• MonsiuerPatEBrown@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    I want a battery in my house big enough for me to lose power for 2 days and still cook with electric stove and have hot water from water heater.

    That is my dream for every house. To be able to have a stable power well from some kind of battery fed by a solar + grid sharing. To be able to offer extra power to a neighbor if they need it for a project or a party or help however.

    I don’t want to be energy isolated from the grid. I want to be energy insulated and be of the grid.

    • Knusper@feddit.deOP
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      1 year ago

      There is this vision for the future, where people can use the battery in their electric car (or a separately bought battery) to store power, either produced by their own cheap solar or from the grid during over-production. And then some software could sell that energy back into the grid at night or during high demand.

      If that becomes a reality, we might have it at least so that if a chunk of the grid gets cut off for a bit, it can actually tide that over.

      • Pok@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This isn’t so much a vision for the future, as it’s an option right now.

        I can’t wait until work puts in car chargers- Top off the battery for free during the day, come home and sell that juice back to the grid, baby!

      • Auzy@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        The problem with Hydrogen, is that its not efficient (fuel cells apparently are only 40-60% efficient). In contrast, batteries are 90% or more efficient (and improving)

        So, you’d be wasting 50% of the power generated, and wasting fresh water too… Thats all assuming too that the additional minerals in the water won’t cause extra issues either.

        Battery costs keep dropping, and the technology keeps improving rapidly.

        If they can get the efficiency much higher, maybe… It also might make sense for long range cars (at the moment) due to energy density

        But, in practice, companies like BP and traditional gas companies are the main ones who benefit from a hydrogen economy. Because they can use non-renewable to undercut everyone