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A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
Overall, the ARRA smart grid seems to be focusing much more on intelligence, demand response, transmission and distribution, all of which are good things. In any event, we need a coordinated approach that has been sorely lacking in the past.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
Old Wizard, the bulk of the ARRA money is for technology deployment and demonstration, not R&D. The DOE is taking about providing matching funds for smart meters, demand response equipment, storage, improved transmission and distribution and distributed generation. Those asset in turn are supposed to make a profit for the sponsoring entities who have to believe the project is important enough to come up with half the cash themselves.
There will undoubtedly be some projects that may not prove to be cost-effective and might therefore be classified as advanced development, but ultimately it will take a private party that is willing to share the risks with the government.
I suspect one of the biggest problems in formulating a comprehensive energy plan is the lack of concrete performance data on the vast majority of the solutions that people are currently developing. If you put enough money on the table to adequately deploy and evaluate the principal contenders on a relevant scale, then a far more rational choice can be made with respect to the second through seventh steps. I agree that we have an immense and highly interconnected problem, but if we don't know what part various technologies can contribute to a solution, we'll never find a solution that does not involve starting over at dirt level.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
The DOE may well agree to make $20 million grants available to companies that you or I would not invest in, but unless those companies can come up with matching funds from private sources, the DOE money won't be released. In 30 years of working in small company finance I've seen very few investors that are willing to throw their good money after somebody else's bad money. The grant availability may make the private tranche easier to obtain, but the private sector will almost certainly serve as a counter-balance against DOE optimism.
Unless both the DOE and private money agree, nobody's money will be spent. That kind of public-private check and balance is, in my view, extraordinary.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
If we take a $200 LAB and get 500 cycles, the cost of storing a single kWh for future use is around $.40. If we take a $500 PbC and get 2,500 cycles, the cost of storing a single kWh for future use falls to $.20. If the PbC price comes in closer to $250, the cost of storing a single kWh for future use approaches $.10.
The 2,500 to 3,500 cycle range is a real sweet spot because it equates to a 10 year life in daily use. Anything much longer than that and you have batteries that outlive the devices they're supposed to power which leads to all manner of wild speculation about how the batteries will be re-tasked rather than recycled.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
I've previously published a chart from Sandia where a similar device known as the Ultrabattery survived over 17,000 cycles at a 10% depth of discharge from a 50% state of charge, which engineers tell me are real torture conditions. See:
seekingalpha.com/artic...
Knowing management's tendency to low-ball forward looking numbers, I would not be surprised to see higher numbers when they start producing a commercial product.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
Dave Marsh, welcome to the club. Your decoder ring and secret handshake should be arriving shortly. ZAAP has always been an interesting company that is still looking to hit its stride, a problem that most of the EV makers will have to cope with while they look for solutions that work and sell. Today the public seems to view EVs as a sacrifice, a downgrade from what they already have. Sooner or later a developer is going to come up with a must-have product (perhaps the PUMA) that the public views as superior to what they have. Then the game will change completely. In the meantime I think Axion will likely focus on the boring but profitable industrial and commercial markets that use engineers and accountants to make decisions and buy truckloads of batteries at a time.
frflyer, it's a brave new world out there and it certainly looks like the opportunities will be endless for cost-effective energy storage. If Merrill Lynch is right, the reports we are seeing on a daily basis are just a glimmer of things to come. It will be a wild ride.
The biggest barrier to any acquisition is control that's concentrated in a small group of people. While anything can be had for a price, there are a lot of us who have sweat blood for Axion and will not let go easily or cheaply.
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
www.earthtimes.org/art...
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
A Very Smart Plan for Federal Smart Grid Grants [View article]
Like any industry, the utilities have their leaders and their laggards. But I don't think it's fair to assume that the leaders lead because of legal compulsion. They lead because they want to provide the best possible service for their customers and they know that a failure to evolve will result in the extinction of their species.
I've seen enough unintended consequences over the last 30 years to assure you that you'll never hear me say "there oughtta be a law . . ."