http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/07/tesla-build-titanic-battery-facility
Tesla announced today that it will build the world's largest lithium-ion battery system to store electricity in Australia. The 100-megawatt installation—more than three times as powerful as the biggest existing battery system—will be paired with the Hornsdale Wind Farm near Jamestown, operated by the French renewable energy company Neoen, in a deal with the state of South Australia. The Tesla battery should smooth out the variability inherent in sustainable power generation schemes.
"Cost-effective storage of electrical energy is the only problem holding us back from getting all of our power from wind and solar," says Ian Lowe, an energy policy specialist at Griffith University in Nathan, Australia, near Brisbane. The Tesla system, he says, will "demonstrate the feasibility of large-scale storage." It might also win over skeptics who doubt that renewables can match the dependability of conventional fossil fuel and nuclear power plants, says Geoffrey James, a renewable energy engineer at University of Technology Sydney.
[...] The battery installation will be a key feature of the state's aggressive move toward reliably generating half of its electricity from renewables by 2025. That drive suffered an image problem last September and again in February, when power blackouts hobbled the state. Conservative politicians were quick to blame South Australia's shift away from fossil fuels. "It's very easy to use a blackout to attack renewable energy," James says. Investigations concluded that the failures were not due to the reliance on renewables but rather to the collapse of transmission towers in one case and unexpected power demands in another. In addition to helping match renewable energy generation and use, James says, the battery facility's "high power capacity will be available in quick bursts" to keep the electricity's frequency in the right range in the event of grid disruptions and demand surges.
Also at BusinessInsider, The Washington Post, and Tesla.
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Tuesday July 11 2017, @12:51AM (1 child)
I'm pretty sure I can find lots of examples of public utilities competing against private entities, where the lawsuits only stop when the right politician happens to properly defund or hamper the action of the public utility, following a balanced election in which nobody could notice completely unrelated excessive contributions by said competitors...
(Score: 2) by c0lo on Tuesday July 11 2017, @02:34AM
On short term, lawsuits won't get them anywhere election-wise... the memory of what happened is too recent inside the electorate.
Besides, the Aussies are pretty used with public utilities, state owned (totally or in part) operating on the market. The most recent of it: NBNCo [wikipedia.org].
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0