4ohSick
Well-known member
I'm on your side here and realize that this is only one example amongst many of innovation that could address power needs. However, the issue I see with the electric car charging idea is that few electric car owners are equipped with fast chargers in their home - most require like 8 hours of charging to reach a full battery. So if you drained in the early evening to supplement the grid, there wouldn't be enough time to charge to full and the cycle would keep resulting in less each evening to supplement the grid. But I'm sure home quick chargers will become more commonplace as electric vehicles proliferate.Right, but our electric grid is based on peak demand. You have to have enough generation to supply power at peak demand, so the time in which you are consuming power matters just as much as the amount you consume.
Lets look at a real example to show you:
View attachment 188402
This image here is of the total demand in the lower 48 the past two days. You'll see that 5 am was the lowest demand hour this morning. Peak was 6 PM, you can't see from that snip, but the peak MWhr was 657,000MWhr.
Now, what this tells us is that the grid has to be able to produce 657,000MWhr no matter what. So under your assumption we would be adding 5 million charging vehicles on to that peak. EPA indicates right now the fast chargers use about 7500 watts. So 5 million additional vehicles being completely empty at getting recharged would add 37.5MW of demand increasing the nations power demand to 657,037MWhr. So we would need additional power generation to make up for this gap.
But that's not what I've been saying this whole time. Instead of charging our cars at 6 pm, we use any remaining energy in them to supplement the grid. So now the grid no longer needs to produce 657,000MWhr through traditional generation, it can produce 656,963MWhr and the additional 37.5MWhr will come from the battery packs to reach full demand of 657,000MWhr.
Then, when demand is at its lowest at 5 am (or earlier) you charge up those batteries. demand goes from 428,000MWhr to 428,037MWhr, but guess what? We have plenty of generation available because we 657,000MWhr available out on the grid.
So in this very real case, we just added 5 million electric vehicles without requiring any additional power generation, and in actuality we reduced the amount of total generation the US would need by providing peak shaving from our EV batteries.
This is a real illustration of what those articles and I have been explaining.