I'll note that aggregate system cost still benefits significantly from including wind and other non-solar sources of energy; having a mix of different intermittent sources (and some firm generation such as geothermal) means less storage is needed.
We really should be installing neighborhood sodium batteries everywhere. It would help to capture residential solar and smooth out the grid. No more mass power outages during storms either.
How resilient are these batteries to flooding? I live on the Texas coast and have been through enough hurricanes that I know that flooding is just inevitable here. I'm not trying to play down the effectiveness of the technology, just wondering how they might fare compared to our terrible power systems in Texas?
We really should be installing neighborhood sodium batteries everywhere. It would help to capture residential solar and smooth out the grid. No more mass power outages during storms either.
How resilient are these batteries to flooding? I live on the Texas coast and have been through enough hurricanes that I know that flooding is just inevitable here. I'm not trying to play down the effectiveness of the technology, just wondering how they might fare compared to our terrible power systems in Texas?
You'd probably site them on higher ground outside of the flood plane. Add in flood walls, etc. if storm surge is a concern
There really isn't any "outside the flood plane" around here. Or flood walls. Or infrastructure. God. Why do I live here?