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New Thinks's avatar

I'll give you an idea for a column.

1) Electricity costs around $50/mwh. The comes to $0.05/kwh, which is a solid wholesale price for electricity, which will sell to the consumer for $0.15/kwh.

2) Large scale storage batteries will cycle once per day.

3) the current cost for the batteries is $120/kwh. That is $120,000/MWh. The battery will last 20 years. It will be cycled around 7,500 times. So, it costs $16 per cycle.

4) The $50/mwh is what it costs to generate the power, so the $16 per cycle is added to the $50/mwh. You also lose power in storage, about 10%.

5) That means your power costs, from the battery will be about $70/mwh. That gets you to $0.21/kwh to the consumer, a 50% price hike.

6) That assumes of course you cycle once per day, but as wind and solar add more and more battery capacity, what if you assume the battery cycles every 3 days? Every 10 days? How about once a year? That $0.21/kwh starts ballooning up very rapidly.

7) Again, this is over and above other management charges added to handle an unstable grid.

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jabster's avatar

Picking a nit: coal is not a hydrocarbon. It's just carbon.

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