Volkwagen Touts Massive Energy Storage Potential of Vehicle-to-Grid Electric Car Batteries (reuters.com) 101
Volkswagen's chief strategist Michael Jost predicts their vehicle-to-grid electric car batteries could open up a new business opportunity: selling their electricity back to the power grid during peak demand. Reuters reports:
"By 2025 we will have 350 gigawatt hours worth of energy storage at our disposal through our electric car fleet. Between 2025 and 2030 this will grow to 1 terawatt hours worth of storage," Jost told journalists in Berlin. "That's more energy than is currently generated by all the hydroelectric power stations in the world. We can guarantee that energy will be used and stored and this will be a new area of business."
The German carmaker is not alone in looking into this field. German utility E.ON has been working with Japanese carmaker Nissan to develop so-called vehicle-to-grid services.
The German carmaker is not alone in looking into this field. German utility E.ON has been working with Japanese carmaker Nissan to develop so-called vehicle-to-grid services.
Why would it require fossil fuel? (Score:1, Flamebait)
It's not like you can't manufacture those batteries with wind and solar power.
The factories and mines don't need to run 24h/365.251d. Run them when there is sun/wind (which is nearly always the case anyway).
It only means having more production capacity ready. Raising prices a bit. But more than compensated by sun and wind being practically free, compared to fossil fuel.
Only a moron would still use processes requiring fossil fuels, when building a damn renewable energy *plant*.
And only an idiot would argue t
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Indeed I have replaced the kerosene in my old lamp with cleaner burning, albeit more expensive, whale oil. Best part is that it is completely organic!
Argument level: Full retard. (Score:2)
So you are saying you never heard of battery powered lamps? Or that tuey haven't been invented in your third world swamp yet?
Let alone quantum dot LEDs using nano fuel cells that process fully synthetic hydrocarbons created from compressed CO2 and water in a plant next to a solar power tower in some very sunny place, and collect the resulting CO2 in a tank.
Seriously ... I'm surrounded by troglodytes.
Re: Why would it require fossil fuel? (Score:2)
Re: Why would it require fossil fuel? (Score:2)
If only there were some way for your solar powered battery plant to store the excess energy it receives during the daylight hours.
Re: Why would it require fossil fuel? (Score:1)
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Go ahead, name a process that "requires" fossil fuels, or shut up.
Intercontinental passenger air flights.
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Go ahead, name a process that "requires" fossil fuels, or shut up.
Intercontinental passenger air flights.
Solar powered blimps.
Re:Battery Lifespan (Score:5, Interesting)
The batteries used in EVs will almost always long outlast the lifespan of the rest of the car. For Europe the average at which a car is scrapped is around 110k miles, for the US it 160k miles.
The batteries are already being recycled. You can buy very cheap home batteries from BYD that are using old vehicle cells. But it would be even better to use those batteries while they are still in the vehicles.
Vehicle 2 Grid (V2G) is probably going to be a big source of revenue for consumers and used to offset the cost of vehicles. There will probably be deals where you can get the car cheap by giving up that income, similar to some of the ones on solar panels. And naturally the car manufacturers want to be in on it.
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Most every vehicle I've scrapped has been due to rust. Once I was stupid enough to acquire one with an automatic transmission that died and it wasn't worth fixing as the rust was moving in. Usually about 400,000 kms on them.
Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:2)
Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:5, Insightful)
Took longer than I expected for the "my car has 9 million miles on the odometer and is still going" comment.
I gave you the average numbers. Do you know what the average is? It's not the outliers. And many cars get scrapped even before then.
It's usually down to them not being worth maintaining. You could keep them going almost forever but it's not cost effective. People value their time and reliability too.
Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:1)
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"And many cars get scrapped even before then." Complete nonsense. Show me the link.
They do, but only because they were totaled in accidents.
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Funny comment and factually true, but dishonest in relevancy. The average car does in fact get scrapped at 150k miles without ever being involved in an accident. Many car magazines and even review sites like consumer reports run specific pages on special models with high reliability or special car required in order to get a car to 200k miles. So the GP with his 240k miles on his car is the exception, definitely not even remotely the norm.
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"And many cars get scrapped even before then."
Complete nonsense. Show me the link.
https://www.goldeagle.com/tips... [goldeagle.com] There you go. Consumer reports says the average car lasts 150000 miles which is less than the OP's 160000 miles
Congratulations on having a reliable car. You are a rarity, don't pretend otherwise.
Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:1)
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"And many cars get scrapped even before then."
