It's been two years since Tesla hit the switch on the world's largest battery in South Australia — you know, the one Elon Musk made a bet to build in 100 days or he'd pay for it. Now the company's unveiled another colossal project.
Following the success of the Powerpack system, the tech giant has unveiled the dramatically named Megapack, a giant new battery product designed "to match global demand for massive battery storage projects."
Tesla completed installing the world's biggest lithium ion battery, a Powerpack system with 100 megawatts of capacity, in South Australia in November 2017. Connected to Neoen's Hornsdale Wind Farm near Jamestown, three hours’ drive from Adelaide, the Powerpack system was meant to alleviate some of the state's severe energy issues.
Since then, according to a report by engineering consultants Aurecon, the battery has saved almost an estimated $40 million, while helping to stabilise the energy grid in the region.
So, how does Megapack compare?
Basically, it's bigger. Mega surprising, we know. It's a utility-scale, 250-megawatt battery that, like the Powerpack, stores excess energy generated by renewables like wind power.
Installation and connection to existing energy grids, according to Tesla, should be pretty simple. Each Megapack will be delivered assembled — battery modules, thermal management system, AC interface — with storage of up to 3 megawatt hours, and 1.5 megawatts of inverter capacity. Plus, you can DC-connect the Megapack directly to solar energy sources.
And Tesla reckons it can build 'em fast — the company said that on three acres, it can construct a 250-megawatt, 1 Gigawatt hour power plant in less than three months. That's about the same time frame Musk bet he could build the Powerpack in, and well, they did it.
Each Megapack connects to Powerhub renewable energy monitoring software, and can also be integrated with Tesla's machine-learning platform, Autobidder, which allows for automated trading in electricity markets.
But the big difference is the scale. Megapack is meant for bigger installations, with Tesla claiming each system has a 60 percent increase in energy density. The company's blog post cites the Moss Landing project in California, which has seen the Pacific Gas and Electric Company requesting approval of four cost-effective energy storage projects totaling around 567 megawatts for locations around the state. Tesla is included in the proposal as responsible for one of these projects, a 182.5 megawatt lithium ion battery.
SEE ALSO: The future of electric vehicles hinges on prolific batteries. Meet the team making that happenTesla says the Megapack will act as a sustainable alternative to natural gas power plants, often included in those described as 'peaker' plants.
"Peaker power plants fire up whenever the local utility grid can’t provide enough power to meet peak demand," the post reads. "They cost millions of dollars per day to operate and are some of the least efficient and dirtiest plants on the grid. Instead, a Megapack installation can use stored excess solar or wind energy to support the grid’s peak loads."
The Powerpack, in conjunction with renewables, has already proven its worth propping up fossil fuel plants experiencing outages — there was that baller time Tesla's system bailed out a coal power station nearly 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) away.
With more grunt and storage capacity, the Megapack could potentially make even bigger headlines than that.
UPDATE: July 31, 2019, 6 p.m. BST Updated details about the Moss Landing project.
文章
751
浏览
72
获赞
32635
Good news everyone, Logan Paul doesn't actually think the Earth is flat
Logan Paul is many things, but thankfully he is not a flat Earther. In a 50-minute, 2-second mockumeHistoric Amazon unionization effort seems to have failed in Alabama
While the vote is ongoing, Amazon has gained the number of "no" votes needed to defeat the unionizatHow to quickly delete your most recent Google search history
Google unveiled a new super-speedy way to get rid of your most recent search history during Google IFTC warns of coronavirus 'vaccine survey' scams
There's no good thing that scammers won't try to ruin.The Federal Trade Commission issued a warningTim Cook calls out 'senseless killing' of George Floyd in WWDC opening remarks
Tim Cook took the stage this morning at Apple's Steve Jobs Theater in Cupertino, California to talkHow to use Apple CarPlay with your iPhone
It's time to ditch that phone mount.If you've got a car with a snazzy screen and an iPhone in hand yChance the Rapper is catching major blowback for defending Kanye's 2020 'campaign'
Chance the Rapper publicly and repeatedly tweeted his support for Kanye West's presidential bid on MIcon, champion, Supreme Court Justice: Ruth Bader Ginsburg dies at 87
At a time of great conflict, stress, and uncertainty in the U.S., Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader GHere's that creepy Rami Malek ad mashed with music from Jordan Peele's 'Us'
It's been an entire month since Rami Malek's promotional video for Mandarin Oriental hotels made theTwitter now lets you reward good tweets with Tip Jar
Get ready to "tip" your favorite people on Twitter.On Thursday, Twitter announcedthat it has startedColonial Pipeline reportedly paid millions for slow
When it comes to ransomware, you don't always get what you pay for. Colonial Pipeline, which operateXiaomi Mi Mix launches next week with a liquid lens camera
Xiaomi is going all out with an experimental new liquid lens. We already know the company is launchiEvery 2020 candidate's 404 error page, ranked
UPDATE: May 16, 2019, 3:36 p.m. EDT Since this story was published, three more candidates -- Bill de8 Karens and Kens who threw huge tantrums instead of putting on masks
Can you think of anything more inconvenient or uncomfortable than temporarily wearing a mask for the*That* Chadwick Boseman tweet is now Twitter's 'most Liked' ever
On Friday evening, Aug. 29, 2020, the people of Twitter received the devastating news of Chadwick Bo