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By Dominic Zaal 12 April 2023 4 min read

We also need to find new and better ways to create heat for industrial processes. Renewables can supply much of that heat during the day, but energy storage will be required to meet industry’s night-time heat needs.

Solar thermal technology has the potential to provide both long-duration storage and industrial heat, yet it has been largely overlooked in the Australian context. That is about to change.

The CSIRO Renewable Energy Storage Roadmap identifies a mix of technologies will be required, across sectors, to meet Australia’s energy storage needs, particularly at night. Solar thermal will be an important part of the mix.

Batteries alone won’t cut it. They’re good for short-duration storage, ranging from mere minutes to an hour or two. But you’d need an awful lot of them, at enormous cost, to cover 8-12 hours. Solar thermal becomes cost-effective for long-duration storage at scale, and brings other benefits too.

Intro

0:00

Have you ever heard of the Archimedes' Death Ray? It's an

0:02

ancient Greek myth that dates back to 212 BC and tells a story

0:07

of how Archimedes used bronze shields to concentrate the sun's

0:09

rays to set fire to invading Roman ships. This ancient idea

0:13

has evolved into modern day concentrated solar power, CSP,

0:16

where instead of using shields to concentrate the sun’s light,

0:19

we use mirrors. And instead of setting ships on fire, we use

0:22

the heat to drive a steam generator. But does CSP make

0:25

sense in the modern era, or should it stay ancient history?

0:28

In this video, I'm going talk about how CSP works and the

0:30

different technology options. We’re going to look at how it is

0:33

different from solar photovoltaics, with or without

0:35

batteries, plus I'll explain why I think CSP's time to shine

0:39

might have arrived. I’m Rosie Barnes, welcome to Engineering

History of Concentrated Solar Power

0:46

with Rosie. Concentrated Solar Power, or CSP, is surely the

0:49

coolest-looking renewable energy technology. So cool, in fact

0:52

that it was used by the villain in a Bond film, The Man with the

0:55

Golden Gun in 1974. So here I am telling you that the cool

0:59

futuristic technology that's going to help solve our energy

1:02

crisis is the same cool futuristic technology that was

1:05

going to solve the oil crisis back in the 1970s. Okay, so it

1:08

looks futuristic, but it's not new now. And it wasn't even new

1:12

when that Bond villain was blowing stuff up with his solar

1:14

laser 50 years ago. That story that I mentioned at the start,

1:17

that Archimedes was concentrating the sun to set

1:20

Roman ships on fire more than 2000 years ago. Well, most

1:23

people assume that story was a myth. But in 1973, a Greek

1:26

scientist demonstrated how mirrors can be used to reflect

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and concentrate light onto an object at a distance of 60

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meters away, causing it to catch by within minutes. His

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experiment showed us that this ancient tale may not have been

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just a legend after all. In more modern time, CSP's first

1:40

documented use was in 1866, when Augustin Mouchout used parabolic

1:45

troughs to heat water and produce steam to run the first

1:48

solar steam engine. And then in Egypt in 1912, CSP was used to

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power steam pumps to irrigate vast areas of the desert. The

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first operational concentrated solar power plant was a one

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megawatt system built in Italy in 1968. Then the oil crisis

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happened and caused a flurry of activity to develop alternative

2:05

energy technologies, including CSP. As a result of this by

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1982, there was a 10 megawatt demonstration project in the

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United States, which was incrementally developed up to

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about 350 megawatts by the late 80s. The oil crisis had ended by

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that time, so it was a bit of a dead end for a while in the US,

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at least. In the early 2000s, there was a lot of CSP action in

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Spain, and by 2010, there were 34 CSP plants worldwide,

2:30

totaling 880 megawatts. Fast forward to today there is over

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five gigawatts worldwide spread mostly between Spain and the US,

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but with China and other countries starting to catch up.