Complete nonsense. Show me the link.
https://www.goldeagle.com/tips... [goldeagle.com] There you go. Consumer reports says the average car lasts 150000 miles which is less than the OP's 160000 miles
Congratulations on having a reliable car. You are a rarity, don't pretend otherwise.
From the link:
According to Consumer Reports, the average lifespan of today’s cars is about eight years or 150,000 miles. That’s shorter, however than many well-built cars that are properly maintained. While there’s no real way to tell how long a car will stay trouble-free, most mechanics recommend a routine of ongoing maintenance to prevent major parts from failing. As a general rule, cars that have exceeded 200,000 miles on the odometer are running on borrowed time and may begin requiring additional maintenance in the coming year.
As it says "many well-built cars that are properly maintained" exceed this -- all of my cars have thus far, but not always by a large margin. The end-of-life is always the same, maintenance work that looks like a bad investment given the age. The OP's car, with 235,000 miles, is close to the limit of where my vehicles end up, about 250,000 miles.
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The OP's car, with 235,000 miles, is close to the limit of where my vehicles end up, about 250,000 miles.
It depends how quickly those miles were put on.
Was it 3 years or 15 years?
Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:1)
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Do you know what the average is? It's not the outliers. And many cars get scrapped even before then.
And those averages include totaled cars, not just cars that are worn out or too old. Guess what happens to electric cars in major wrecks?
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The battery is usually fine. It's all the crumple zones and expensive panels that cause it to be uneconomical to repair.
That's why there is a decent supply of used EV batteries already.
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Time is not the killer of li-ions. The interesting part about li-ion is that the number of charge cycles vary based on % filled/drained to, combined with heat.
For example, on Tesla's Panasonic's 18650 batteries is good for ~1200 cycles. Of course, that assumes 100% down to 1%. BUT, if you range from 90% down to 10%, it is supposed to be ~15,000 cycles. IOW, 10x
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Wait, my prius charges at 20% up to 80%. And it's from 2006. Are you saying that Tesla hasn't discovered this yet?
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The batteries used in EVs will almost always long outlast the lifespan of the rest of the car.
The average age of a car in the USA is nearly 12 years old. [usatoday.com] The inventory typical of buy-here-pay-here car lots is usually even older. A quick cars.com search revealed within 50 miles of me, there's approximately 574 vehicles available that are 2008 or older with under 150k miles on them. Hell, I own a 1999 vehicle with about 144k on it, and it still runs fine.
Just because you may not personally want to drive a car until the wheels fall off, doesn't mean no one else does.
EVs absolutely are already starti
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Re: Battery Lifespan (Score:2)
Re:Battery Lifespan (Score:5, Informative)
And the Lithium in the battery is not burnt like in fossil fuels. It is still there in the dead battery and it can be recovered. The batteries are warrantied for 8 years. But realistically they have useful life of about 10 to 12 years as automotive battery. Then a decade or more as storage battery. Then the packs will be diassembled and the cells can be reused. But battery price is expected to be just one third to one fourth of today's prices. So its anyone's guess whats going to happen to them.
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And in the future these charging stations will allow the car to reverse their charge and feed the grid.
Obviously all depending on how you instruct the system.
In the future power pricing will be flexible and depend on the availability and at times of a lack of it you'll get good money for your car's output, inversely charging during sunlight and/or sufficient wind will be cheaper than during a foggy
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When you are dealing with a fleet of tens millions of vehicles scattered across a continent all the special cases and exceptions and ifs and buts get averaged out. Sure, only a portion of that capacity - set to increase to one terawatt hour by 2030 when such a business of grid power arbitrage will be well established - can be utilized, but a terawatt is the entire average power consumption of the U.S. Having even 10% of that available to manage grid loads is an enormous resource.
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think they are taking into consideration that lithium batteries only have a life-span of a couple of years.
These are Lithium Ion (rechargeable batteries), not lithium batteries. Once they have been used up, you put connect them to an electricity supply and then they can work again. It's all a bit different from the way your watch battery works.
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Your 2010 Prius has a nickel-metal hydride battery.
I don't get why someone always has to bring up a Prius in discussions about EV battery longevity. It's apples and oranges, because a hybrid still produces all of its power from an ICE. You can even still drive a Prius with a totally crapped out battery [autotrader.com] - try doing that with a Nissan Leaf.
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Not only that, they overestimate how much of the EV battery will be available during peak time (which is 4pm to 7pm)
so most EVs will charge overnight, then use that charge on the commute to work, and bakc again. Then they get plugged in at, say 6 or 7 pm, and what remaining charge could be used to help deliver supply to meet that peak demand. But there won;t be that much left, and the EV will be plugged in for a quarter of the peak time at best.
