Public Release: 11-Dec-2018
Switching to a home battery won’t help save the world from climate change
At least until utilities charge less for energy coming from renewable power sources
University of California – San Diego
Home energy storage systems might save you money, but under current policies, they would also often increase carbon emissions. That is the conclusion reached by a team of researchers at the University of California San Diego in a study published recently in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
Conventional wisdom may suggest that these storage systems, which are essentially household batteries such as the Tesla Powerwall, could be instrumental in weaning ourselves off greenhouse gas-emitting energy sources. But deploying them today, without making fundamental policy and regulatory reforms, risks increasing emissions instead.
If residents use these systems to reduce their electricity bills, the batteries would draw energy from the grid when it is cheapest. And because utilities don’t structure how much they charge with the goal of lowering emissions, the cheapest power more often comes from power sources that emit carbon, such as coal. In addition, batteries do not operate at 100 percent efficiency: as a result, households that use them draw more power from the electric grid than they actually need.
For the systems to actually reduce greenhouse gasses, utilities need to change their tariff structures substantially to account for emissions from different power source. They would need to make energy cheaper for consumers when the grid is generating low-carbon electricity, researchers said.
The first-of-its-kind study, conducted by a research team from UC San Diego’s School of Global Policy and Strategy and Jacobs School of Engineering, modeled how residential energy storage systems would operate in the real world. The study modeled deployment across a wide range of regions, utilities and battery operation modes.
“We sought to answer: what if consumers on their own or in response to policy pressure adopt these systems? Would greenhouse gas emissions from the electric power system go down, and at what economic cost?” said lead author Oytun Babacan, a postdoctoral scholar at the School of Global Policy and Strategy.
The systems are so new that they are not in many homes. But this year saw a substantial increase in installations, with sales tripling from January to September of 2018.
When the systems are set up to operate with the goal of cutting emissions, they can indeed reduce average household emissions by 2.2 to 6.4 percent. But the monetary incentive that customers would have to receive from utilities to start using their home systems with the goal of reducing emissions is equivalent to anywhere from $180 to $5160 per metric ton of CO2.
“This is impractically high, and very high compared to other emissions reducing options that are available,” said Ryan Hanna, a postdoctoral researcher at the School of Global Policy and Strategy, who earned his Ph.D. at the Jacobs School of Engineering.
Most households adopting energy storage are likely to choose equipment vendors and operation modes that allow them to minimize electricity costs, leading to increased emissions, Babacan added.
“Thus, policymakers should be careful about assuming that decentralization will clean the electric power system, especially if it proceeds without carbon-mindful tariff reforms that aim to reduce residential energy bills and energy consumption associated CO2 emissions,” he said.
Absent tariff reform, policymakers could still encourage environmentally beneficial operation of the devices by ensuring that system developers and equipment vendors favor clean energy use by tracking and adjusting to variations in marginal emissions across the bulk grid, the authors noted.
Although the systems do not encourage cost-effective emissions control at the moment, authors were quick to note that the advantages of batteries should not be overlooked.
“There is an enormous upside to these systems in terms of flexibility and saving households money,” the authors said. “While the increase in home batteries deployment is underway, we need to work on multiple fronts to ensure that their adoption is carbon minded.”
Researchers selected 16 of the largest utilities companies in the country and dug into their tariff structure, carrying out the first systematic analysis of how much utility companies charge residential customers to forecast the economic and environmental impact of these systems, if they were to be widely deployed across the country.
Residential energy storage systems present a promising avenue for policymakers and companies such as Tesla seeking to decentralize electric power systems, reducing costs to consumers in the process.
In addition to Tesla, companies such as Evolve have invested heavily in residential energy storage systems. There also is an increasing interest in states such as New York and California to decentralize energy, both to empower consumers with greater control over their energy choices, and to create competition in a sector traditionally structured around regulated monopolies. With energy storage widely expected to play an integral role in efforts to deeply decarbonize the electric power system, organizations like the California Energy Commission are also actively advocating for their use.
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Co-authors of the study include Ahmed Abdulla from the Center for Energy Research and fellow at the School of Global Policy and Strategy, Ryan Hanna, a postdoctoral scholar from the School of Global Policy and Strategy as well as professors Jan Kleissl from the Jacobs School of Engineering and David G. Victor from the School of Global Policy and Strategy
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Seems as though there’d be a whole lot of minim and extraction from the earth to provide all the resources for these batteries. Thought mining and extraction of natural resources was taboo in the left-wing environmental world?
