How incredibly simple tech can supercharge the race to net zero

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Solar Power News

Batteries,Renewable Energy

To even out the intermittent power supply from wind and solar, we need to build vast energy storage facilities. It turns out the best solution might be cheap, simple ideas like heating bricks and lifting weights

Some 450 kilometres north of Helsinki, Finland, lies a decommissioned mine. Despite its remote location, it is being keenly watched because it looks set to play a role in revolutionising our energy systems – though not for the reasons you might suspect.

The Pyhäsalmi mine used to yield wealth from zinc and copper, but it is about to monetise the power of gravity. As the deepest metal ore mine in Europe, it is an ideal spot for what’s known as a gravity vault. UK-based company Gravitricity plans to dangle a heavy weight down a mine shaft and connect the mechanism to a generator. It will store power as potential energy by pulling up the weight, then generate it again by letting it plummet.

If that sounds surprisingly simple, that is exactly the point. Governments are wrestling with the epic challenge of the intermittency of: how to keep the lights on when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine. So far, they have largely focused on expensive technologies like hydrogen, nuclear power and lithium-ion.

The gravity vault could be just the start. Other companies are developing energy storage methods that involve such technological marvels as salt, sand, water and hot bricks. These disarmingly…

 

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