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So there is a lot of growth in fits and spurts but nothing like

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the rollout of other renewable energy technologies, solar PV

2:47

and wind, which also started small in the 80s and 90s. But

2:50

now each nearly 200 times the installed capacity of CSP. So

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since CSP has been around so long, Surely it would already be

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a mainstream energy source if it was ever going to be? or maybe

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not. I think until now, CSP has been a technology ahead of its

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time, but that might be about to change. To explain why I think

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that let's start with how it works and the different

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technology options available. Concentrated solar power works

The Different Types of CSP Systems

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by concentrating and capturing the thermal energy from the sun

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into a focal point. It's pretty similar to a kid using a

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magnifying glass to concentrate sunlight to burn a hole in a

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piece of paper. This concentrated heat can be used to

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heat a fluid such as molten salt which can be stored for hours or

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days. The heat is used to create steam to power a steam

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generator, which is the same kind of generator used in a

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traditional thermal power plant like coal, conventional gas or

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nuclear. There are three main ways that you can concentrate

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the sun's heat using either a tower, a couple of variations of

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a trough design or a dish. The tower design, also known as a

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power tower or central receiver, has a receiver on top of a tower

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that's surrounded by hundreds of heliostats, which are small

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individual Sun-tracking mirrors that reflect the sunlight onto a

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single point at the top of the tower. This concentrated light

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heats up the receiver which contains a heat absorbing

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material such as molten salt. The heated molten salt then

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travels to storage tanks below the receiver. Instead of

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concentrating at a single point on a tower. You can also

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concentrate in a line using the trough method, also known as a

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linear receiver. The trough mechanism is curved in a

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parabolic shape and tracks east to west following the sun. It

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focuses the sunlight to a line which contains heat transfer

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fluid blowing down that linear receiver. There's also a

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variation, the Fresnel aka linear trough, which instead of

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a mirrored trough uses mirrors and facets that move

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individually and focus everything onto a long thin

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receiver. In this case, the receiver doesn't need to move

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since the mirrors move instead, the advantage is that the whole

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thing is on the ground, so you need less supporting structure.

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And because the receiver doesn't need to move, it's easier to

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deal with the heating fluid and you could potentially directly

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heat molten salt instead of the thermal oil that's typically

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used in the trough designs. And finally there are dishes. They

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use parabolic mirrors to focus sunlight onto our receiver, the

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mirrors and receiver can move in two axes, so the entire area is

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always facing straight at the Sun. This makes them more

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efficient than the other options. With a tower, in the

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morning in the afternoon, the sun's glancing off it at a quite

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a low angle and so the projected area of the mirror to the sun is

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quite small relative to its area, and the troughs track east

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or west but when the sun's low in the sky in winter, the whole

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trough is seeing an oblique angle so it's energy capture is

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compromised too. The dish is the most efficient method and it

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was popular early on, but they've pretty much vanished

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commercially, mostly because it's more complex than the other

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methods. Because the receiver moves with the dish to follow

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the sun, the pipe that transports your hot fluid has to

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move too, so you've got to move liquid hot stuff through axes of

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rotation, or you can avoid that by generating electricity at the

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receiver, but then you lose the major advantage of CSP, which is

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its storage capability. So those are the main technology

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options for CSP. And like in so many other technologies that I

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cover on this channel, there's a trade off here between

6:00

efficiency and complexity. Most of the installed CSP plants use

6:04

a trough design, but the companies that are most

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aggressively expanding these days are tending more towards

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the tower design. If you're interested in learning more

Thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring this video!

6:12

about the special parabolic mirrors used to reflect the

6:15

sun's rays, then Brilliant.org is the perfect resource to help

6:19

you do just that. They are the sponsor of today's video.

6:21

Brilliant.org brings STEM concepts like math, science and

6:24

computer science to life through a visual and interactive

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approach, which helps the concept stick because you learn

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by doing not just by memorizing. Whether you're a student,

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educator or technology enthusiast Brilliant offers

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1000s of topics to explore with new content added every month.

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If you want to learn more about the concepts you need to

6:40

understand CSP then I suggest you check out Brilliant's

6:43

lessons on parabolas to interactively learn the maths

6:46

behind this special shape. Or check out the lesson on

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reflections where you can hone your intuition on how light

6:52

bounces off surfaces through interactive simulations. To try

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everything Brilliant has to offer for free for a full 30

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days, visit brilliant.org/EngineeringwithRosie

7:01

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you will get 20% off Brilliant's annual premium subscription.

CSP vs PV

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Because CSP generates electricity from the sun, it's

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tempting to consider it as a direct alternative to solar

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photovoltaics (PV) and in the early days for both technologies

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around the 90s. That was pretty much how it was treated.

