Imagine a moving tower made of huge cement
bricks weighing 35 metric tons. The movement of these massive blocks is
powered by wind or solar power plants and is a way to store the energy
those plants generate. Software controls the movement of the blocks
automatically, responding to changes in power availability across an
electric grid to charge and discharge the power that’s being generated.
The development of this technology is the culmination of years of work at Idealab,
the Pasadena, Calif.-based startup incubator, and Energy Vault, the
company it spun out to commercialize the technology, has just raised
$110 million from SoftBank Vision Fund to take its next steps in the world.
Energy storage remains one of the largest obstacles to the
large-scale rollout of renewable energy technologies on utility grids,
but utilities, development agencies and private companies are investing
billions to bring new energy storage capabilities to market as the
technology to store energy improves.
The
investment in Energy Vault is just one indicator of the massive market
that investors see coming as power companies spend billions on
renewables and storage. As The Wall Street Journal reported over the
weekend, ScottishPower, the U.K.-based utility, is committing to
spending $7.2 billion on renewable energy, grid upgrades and storage
technologies between 2018 and 2022.
Meanwhile, out in the wilds of
Utah, the American subsidiary of Japan’s Mitsubishi Hitachi Power
Systems is working on a joint venture that would create the world’s
largest clean energy storage facility. That 1 gigawatt storage would go a
long way toward providing renewable power to the Western U.S. power
grid and is going to be based on compressed air energy storage, large flow batteries, solid oxide fuel cells and renewable hydrogen storage.
“For
20 years, we’ve been reducing carbon emissions of the U.S. power grid
using natural gas in combination with renewable power to replace
retiring coal-fired power generation. In California and other states in
the western United States, which will soon have retired all of their
coal-fired power generation, we need the next step in decarbonization.
Mixing natural gas and storage, and eventually using 100% renewable
storage, is that next step,” said Paul Browning, president and CEO of
MHPS Americas.
Energy Vault’s technology could also be used in these kinds of remote locations, according to chief executive Robert Piconi.
Energy
Vault’s storage technology certainly isn’t going to be ubiquitous in
highly populated areas, but the company’s towers of blocks can work well
in remote locations and have a lower cost than chemical storage
options, Piconi said.
“What you’re
seeing there on some of the battery side is the need in the market for a
mobile solution that isn’t tied to topography,” Piconi said. “We obviously aren’t putting these systems in urban areas or the middle of cities.”
For areas that need larger-scale storage that’s a bit more flexible there are storage solutions like Tesla’s new Megapack.
The Megapack comes fully assembled — including battery modules,
bi-directional inverters, a thermal management system, an AC breaker and
controls — and can store up to 3 megawatt-hours of energy with a 1.5
megawatt inverter capacity.
The Energy Vault storage system is
made for much, much larger storage capacity. Each tower can store
between 20 and 80 megawatt hours at a cost of 6 cents per kilowatt hour
(on a levelized cost basis), according to Piconi.
The first
facility that Energy Vault is developing is a 35 megawatt-hour system in
Northern Italy, and there are other undisclosed contracts with an
undisclosed number of customers on four continents, according to the
company.
One place where Piconi sees particular applicability for
Energy Vault’s technology is around desalination plants in places like
sub-Saharan Africa or desert areas.
Backing Energy Vault’s new
storage technology are a clutch of investors, including Neotribe
Ventures, Cemex Ventures, Idealab and SoftBank.
Source. Techcrunch, Johnathan Schreiber, August 14, 2019
***
This post was brought to you by Woewoda Communications, your partner in the venture capital, private equity and startup markets; offering strategic communications, public relations & investor relation services to Canadian VCs, PEs, Angels, Endowments/Trusts, Family Offices, and Canadian startups involved in ICT, IoT, blockchain, life sciences, healthcare, agribusiness, clean energy, fintech, AI and robotics.
Are you a Canadian GP/LP/CI or a Canadian startup that needs to grow or scale? Give us a call! One of our representatives would love to explain how we vertically design, and then systematically layer each of our communication platforms to effectively reach niche target audiences for our clients. WC offers a unique synergistic approach to effectively communicate our client's message to their target audience.
Serving Vancouver, Montreal, Toronto, Waterloo, Ottawa and Halifax.
No comments:
Post a Comment