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Batteries or hydrogen or both for grid electricity storage upon full electrification of 145 countries with wind-water-solar?

Mark Z. Jacobson

2024iScience38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Grids require electricity storage. Two emerging storage technologies are battery storage (BS) and green hydrogen storage (GHS) (hydrogen produced and compressed with clean-renewable electricity, stored, then returned to electricity with a fuel cell). An important question is whether GHS alone decreases system cost versus BS alone or BS + GHS. Here, energy costs are modeled in 145 countries grouped into 24 regions. Existing conventional hydropower (CH) storage is used along with new BS and/or GHS. A method is developed to treat CH for both baseload and peaking power. In four regions, only CH is needed. In five, CH + BS is the lowest cost. Otherwise, CH + BS + GHS is the lowest cost. CH + GHS is never the lowest cost. A metric helps estimate whether combining GHS with BS reduces cost. In most regions, merging (versus separating) grid and non-grid hydrogen infrastructure reduces cost. In sum, worldwide grid stability may be possible with CH + BS or CH + BS + GHS. Results are subject to uncertainties.

Topics & Concepts

ElectricityElectrificationHydrogen storageRenewable energyWind powerGridGrid energy storageEnergy storageEnvironmental scienceHydrogenEngineeringElectrical engineeringChemistryDistributed generationPhysicsPower (physics)GeographyOrganic chemistryGeodesyQuantum mechanicsHybrid Renewable Energy SystemsIntegrated Energy Systems OptimizationWater-Energy-Food Nexus Studies
Batteries or hydrogen or both for grid electricity storage upon full electrification of 145 countries with wind-water-solar? | Litcius