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Northern Europe with more cloudy weather unsuitable for CSP did

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photovoltaics and Spain with clearer skies did CSP without

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any storage at first. Until about 2010, PV and CSP were

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fighting it out on cost per kilowatt hour, then the cost of

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energy from PV dropped much faster. This was due to its

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steep cost reduction curve helped by the fact that it was

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largely northern European countries pushing hard on

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renewables rollout in the 2000s and 2010s. And that kind of

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brings us to today where energy from PV costs less than half

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what it does from CSP. I don't think anyone expects this trend

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to reverse. So CSP has simply lost the battle to be the

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dominant solar power technology. But that isn't the right battle

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for CSP to even be in. PV provides very cheap power when

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the sun is shining. But only when the sun is shining. In the

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early days of the energy transition when there wasn't

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much solar power in the grid. That was all that was needed.

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The grid could soak up whatever amount of solar whenever it was

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generated, and everyone just wanted as many renewable

8:14

kilowatt hours as possible for as cheap a price as possible. PV

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did that amazingly well. So well, that by now some grids

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like Australia's is starting to have significant solar

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penetration enough to be really affecting the way the

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electricity grid operates and negative prices and curtailment

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of renewables during very sunny days have become really common.

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CSP won't cause problems like this, because in addition to

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generating power, it can store it And this fact provides three

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benefits when used in today's grid. One, you can provide power

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after the sun sets and two, you can take advantage of higher

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electricity prices so the value is greater. Meaning it's not as

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relevant that the cost from energy from CSP is higher than

8:52

from PV. So that's great and all but obviously, CSP isn't the

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only form of storage for renewable energy. Battery

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storage has come a long way since the early days of solar

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versus CSP. And surely we can simply add a lithium ion battery

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to a PV system to get the best of both worlds: cheap energy

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generation from PV and cheap energy storage from batteries.

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Does CSP lose again? maybe not. And that's because of benefit

What about CSP vs PV + Battery?

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number three, that the cost of energy from CSP actually gets

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cheaper as storage duration increases, which is the opposite

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of what happens with a PV plus battery system. There's a few

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reasons why first, having storage means that you don't

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need to use the energy right when it's generated. So in the

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middle of a sunny day, when the grid is totally saturated with

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solar power, and some of it is being curtailed, you're able to

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store your energy for later and so, avoid curtailment. Second,

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because CSP includes an expensive steam turbine, adding

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storage capacity means that you can run that turbine much closer

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to full capacity, 24/7 If you want to size it that way. CSP is

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an expensive way to convert sunlight to electricity, but

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it's very cheap storage. In contrast, PV panels plus a

9:54

battery, are very cheap conversion of sunlight to

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electricity, but expensive storage. So if you only want one

9:59

hour storage, it's great. But as you increase the storage

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duration to six or 12 hours say, then the battery gets more and

10:06

more expensive. And CSP then becomes a cheaper option. At

CSP as Long Duration Storage

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long durations, its cost is on par with pumped hydro, which is

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my other favorite long duration energy storage, especially when

10:16

it's off river pumped hydro, which you can check out in this

10:19

video. Above all, CSP is a generator with storage so you

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can rely on it. It shouldn't be competing against solar PV, it

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should be competing against traditional coal and gas

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turbines. And that's why I think CSP's time to shine is coming up

10:33

soon. Coal is exiting the grid around the world, whether

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because of government action, or as cheaper renewables destroy

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their business case. The latter is what's happening here in

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Australia, where 1/3 of coal power plants have already

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announced they'll close by 2030. And more announcements are

10:47

expected to take that up to about two thirds closed by the

10:50

end of this decade. Coal contributed nearly 60% of

10:53

Australia's electricity last year and two thirds of that is

10:57

not going to be available in less than a decade. To replace

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it, we will need hours of storage, longer than what

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lithium ion batteries can provide cheaply. But can CSP

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really supply electricity that we will be able to rely on? It's

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still based on solar power after all, and even though we can be

11:11

reasonably sure that the sun will rise every single day,

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sometimes it's cloudy, and CSP needs fairly clear skies to work

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well, plus the energy is stored as hate and we all know that hot

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things cool down so that energy will be gradually lost if we try

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to store it for days, weeks or months at a time. Actually,

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neither of these issues are as big a deal as you might think.

11:29

If the CSP is located appropriately, there are lots of

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desert locations where skies are clear nearly all of the time.

