Thursday, February 20, 2020

Resilient Energy collective

Now this is sheer genius:

Australian software billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes has teamed up with Tesla and Australian solar company 5B to create a new initiative that will provide stand alone solar and battery storage systems that can provide power to communities cut off by the summer’s bushfires and storms.

The Resilient Energy Collective was unveiled by Cannon-Brookes on Wednesday afternoon, and will be backed by an initial $12 million investment from the Cannon-Brookes family investment fund, and follows his commitment to fund a detailed study into what could become the world’s biggest solar farm in the Northern Territory.

Cannon-Brookes says many areas affected by the bushfires still don’t have power, and while the collective has already rolled out solar and batteries in two fire-ravaged locations – in Cobargo in NSW and Goongerah in Victoria’s East Gippsland region – it has the capacity to roll out systems at another 100 sites  “in the next 100 days if required.”

“Solar and batteries are resilient,” Cannon Brookes said in a statement. “They are an awesome off-grid solution that are quick and easy to transport and deploy.

He told Reneweconomy that the reaction from the people in the communities had been amazing. Many had thought such technologies were 10 years away.

“They said, ‘does this run at night?’ Yes! They said, man, this is technology from the future. No it’s not, it’s stuff that you find on the shelves. The only new bits we added were nuts and bolts from Bunnings.”

Cannon-Brookes said that after a horror summer, “many Aussies need our help to get their lives back on track. We’ve got to do all we can to get them back on their feet.

“In three weeks we’ve come together, found the technology, adapted it, put it on trucks and right now it’s operating, generating electricity. That’s what this collective is all about; getting the best tech and the best ingenuity together to solve a massive problem, in days, not months or years.”

The joint venture with Tesla rekindles Cannon-Brookes’ links with the company co-founded and led by CEO Elon Musk. Their Twitter exchange in early 2017 supercharged efforts to bring a big battery to South Australia, and the world’s biggest lithium-ion battery was ultimately installed in less than 100 days after contracts were signed, as Musk had promised.

Cannon-Brookes has also been working with 5B, a company founded by a couple of young engineers that specialises in readily and rapidly deployable solar installations, for the massive 10GW Sun Cable solar project in the Northern Territory where it has been named preferred supplier.

The Resilient Energy Collective says the rapidly installed solar and battery solutions – with can range in daily capacity from 8kWh to 400kWh – can allow infrastructure, homes and businesses to operate off-grid, 24 hours a day. [I think they mean 8kW to 400kW, not kWh]

The installation at Cobargo comprises a stand alone, off grid solar and battery system has helped to reconnect electricity to vital emergency communications towers. It supplies a police radio tower and an RFS, National Parks and Eurobodalla Shire radio tower.

It was installed and operational in less than two days and replaced diesel generators that firefightersAnother system has been installed to power the Goongerah Community Hall to provide power to relief services, the local internet connection, as well as refrigeration, and important community meetings. Other suppliers to this system included Enfrex Metalworks, Risen Energy (Australia), Southern Precast NSW, DSE Transport and AG MURF Australia.

“These systems are cheaper than diesel generators and they are up and running months before  electricity will be fully restored,” Cannon Brookes says.

“As a nation we’ve got to learn the lessons of this summer and invest in energy systems that help the planet, not hurt it, that are resilient, not brittle, that are fast and flexible, not slow and fixed. And most importantly that reduce bills,” Cannon-Brookes said.

“In the future – we see a world in which many remote communities operate on solar power, off-the-grid. It will be more stable, more resilient, and less prone to damage.”

But he told RenewEconomy that while this was a philanthropic venture, there was likely a business case for standalone power system – the costs were up to 50 per cent cheaper than diesel gen-sets, and cheaper in many circumstances for grid connected communities. And it reinforced that the technologies needed to improve the lives of Australians, and lower costs and emissions, were here now.

Read more of the original article in RenewEconomy here and see a video of the assembling process here.

My last tweet was about energy poverty, and the solution I put forward was micro-grids.  A few hours later, I saw news of this initiative on Twitter, and thought, I must tell y'all about it.   This is the future of electricity: renewables plus storage.  And it's happening right now.




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