Its much better if the power companies that are moving to renew
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Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation? (Score:2, Insightful)
As in: Will they give me a new car every 2-10 years? Or replace the batteries?
And compensate the degraded range?
On top of using my energy storage services!
Otherwise, fuck off!
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Now the good news. Power costs different amount to produc
Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation (Score:2)
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What we need, and maybe will get, is a battery-swapping "recharge" of the electric car batteries so that people rent, rather than buy the batteries in their cars. That way, you don't much care about the life of the battery, while the other recent news, that (who was it, Musk again?) recently (in the last few months) patented a "million mile battery" for electric cars.
So you're an entrepreneur with big bucks looking to invest, and you buy a stock of "standard" batteries that fit "most" battery-swappable EV
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Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation (Score:2)
Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradatio (Score:2)
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I wish for it to be implemented such that you can drive into a "gas station" pretty much anywhere and get a battery swap in about 5 minutes or less. That's what EV's need in order to "take over" from ICE cars, that and decent range at an affordable price.
Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation (Score:2)
If you have right to repair laws you don't have to limit yourself to what they allow you to do. Then it's simply a matter of whether you make enough money to pay for a new battery.
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No shit; beancounters eyeballing other people's resources... news at fucking 11.
Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation (Score:2)
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Re: Are they gonna pay for the battery degradation (Score:2)
The point would be: the car owner can save/make money with this. Example: we have solar that generates excess energy. Currently, we sell this power to the power company for a pittance, because everyone else also has excess. It would be far better to use it ourselves, via battery storage. And there is this huge battery sitting in our EV. So use it, down to some minimum based on your driving needs.
Or go farther and collect money from the power company, by selling power when they really need it.
This makes a lo
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You will get paid for the electricity going back to the grid, although in the USA thanks to corporatist lawmakers you will probably only get paid by having your meter spin backwards. With a fair billing system you would get paid the current rate at the time you supplied power to the grid, so you'd actually make money. The low rate charge and discharge activity at the top of your battery does little to compromise its lifespan, it's deep and or fast [dis]charges which reduce battery life.
Problem is... (Score:2)
...they don't have such vehicles.
Re: Problem is... (Score:2)
Wouldn't I want to keep my storage? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd say this might work with the aging population of Baby Boomers, who might have a car sitting around doing nothing, but they'll mostly be dead in 25 years.
And of course unless you can make a battery that degrades slower than the mechanical parts of the car while being used as power storage then this idea won't really work.
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Exactly! What is my reward for letting my car run low so I can't drive? Will they buy back my energy so I make a profit?
Very good point, but I wouldn't be selling that electricity back anyway, given that this would increase the number of charge cycles on my battery. The last thing you want to do is cycle the battery more, given that it will decrease the range sooner, and increase the risk of a failure happening sooner rather than later.
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Exactly! What is my reward for letting my car run low so I can't drive?
That's presumptuous. Who's to say that your car will run low, and won't just skim the top 20% off its charge? The vast majority of cars trips don't come anywhere near needing even 1/3rd of the battery available in any given day. Your car will be fine.
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I'd say the remaining 80% charge would suffice for your "more than 20%" trip. And if you're planning in a longer trip, turn off the grid storage feature?
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Exactly! What is my reward for letting my car run low so I can't drive? Will they buy back my energy so I make a profit?
Your reward is a few cents for something that cost hundreds of dollar to fill up your battery for your commute. Let alone the wear and tear of your batteris.
Re: Wouldn't I want to keep my storage? (Score:2)
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I really like your optimism, but disposable cups intended for the distribution of hot liquids come with a warning on them that advises recipients that their contents may be hot since some recipients managed to burn themselves because they did not make this deduction themselves. So yes, if such a scheme becomes widely available, there will be the most delicious stories about greedy morons stranding themselves with empty batteries.
Re:Wouldn't I want to keep my storage? (Score:5, Interesting)
NOW, how does that sound?
At my house, I can buy electricity at
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Can not believe how some of these CEO are. MBAs with a serious lack of intelligence.
My state passed laws (Score:2)
There were a bunch of old folk sitting around a table talking about something scary. Then at the end there was a "Vote no on proposition such and such". No explanation was ever given about what the proposition was or did.
The law passed, and now if you've got solar you don't get anything for the excess power you generate.
