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I posted this on LinkedIn.
The biggest problem with renewable energy is large scale, long term storage.
We are looking to flow batteries for storage in networks with high solar and wind generation in the network. Organic flow batteries that do not use critical materials appear to have significant advantages. Vid Beldavs
Robert
I would again like to focus on flow batteries using organic electrolytes from innexpensive materials available everywhere. No complications of supply chains for critical materials. As flow batteries scale and storage capacitiy grows significantly beyohd 100 hours the flow battery costs will drop. At least our numbers show this possibility. The challenge now is to go from lab scale to prototypes that can be piloted with users and then with lessons learned learned produced at scale. Our project is in the planning stages. We would welcome European or African partners eligible for European funding.
Vid Beldavs
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You are proposing using renewable energy electricity during the day to make syngas to burn at night.
To replace that renewable electricity, California would use natural gas electricity.
This is a huge waste, as natural gas uses far less electricity to acquire than syngas, and is at least 40% more efficient by your numbers.
Also, instead of burying the carbon, you are putting it into the atmosphere.
I wonder how long the carbon stays in the ground before leaking out as CO2? I was surprised to find that a landfill in the US is on the top 5 methane sources.I have to acknowledge that "do nothing" is a lot less trouble.
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Heating municipal solid waste (MSW) to produce town gas (via gasification or pyrolysis) releases several toxic gases, including hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen cyanide, ammonia, and various volatile organic compounds (VOCs).The process also generates dioxins, furans, and vapors of heavy metals like mercury and lead.
These gases require extensive scrubbing and purification to convert the raw gas into usable town gas.