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And when they're not that's forecastable. What will be

11:37

needed in a fully renewable electricity grid will be firm

11:40

dispatchable capacity, meaning it's always available when you

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need it, it doesn't mean 24/7 constant electricity generation

11:47

because demand isn't constant 24/7. And also because solar and

11:50

wind power provide much cheaper energy when it's available. So

11:53

we'll use those when we can and we mainly just want to fill in

11:56

the gaps when it's not very windy or sunny. But you do need

11:59

power to be always available. Gas turbines traditionally fill

12:02

that role, they mostly sit idle and then every evening or

12:05

whenever price goes up, you fire them up, but they're far from

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24/7 constant generation, and crucially, the times they're

12:11

needed are mostly known quite far in advance. So if in the

12:14

future, we've replaced most of our gas generation with CSP, if

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the weather forecast says there are sunny or windy days coming

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up the CSP plant might generate all night every night and a bit

12:23

in the morning. But if we see a shortfall coming up in a few

12:26

days, and also see that cloudy skies above the CSP plant are

12:30

forecasted on those same days, well, we'll just make sure it

12:33

remains charged up. So you'd reserve your output for just the

12:36

early evenings when it's most needed. The thermal storage only

12:39

loses about 1% of its energy per day. So you can easily ride

12:42

through several cloudy days like that. And in the locations where

12:45

these systems are going, that's the longest that you'll need to.

12:48

If you put 15 hours plus storage on a CSP plant, it can actually

12:52

have very close to the same firming value as a gas turbine,

12:55

it's almost always going to be there when you need it. And I

12:57

know that people in the comments are gonna latch on to that word,

13:00

"almost"... almost always available isn't good enough for

13:03

the grid overall. But the last tiny little bit of reliability,

13:06

and we're talking fractions of 1% here, the last little bit

13:10

will be filled with something more expensive, like hydrogen,

13:12

or even fossil gas would be fine, since it's practically

13:15

never used, and therefore creates practically no

13:17

emissions. And remember that all of our generators are only at

13:20

best, "almost" always available, coal, gas, nuclear, whatever,

13:24

they all have unexpected shutdowns that need to be

13:26

planned for. Like I mentioned before pumped hydro systems with

13:29

15 hour storage can do much the same thing at the same cost of

13:32

CSP. So we could end up with pumped hydro in the mountains

13:35

and CSP in the deserts to keep the lights on once all the coal

The Scale of CSP Systems

13:39

has closed. To replace coal power plants, we're going to

13:41

need large scale solutions, our CSP plant needs to be quite big

13:44

to be cost effective, largely because it uses steam turbines,

13:48

and they're much more efficient when they're bigger. I mean, no

13:50

one makes a one megawatt coal fired power plant anymore. And

13:53

for the same reasons you wouldn't make a one megawatt CSP

13:56

plant, you're looking at 50 megawatts and upwards. So that

13:59

sounds big, and it is big compared to a single PV panel.

14:02

But if you think about the size of a coal power plant,

14:05

Australia's largest, Eraring power station, which is going to

14:08

retire in 2025, is 2.8 gigawatts. So to replace that,

14:11

with CSP, even if you're building 100 megawatt units say,

14:14

you'll still need to build 28 of them. So can it be done? Given

So why isn’t CSP more popular?

14:18

that CSP has been around for ages and yet seems remained a

14:21

kind of fringe technology, you might assume that previous

14:23

experiences have been bad. Otherwise, wouldn't we see a

14:26

whole lot more CSP plants around the world. In fact, some of the

14:29

plants in California that were built in the 80s are still

14:32

running after 40 years so it's not that. It's just that until

14:35

coal power plants actually start closing in large numbers. We

14:38

don't yet need the type of generation and storage that CSP

14:41

provides. But coal plants are closing soon and CSP or whatever

14:45

long duration storage technology you prefer. These don't just

14:48

spring up overnight. The day a coal power plant closes, it

14:51

takes around three years to build a CSP plant. So a little

14:54

forward planning would be beneficial if we want a smooth

14:57

transition away from coal. There are movements in the right

14:59

direction, country Just like China, Morocco and others have

15:02

started installing a lot of CSP. And here in Australia, we're

15:05

finally starting to talk about a mechanism to incentivize long

15:09

duration storage in a similar way to how renewable energy

15:12

certificates have been incentivizing renewable

15:15

generation for years now. So expect big things from CSP in

15:18

the next few years. And I'll be following closely to see how it

15:21

plays out. I got a lot of generous help from Dr. Keith

15:23

Lovegrove for this video. Keith taught me thermodynamics at uni

15:27

about 20 years ago and has been working on CSP for even longer

15:30

than that. He's agreed to be a guest expert on a live stream on

15:33

CSP technology that's coming up in about a week. So if you've

15:36

got questions or ideas, please write them in the comments or

15:40

even better join us live. As always big thanks to the

Outro

15:43

Engineering with Rosie Patreon team, whose support is a reason

15:46

why I'm able to get paid help researching and editing these

15:48

videos. If you'd like to join the team, there's a link in the

15:51

description. Thanks for watching and I'll see you in the next

15:54

video.

