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Friday, 17 March 2017
Seawater could provide the solution to South Australia's power woes
The state lacks the rainfall, rivers and mountains to run a conventional hydro system, but the ocean could step in
Dawn over the head of the Spencer Gulf. Research by the Melbourne Energy
Institute has found the topography of the area would be suitable for
saltwater pumped hydro storage.
Photograph: Auscape/UIG via Getty Images
Roger Dargaville for the Conversation
The federal government has announced a $2 billion plan to expand the iconic Snowy Hydro scheme.
It will carry out a feasibility study into the idea of adding “pumped
hydro” storage capacity, which it says could power up to 500,000 homes.
Hydro is one of the oldest and most mature electricity generation
technologies. And pumped hydro storage – in which water is pumped uphill
for later use, rather than simply flowing downriver through a hydro
power station – is the dominant form of energy storage globally.
But there are limitations to how much freshwater hydro can be
accessed, so it’s worth looking at what alternate approaches are
available. One promising prospect is to use seawater instead of rivers.
This tactic could potentially help South Australia resolve its highly publicised energy problems.
Hydro basics
The principle behind conventional hydro power is straightforward:
rainwater runoff feeds a river, which is dammed to create a large
reservoir of water. This is then gradually released through pipes to a
turbine at the foot of the dam, thus converting the gravitational
potential energy into electricity. The water then flows on downriver.
Hydro power is fossil-free and also “dispatchable” – it can be turned
on or off at will (provided there is water in the dam). This gives it a
significant advantage over wind turbines and solar photovoltaic (PV)
panels, which produce power only when the wind blows or the sun shines.
Hydro thus makes an ideal partner for wind and solar PV, as it can
adjust its output in response to changes in output from these
non-dispatchable renewables.
The principle of pumped hydro storage. Photograph: Energy Australia
Pump it up
Pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) is very similar to conventional
hydro power but differs in that rather than being a generator, it’s more
accurate to describe it as a battery.
Normally done at smaller scales than conventional hydro, PHES uses
excess electricity from the grid (such as during periods of low demand
and/or high generation) to pump water uphill from a lower reservoir to a
higher one.
Later, this water is released back downhill through the turbine,
returning the electricity to the grid when it is most needed – typically
during the evening peak. It is this approach that is being considered
in the Snowy Hydro 2.0 project.
Pumped hydro storage thus helps to “smooth out” peaks in demand by
effectively transferring excess electricity from periods of low demand
to periods of high demand. It has a “round trip” efficiency of ~80%, which is comparable to that of batteries.
PHES is the most common form of grid-connected energy storage in the world, accounting for around 97% of the total.
It is often built in partnership with “baseload” power generators such
as coal and nuclear plants, to help them vary their output to cope with
peaks and troughs in demand.
Australia already has three PHES facilities – at Tumut 3 in the Snowy Hydro Scheme, at Shoalhaven in New South Wales, and at Wivenhoe Dam on the Brisbane River in Queensland.
South Australia is arguably the place that is most in need of
grid-scale energy storage. Unfortunately, South Australia lacks the
rainfall, rivers and mountains to run a conventional hydro system, with
or without storage.
However, there is a way to use this technology without rivers and
mountains: by using the ocean as the lower reservoir, and building an
artificial upper one.
The upper reservoir doesn’t need a river to feed it fresh water; it
just needs to be significantly higher than the ocean (that is, there
should be a steep slope on or near the coastline, up which the seawater
can be pumped). Using seawater also avoids the need to divert freshwater
resources into a large reservoir, where a significant amount would be
lost through evaporation.
Testing the technology
So far, only one seawater PHES installation has been built anywhere
in the world – on the island of Okinawa, Japan. It came online in 1999
and was decommissioned in 2016, after Okinawa’s power requirements
changed. Seventeen years for a first-of-its-kind project is a
significant success. However, the Okinawa project was combined with a
coal-fired power station, so linking this technology with intermittent
renewables has never been trialled anywhere.
The Okinawa pumped saltwater hydro electric plant. Photograph: Roger Dargaville/Agency of Natural Resources and Energy Japan
So could this technology help to ease South Australia’s energy crisis? The Melbourne Energy Institute (MEI) report on Pumped Hydro Opportunities
identifies several potential seawater PHES locations in South
Australia. This includes a very promising site at the northern end of
the Spencer Gulf, with significant elevation close to the coast and
close to high-capacity transmission lines.
The Department of Defence manages this land, and discussions are
ongoing as to how the project might be designed to not interfere with
the department’s operations on the site. A win–win development is the
primary design aim.
The MEI study suggests that PHES could be delivered at around A$250
per kWh of storage. This compares well with utility-scale lithium ion
battery storage, which currently costs of the order of A$800 per kWh,
although recent announcements on Twitter from Elon Musk suggest this
might be coming down towards A$500 per kWh.
The Spencer Gulf site has the potential to provide at least 100
megawatts of dispatchable generation, effectively making the wind and
solar generation in South Australia significantly more reliable.
The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) will help fund a feasibility study into the technology, working with partners Energy
Australia, Arup and MEI. If the facility is ultimately built, it could
become a key element in SA’s bid to avoid future power blackouts. •This article originally appeared in the Conversation. It has been republished with permission.
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