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$737 Million of Your Money Bet on Molten Salt to Store Solar Electricity

The New York Times reports on the emerging science of storing solar energy through the heating of salt, and the taxpayer loan to SolarReserve making this experiment possible:

If solar energy is eventually going to matter — that is, generate a significant portion of the nation’s electricity — the industry must overcome a major stumbling block, experts say: finding a way to store it for use when the sun isn’t shining.

That challenge seems to be creating an opening for a different form of power, solar thermal, which makes electricity by using the sun’s heat to boil water. The water can be used to heat salt that stores the energy until later, when the sun dips and households power up their appliances and air-conditioning at peak demand hours in the summer.

Two California companies are planning to deploy the storage technology: SolarReserve, which is building a plant in the Nevada desert scheduled to start up next year, and BrightSource, which plans three plants in California that would begin operating in 2016 and 2017. Together, the four projects will be capable of powering tens of thousand of households throughout a summer evening.

Whether the technology will be widely adopted remains to be seen, but companies like Google, Chevron and Good Energies are investing in it, and the utilities NV Energy and Southern California Edison have signed long-term contracts to buy power from these radically different new power plants.

One crucial role of the plants will be complementing solar panels, which produce electricity directly from sunlight. When the panels ramp down at dusk or on cloudy days, the plants will crank up, drawing on the stored thermal energy.

That job will become more important if photovoltaic panels, which have plunged in price lately, become even cheaper and sprout on millions of rooftops. As the grid starts depending more heavily on solar panels or wind turbines, it will need other energy sources that can step in quickly to balance the system — preferably ones classified as renewable.

Most utilities are trying to generate as many kilowatt-hours of renewable energy as they can to meet stiffer state requirements on incorporating more alternative energy, said Kevin B. Smith, the chief executive of SolarReserve.

“As we move forward, we’ll get more and more traction with the fact we can provide more capacity,” Mr. Smith said, referring to his company’s storage technology.

The Energy Department seems to agree: in September it gave SolarReserve a $737 million loan guarantee for its project in Nevada. The plant will generate 110 megawatts at peak and store enough heat to run for eight to 10 hours when the sun is not shining.

The public’s view on loan guarantees for solar projects has soured somewhat since the bankruptcy of Solyndra, a California company that received a $535 million loan guarantee to build a factory to make solar panels — only to see the market for the modules crash.

But the outlook has always been clearer for companies that make electricity, which, unlike solar modules, is generally presold by contract.

Technical details of the SolarReserve and BrightSource plants vary slightly, but both will use thousands of computer-operated poster-size mirrors aiming sunlight at a tower that absorbs it as heat.

SolarReserve absorbs the heat in molten salt, which can be used immediately to boil water, generating steam that turns a conventional turbine and generator. Hot salt can also be used to retain the heat for many hours for later use. BrightSource heats water that can be used immediately as steam or to heat salt for storage.

The plants rely on salt because it can store far more heat than water can. But once molten, it must be kept that way or it will freeze to a solid in part of the plant where it will be difficult to melt again. “You’ve made a commitment to those salt molecules,” said John Woolard, the chief executive of BrightSource.

The rest here.

And here’s a video of the CEO of SolarReserve explaining why his company is not another “Solyndra.” We. Shall. See . . .

New on Planet Gore. . .


COMMENTS   12

EXPAND  

   01/03/12 14:33

Solar only competes because of massive govt subsidies.
Now they want to add another expensive "feature".

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Den
   01/03/12 14:53

Every conversion of energy from one form to another bleeds some of that energy. Conversion of energy from electromagnetic form (light) to electrical via solar panels is only 4-6% efficient. Conversion from sunlight to molten salt to electricity is about 20% efficient. Still no where near the 40% efficiency of coal powered plants and 35% efficiency of nuclear plants.

This sounds like a better approach than solar panels.

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MPM 62
   01/03/12 15:19

Solar thermal is more efficient but would still NEVER be built without subsidies and mandates.

The idea that PV panels will be so cheap that this will change the capacity curve is very specious. If that were true there would be no need for subsidies or mandates. To base a business model on that premise is wishful at best. That is why they need a government guaranty. Odds of "success" with subsidies and mandates - 80%, odds of success without them 0.00%. Odds that utilities would do the PPAs without being forced to 0.00%.

It is interesting that our country is flat broke and yet we continue to waste money on these fantasies. Want an energy solution - promote domestic energy especially fracking.

M

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 mojo
   01/03/12 15:36

Still waiting for the "Really, really BIG flywheel" idea to crop up...

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Aarradin
   01/03/12 16:01

I'd wish them the best of luck IF I wasn't being forced to finance their R&D.

When Venture Capitalists invest in something like this, they know there's a high risk but they also know there's a high reward if the new technology works and is economically feasible. When the federal government "invests" in these Venture Socialism schemes, the taxpayers are forced to take the risk while the owners of the private company has all of the potential reward.

Then, of course, is the fact that no one ever spends other people's money as carefully as they would their own. No venture capitalist would invest millions of his own money with as little regard to due diligence as the government "invests" taxpayer money.

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   01/03/12 17:56

Interesting approach to storing energy. Seems easliy testable on a small scale. I wonder if there are test results. And, if results are positive, why is it necessary for the government to provide the capital?

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   01/03/12 18:08

The results may not be all that positive. For as long as true scientists have been trying to get electricity out of sun, this doesn't seem all that dependent on recent techonological development.

It wouldn't be necessary for governement to supprt a viable project of this type. But why would government even want to provide the capital for an untested or unpromising project? The answers to that question are known and are probably present for this project.

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Dr. Steve
   01/03/12 21:11

We did this for Solar One in 1978 in Barstow. Total boondoggle then. Total scam now. SoCalEd and the taxpayers ate the cost for this fiasco, which produced negative net energy from the heliostat field/direct absorption tower and molten salt heat transfer system. I hope my children never find out I worked on this. "Alternative energy" really means that only in an alternative universe where the laws of physics are different will any of these bogus schemes work.

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   01/04/12 08:23

Thanks. Suspected as much.

Embracing a failed technology of 1978 as a new source of energy. Brilliant!

Well, not a lot of information on it quickly googled, but reportedly One (completed in 1981?) and a follow-up Solar Two with even more mirrors were abandoned. The Wikipedia and Solaripedia websites are never the less optimistic in their reverence. One and Two were joint projects of DOE, Southern California Edison, and some state governmental agencies. They have apparently dug themselves into a hole and have only one governmental answer.

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Den
   01/04/12 11:59

If I remember properly, keeping the mirrors clean was a major problem.

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Robert Warren
   01/03/12 22:05

I thought Rube Goldberg had died.

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gary gray
   01/09/12 09:30

Salts will have a major impact in energy production and conservation but not in the way this article suggests. The use of Phase Change Materials to reduce peak energy hour loading is the single best way for an individual to conserve energy and save money. The government should get behind the use of PCMs rather than this billion dollar boondoggle.

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