decarbonise industries.
I think everyone understands that a hydrogen economy will have to emerge very soon, but this is a thing with a lot of moving parts, so it's going to take a lot of effort (& money) to make it happen. There are also uses, for which hydrogen will simply not be feasible anytime soon, so other approaches will have to be pursued (e.g. heating and light vehicles).
RonPMexico t1_iqt4sld wrote
Oh well if everyone understands it I feel like a real dunce. Keep dreaming you dreams little buddy.
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