just east of the creek
Active Member
The one things that your replies have made clear to me is that their is much, much more to learn about this topic and the technologies involved. I’ll have to think about this a bit more, and it may be time to recruit some outside expertise to advise on longer term view of farming operations.The greener the grid, the greener the buildout of additional grid infra. That said, even solar PV manufactured using China's coal-heavy grid have a very low g CO2/kwh, around 40g, with a carbon payback in the range of 6 months.
One thing a lot of people get wrong is that the look at global primary energy consumption, and assume we have to replace all of that with renewable electricity TWH. This is just wrong, as most of that energy consumption is in the form of heat, which is subsequently wasted. And there are strategies for renewable heat that are lower cost than renewable electricity. We only really need to replace about 30% of primary energy consumption with renewables, and a lot of that can be thermal energy capture and thermal storage (as opposed to batteries).
And there is no shortage of lithium--it is highly abundant. Chemical battery chemistries are evolving to those that are as common as rocks. Sodium instead of lithium, aluminum instead of copper conductors, etc.
Thanks for the comments.