Introducing thermal energy storage

The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) identified storage of four to 12 hours’ duration as “the most pressing utility-scale need in the next decade”. That’s what’s required “to manage stronger daily variations in solar and wind output, and to meet consumer demand, also during more extreme days, as coal capacity declines”.

Most people know about lithium-ion battery (chemical) storage and pumped hydro (mechanical) storage. However, thermal energy storage is not well understood or recognised. This is partly due to perceived costs and engineering challenges. However, as concentrated solar thermal plants are built all over the world - 30 are being developed in China alone – the knowledge base is growing.

More than 80% of Australia’s total energy use involves a thermal process:

  • combustion of coal and gas for electricity
  • combustion of fuels for transport
  • combustion of fuels for industrial process heat.

A large proportion of these existing fossil-fuel thermal processes can be met with renewable thermal energy storage.

Sun-tracking mirrors (heliostats) focus sunlight on a central receiver or power tower at CSIRO Energy in Newcastle
The CSIRO Energy Centre in Newcastle contains the only operational high-temperature solar thermal research facility of its type in Australia. This is the largest high-concentration solar array in the Southern Hemisphere. CSIRO, Author provided

The CSIRO Roadmap found thermal energy storage was a relatively low-cost solution with multiple applications, including utility-scale power generation, renewable fuel production and industrial process heat.

For utility-scale power generation, the lowest cost technology for eight-hour storage in 2050 is thermal energy storage using concentrated solar thermal power. The cost in 2050 was slightly over A$100/MWh, compared with lithium-ion battery at A$140/MWh and pumped hydro at around A$155/MWh.

For 24-hour storage technologies in 2050, thermal energy storage was again the lowest cost at A$99/MWh, compared with pumped hydro at A$145/MWh or grid-charged electrical (using solar photovoltaics and wind) thermal energy storage at A$150/MWh.

Short-duration storage is likely to remain the domain of lithium-ion battery for at least up to two hours duration, and perhaps as high as four hours.

Here’s how it works

Concentrated solar thermal power uses mirrors to convert sunlight into heat energy. This heat energy is typically stored.

The stored thermal energy can then be used, at any time of day or night, on demand, to produce steam for electricity production, or heat/steam for industrial processes.

The system typically provides for six to 24 hours of operations. What this means is concentrated solar thermal can provide continuous, on demand power and/or process heat 24/7. It can also simultaneously generate power and store heat at the same time.

The stored thermal energy is typically used at night. Concentrated solar thermal systems deployed in China, Spain, the United States, South America, Africa and the Middle East generally have over ten hours of storage, which allows for the overnight generation of renewable power and heat.

Concentrated solar thermal is also a synchronous technology because it uses a traditional spinning turbine (identical to those used in coal-fired power plants). This creates much-needed system-strength and frequency services to the grid. In essence, when coal fired power stations close, concentrated solar thermal is a technology that could continue to provide essential system services.

While more than 100 concentrated solar thermal plants, generating 7GWh of power, have been deployed around the world, the technology has not yet been deployed at scale in Australia. This will soon change with the construction by Vast Solar of a 30MW concentrated solar thermal plant in Port Augusta, supported in part by the federal government. The project will have ten hours of thermal energy storage to generate power for supply to the grid, primarily at night. The project will also provide renewable heat and power to produce more than 7,000 tonnes of green (renewable) methanol each year. (Methanol is an essential chemical building block for hundreds of consumer and industrial products such as paints, carpets, fabrics, building materials and liquid fuels).

In Vast Solar’s modular design, deployed at the Jemalong Pilot Plant in central western New South Wales, there are five separate arrays, each concentrating solar radiation onto their own 27m thermal receiver tower. Vast Solar, Author provided

Heed the warning

We need to start building long-duration energy storage systems now, so we have secure and reliable power when the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow. We also need to replace fossil fuels used to create industrial process heat.

Sectors such as mining, industry, transport, agriculture, and households all require secure, reliable, and affordable renewable energy. For many sectors, this need occurs at night, and that necessitates storage.

Editor’s note: Dominic Zaal contributed to the CSIRO Renewable Energy Storage Roadmap as one of a number of internal and external technical advisers.The Conversation

Dominic Zaal, Director, Australian Solar Thermal Research Institute (ASTRI), CSIRO

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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