I have solved the wind power problem.
Bear with me here, this is going to depend on widespread infrastructure and future technology.
Wind power isn’t a viable always-on solution because wind isn’t always on. Step outside your house right now: It might be windy, or it might not be windy. Even places like parts of Texas which have almost constant prevailing winds, the wind sometimes dies down. When it does, we burn coal to keep the lights on.
So in order to use wind power as an always-on power generation system, we’d need a remarkably large array of batteries to store power for when the wind dies down.
Of course, batteries are expensive. No-one wants to buy as many batteries as it would take to store the amount of power needed for, say, an entire day without wind.
What if there were an existing infrastructure solution to this problem, though? What if there were literally millions of batteries out there just waiting to get plugged into the grid?
Maybe there will be someday soon: Electric cars. They’re basically filled with batteries. Think about it: You drive your car for 15 minutes to and from work at times with low power usage (because people are driving to work instead of using power) and the rest of the time it sits in a parking lot or a driveway.
Instead of just sitting there, it could be plugged into the power grid all night powering up when demand is lowest. Then when demand is highest during daylight hours, it could feed back into the grid if the grid needed it.
We’d still need other generation facilities, yes, because wind might die down for two days and we’d be cursed with having no power and no cars to drive, but for most of the “wind is dying down for two hours”, the blips that are the real concern, electric cars would solve the problem admirably.
Tags: cars, environment, geekery, power



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Here’s how TVA does it: when excess power is being generated, impellers push water up into a reservoir up 1,000 feet. When power demand is high, they reverse the impellers and let the water drive them, generating excess power.
July 22nd, 2008 at 9:40 pmBut my idea needs a massive outlay of new infrastructure and future technology that is nowhere near adoption yet… so my idea is cooler :)
Though of course it’s just my idea, and just one idea out of many…
d
July 22nd, 2008 at 9:43 pmCan you imagine what a pain it would be to wake up and get ready for work, just to find your shiny new electric car has been drained of all it’s power?
July 26th, 2008 at 9:18 pmThat’s the opposite of grid load.
And I imagine there might be some sort of technical work-around for that problem. Maybe.
d
July 26th, 2008 at 10:56 pmEnergy comes in but it can’t get out?
July 27th, 2008 at 9:07 pm