Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2
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John, I don't know if you've covered this before, but it would be interesting to know what the relative $/ Kwh/ weight is for the various technologies. Also, due you have a sense of the relative potential market for various sectors of storage- light transporation / heavy transport/ grid support? Thanks, Isaac
Li-ion Battery Technologies: Understanding Their Development Path [View article]
John, When are you, Charles and Tom K. going to put together an index that an ETF can be based on- that would be an Energy ST & E. That would stand for Energy Storage, Transmission and Efficiency. I'm thinking a one stop shop for the likes of American Superconductor, Itron, Exide, Echelon, SQM, Quanta, Johnson Controls, etc (and yes even some Axion). Sign me up. And yes, that inactive tool for energy you referenced on Leebs article is very suprising. Thanks, Isaac
Smart Grid's Enabler - Alternative Energy Storage [View article]
Fitz, I believe its alot more energy efficient (and thus cheaper) to send remotely produced electricity to battery banks that are close to the end users via transmission lines, as opposed to physically transporting the batteries- since they are heavy. I'd like to have abanl of PbC batteries right across from my NG filling port in my garage, with my plug-in NG Ford ultracapactor SUV in between.
John, Do you think that the PbC technolgy is something that other companies can easily reproduce on their own, if axions work proves viable on a large scale? Thanks.
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
Battery Investing for Beginners, Part 2 [View article]
I don't know if you've covered this before, but it would be interesting to know what the relative $/ Kwh/ weight is for the various technologies. Also, due you have a sense of the relative potential market for various sectors of storage- light transporation / heavy transport/ grid support?
Thanks, Isaac
Li-ion Battery Technologies: Understanding Their Development Path [View article]
When are you, Charles and Tom K. going to put together an index that an ETF can be based on- that would be an Energy ST & E. That would stand for Energy Storage, Transmission and Efficiency. I'm thinking a one stop shop for the likes of American Superconductor, Itron, Exide, Echelon, SQM, Quanta, Johnson Controls, etc (and yes even some Axion). Sign me up.
And yes, that inactive tool for energy you referenced on Leebs article is very suprising.
Thanks, Isaac
Long Live the Cleantech Revolution [View article]
Thanks
Smart Grid's Enabler - Alternative Energy Storage [View article]
I believe its alot more energy efficient (and thus cheaper) to send remotely produced electricity to battery banks that are close to the end users via transmission lines, as opposed to physically transporting the batteries- since they are heavy. I'd like to have abanl of PbC batteries right across from my NG filling port in my garage, with my plug-in NG Ford ultracapactor SUV in between.
John,
Do you think that the PbC technolgy is something that other companies can easily reproduce on their own, if axions work proves viable on a large scale?
Thanks.