Energy storage is a new disruptive trend. It basically involves storing energy that can later be harnessed for electricity to power our homes, our cars – our future.
The first part of the future of clean energy is for all vehicles to move from polluting gasoline, diesel and natural gas to run on electricity. Hence, the electric vehicle (EV) boom has only just begun. Tony Seba, in his video on “clean energy disruption” and others, expect EVs to be cheaper than Internal Combustion Energy (ICE) cars by 2020, and this will signal the accelerated take-off of the EV boom. You can read more about the EV boom here andhere.
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Energy storage is coming in a big way in the U.S. and around the world, but before it does, the industry needs to figure out how installing batteries is going to make customers money. Building batteries in buildings or on the utility’s grid isn’t going to be done because it’s cool or somehow saves the planet — it’ll be done because it makes money. And energy storage has the ability to make a lot of money.
If you thought renewable energy was the big thing of our times, you’d be only partially right. The bigger thing is energy storage – the key to making renewable energy sustainable and reliable; the key to making it practically useful and more than a fad.
The US energy secretary, Ernest Moniz, believes the advances being made in
Stem, one of the leading providers of commercial energy-storage systems, just added $100 million in new financing from energy infrastructure investor
In June, the Obama administration announced a new series of policies and investments aimed at boosting U.S. energy-storage capacity. They say
The advanced energy storage systems market size may reach USD 7.17 billion by 2022 and exceed 11 GW, according to a new research report by Global Market Insights, Inc. (Independence, OH, US).
South Korea’s largest utility has contracted battery developers Kokam to build a 36MW energy storage system at its Non-Gong substation in the south of the country.
On Monday, Gov. Charlie Baker, R-Mass., signed into law a bill to further diversify Massachusetts’ power mix with clean energy resources. Although it focuses mainly on large procurements of offshore wind and hydropower, the legislation also includes a significant provision authorizing an energy storage procurement goal.