Updated
When 45,000 homes and businesses in Sydney's eastern suburbs were plunged into darkness yesterday, Carl Prins did not even notice his watch had buzzed.
At
11:30am, it let him know a recently purchased battery had isolated his
Waverley house from the electricity grid, but everything was still
working fine."I was upstairs working and I got a notification that my house was now being powered by the battery, it was pretty cool," Mr Prins said.
In September 2017, the 38-year-old energy consultant — an alumni of the same South African school as Elon Musk — spent $12,000 and five months on a waiting list to be one of the few hundred Australian owners of a Tesla Powerwall 2.
The 120 kilogram battery is charged by integrated solar panels during the day, storing excess energy for use through the night.
When an outage strikes, the Powerwall is supposed to automatically take over as the home's main power source, effectively taking it off the grid.
For an hour, Mr Prins' house was the only one on his street with a running fridge.
He was surprised the battery worked as advertised.
"It was always meant to work in theory but there was never a way to test it," he said."I'm pretty pleased — there's a certain sense of Machiavellian satisfaction to it ... kind of being out for yourself."
Leia*, who works in advertising and lives across the road from Mr Prins, was scrambling to meet a deadline when she suddenly lost power to her laptop.
Mr Prin's neighbour Monique Munro, 55, was vacuuming when "everything suddenly turned off".
Her husband, who works at Bondi Junction, was also left in the dark.
Both Leia and Ms Munro's homes were outfitted with solar panels, but because both rely on the grid to circulate energy through the home, neither could keep the fans spinning as the temperature reached about 35 degrees Celsius.
Despite his little oasis and saving his family about $3,000 a year on their electricity bill, Mr Prins did not think Powerwalls were cost-efficient.
"Not unless you had a life support system running," he joked."Personally it's nice, but thinking a bit broader I'd rather be interacting in a smarter way with the grid."
He said he would rather a more dynamic grid system involving smart metres to inform efficient power usage.
"When the grid goes down, it goes down," he said.
"But [when it does] maybe there's a way I could be supplying my neighbour with power too, or vice versa?"
*Leia did not wish to use her real name.
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