I look at it this way ..
I live in the typical suburban home ..
My electrical expense averages $200 per month or ~$2,400 per year
I can invest $60,000 @ur momisugly 4% in a diversified portfolio of dividend paying utility stocks
to cover that expense or invest that same amount to go “off grid” ( or not ) ..
So, far the “portfolio” approach wins ..
Switch everything to renewables and then they will come after that. People don’t get the cult of environmentalism.
Battery energy density is pretty low and have a chemical maximum. I recall tge equivalence is somethimg like 50Litres petrol = 2tonne battery. Hmmmmm.
My Leaf already does this. It sucks up 25kw at night when the rates are lowest, stores it, then I luse it during the day as I need it.
Get rid of thermal and there won’t be cheap night rates as available wind needs to recharge the grid batteries while your Leaf is encouraged to cheaper rates midday with the solar duck curve. Oh wait a minute you want to be driving it during the day or parking it at work? OTOH retirees and stay at home mums might want to call up autonomous cars with pay per km during the day to minimise resource use but if they’re all EVs how will that work? Methinks you need to look up fallacy of composition here.
Silly Goose… With a range of around 80 miles, it’s only driven one or two hours max. Plenty of time remains to charge it during the day, if that’s what you want.
At todays rates, I can install 6kw of solar panels for roughly $2400 (plus inverter, racking and installation) and then have free fuel for 25 years. Not a bad deal and I think that is what people will do long term. (Before the Leaf, I used to spend about $4k/yr on fuel, so this is an easy tradeoff.)
Don’t have space? The nice thing about electrons is you can put the panels anywhere and the electtons eill find you. 😉
BTW, solar panels are starting to become available (wholesale) at under $0.40 per watt. That’s just $2000 for enough panels to produce all the power an average house uses here in S California. (To that add racking, inverters, installation and misc.)
They could be costless and represent all they’re worth at night but what do commercially available batteries add to total cost per watt to make the solar panelled house self sufficient and reliable with power? Get back to us with that now won’t you? I like the idea of tyre prices coming down but it’s not the be all and end all with the cost of running my car.
Batteries are not required. Note that virtually no residential solar installations use batteries today. The grid provides whatever power is needed at other times, and a house needs to use little power at night.
Batteries are useful if you want to essentially arbitrage power (charge with cheap power and use instead of expensive power. E.g. charge from your own solar.) Batteries aren’t ‘required’ unless you’re off grid. Can be economically beneficial though.
The solution is so simple I can’t imagine why no one hasn’t thought of it before.
It just came to me when I was hooking up an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) for my internet router. Our electricity supply drops out for brief period several times per week.
Our state government raised the royalty they charge for Victorian brown coal three times in their last term, forcing 25% of the state’s electricity generation to be shut down. All that’s besides the point.
Here’s my brilliant idea.
While plugging in the router to the UPS, I thought “Why just the router? Why not everything?” (I’ve always prided myself on “thinking outside the box”.)
So I plugged in the house lights, stove, heater, air-conditioner and everything else I could think of into the UPS. I had to use a few power boards and extension leads, but the cost was more than covered by the money I saved by doing all the electrical work myself. Those electricians charged like wounded bulls, you know.
The came the real flash of genius: I still had one empty socket on the UPS, so I plugged the UPS into itself!
Free electricity! No need for messy solar panels; no climate destroying connection to the grid; no hard-to-find and sometimes feisty unicorns.
Just free electricity.
If you decide to use my idea, go ahead. Just send me $1000 per month for the rest of you life or mine, whichever is longer. I thinks it’s only fair. I did all the hard work thinking this up!
Of course it might turn out that you have one of those UPS models with a big box and a tiny battery inside, the rest of the contents being a mix of N2 and O2 plus a small amount of CO2. A favourite scam, it seems.
If the goal is to reduce emissions, maybe the batteries can have an internet connection with the utility, so they can charge for free whenever power would otherwise be dumped.
A clever opportunistic approach :
California Energy Commission
https://g.co/kgs/E14kgr
will harvest 1,000s of $$ by 1$ from 1,000s of taxpayers.