Re: Wouldn't I want to keep my storage? (Score:2)
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$800 was about how much we would take in. A powerwall in America costs somewhere around $7000 (installed). That is why I suggested that this becomes doable if utilities/state put up money towards it. If between the 2 of them, they put up say $3500, which means 3500 to be done by the building owner. Several years and it is paid for.
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At my house, I can buy electricity at .08/kwh / nighttime and sell it back for .16 / kwh from 1400-1800. If we do 30 KWH / day, that is ~$800 / year.
And how much did it cost to set up?
And for how many years can you guarantee the pricing will stay the same?
Welcome to the party bro (Score:1)
I am pretty sure Musk has pointed this out for -- what -- ten years now. At least.
I guess this articles is all about paying reverence to the Old Guard so I guess OK.
Re: Welcome to the party bro (Score:2)
Isn't the problem cars having too little capacity? (Score:3)
When did we go from "car batteries are too heavy, expensive and small to provide reasonable range" to "car batteries have so much excess capacity that they can fuel your car, house and your little dog" ?
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When did we go from "car batteries are too heavy, expensive and small to provide reasonable range" to "car batteries have so much excess capacity that they can fuel your car, house and your little dog" ?
These are not exactly mutually exclusive. For the second use, the batteries don't have to move so the fact they are heavy doesn't matter. For the first use, moving a car, your statement isn't fully true, but it is true that the weight of the batteries is the fundamental limit on range and performance. Battery driven cars are great for short ranges because the motors are much lighter than combustion engines for the same power. For longer ranges, energy density of the power source becomes more important
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When did we go from "car batteries are too heavy, expensive and small to provide reasonable range"
There's a simple answer: That hasn't been a problem for a long time. People in general just thought it was. Electric cars are slowly becoming the norms for buses and taxis, people who are in the 99th percentile of those who need range, and yet they work fine for them.
The solution to anyone who has had range anxiety in the past 5 years is to slap them across the face and say "Don't be a bitch, use your brain!".
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It's because people can't think rationally about what size battery they need.
They want 300 miles if range even if they only need it a few times a year. They will pay a lot of money, tens of thousands, just to save an hour or two a year.
So there is huge potential to use that excess capacity the rest of the year.
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When did we go from "car batteries are too heavy, expensive and small to provide reasonable range" to "car batteries have so much excess capacity that they can fuel your car, house and your little dog" ?
Marketting.
Reputation is important (Score:2)
After my Jetta TDI secretly spewed excess pollution for 10 years I'm not inclined to believe any claims made by VW's leadership.
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....And my TDI was in the shop for $800+ about every 13 months after the warranty expired. Some $25-50 part would croak but they would only replace an entire subsystem. Total scam.
I'm glad for the buyout, it allowed me to get out from under the maintenance hog.
No more Vdubs for me.
VW doesn't understand Power vs Energy (Score:1)
"...1 terawatt hours worth of storage ... That’s more energy than is currently generated by all the hydroelectric power stations in the world."
That's a meaningless statement: he is comparing watt-hours (energy) to watts (power). Two totally different units. Not a good sign when your "Chief Strategist" doesn't understand the basic science of energy.
If he had said, "That’s more energy than is currently generated by all the hydroelectric power stations in the world ->in an hour/day/week-." the
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Sounds great on paper... (Score:1)
...but totally sucks ass in the real world
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Problem is EVs shift the electricity peak period (Score:4, Interesting)
Overnight becomes the new electricity consumption peak. And thus prices are highest overnight. The opposite of how it is right now.
Meaning there is no longer any need to use EVs for electricity storage because the power generation needed to recharge all those EVs overnight, means there is more than enough power generation during the rest of the day. In fact this will be compounded by solar, which only generates during the day - precisely when we'll need electricity the least. There will be so much excess power generation during daytime that we'll have to scale back production unless we can find a place to put all that extra electricity. The EV batteries would seem like a great place to put it, except they're all driving around or parked at work during the day.
You can play around with the numbers for other countries too. The first two links I sourced give electricity consumption and miles driven per person for other countries.
Wouldn't the solution be to have charging stations (Score:2)
I can see the value (Score:3)
... if one has a time-of-use electric rate structure (e,g. noon to 8 PM costs twice as much midnight to 8:00 AM).
A Tesla 3s has 75 kwh power capacity. If you return home with 20% charge remaining, you have the capacity of a Powerwall (13.5 kwh). Since a Powerwall can nominally power a house for a day, there should be no problem powering your house during the expensive early-evening rates and then recharging the vehicle with cheap over-night power.
What are battery owners going to say about that? (Score:2)