The New York Power Authority (NYPA)
announced plans last week to install a demonstration zinc-air energy storage
system in collaboration with developer Zinc8 Energy Solutions. According to
foreign media, this 100 kW/1 MWh energy storage project stems from an
"innovation challenge" undertaken by NYPA last year, using it as a
backup power supply to meet the needs of the power grid.
Alan Ettlinger, NYPA's Director of
Technology Development and Innovation, stated that the zinc-air project is part
of achieving New York's long-term energy goals. The state's targets include
100% zero-carbon electricity by 2040, reaching 6 GW of distributed solar energy
by 2025, installing 3 GW of energy storage by 2030, and achieving 9 GW of
offshore wind by 2035.
Zinc-air battery technology is attractive
due to its low cost. It is made of widely available and abundant materials and
is easy to dispose of. "The toxicity of zinc is very low, so the impact on
battery costs and battery handling has sparked interest in studying zinc-air
batteries and promoting the development of zinc," Ettlinger said. Part of
the reason NYPA chose zinc-air battery technology is that it has advanced
further in research and carries no fire safety hazards, making it suitable for
practical energy storage.
NYPA President and CEO Gil Quiniones said
in an interview, "This collaboration will showcase a low-cost and
long-duration solution that addresses the unpredictability of renewable energy
sources like wind and solar, bringing environmental and efficiency
advantages."
The project will be built in western New
York, and NYPA is currently looking for a final possible deployment location,
expecting to choose the site in the first quarter of 2020 and complete
installation of the system in 2022. Meanwhile, related departments said that
the company is developing actual energy storage containers and controls for the
unit. After piloting the project, NYPA plans to research scaling up to larger
batteries and ultimately develop them to grid scale.
Industry insiders believe that with
research on battery technology and industry development, zinc-air battery
technology will show tremendous promise.
Meanwhile, Fabio Albano, Vice President of
Technology for zinc-air battery developer NantEnergy, believes that zinc-air
batteries are more suitable for certain applications than other batteries. He
says that zinc-air battery technology is not a powerful technology for
deploying three-hour energy storage but is an excellent choice for
long-duration energy storage, such as accumulating solar energy during the day
and deploying it during inactive renewable energy nights.
Albano thinks, "Zinc-air batteries play
an essential role in low-cost deployment. The main problem with lithium-ion
batteries entering grid energy storage is that there is no lithium battery
system in the world capable of supporting grid scale, and deploying two would
be too expensive."
It is understood that NantEnergy built a
95.1 kWh zinc-air energy storage system for Duke Energy, serving as part of a
microgrid to assist the emergency communication power supply in the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park in the United States.
Full Text from Lithium Battery Network.