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In my recent article celebrating the great month that pumped hydro had, between the Loch Ness Red John facility selling to Statkraft, the UK finally settling on cap and floor for the technology and China having 365 GW of power and four to eight TWh of energy storage under construction, I included a throw away line.
As a reminder, pumped hydro is the gravity storage solution that actually works, unlike concrete blocks, elevators and hillside rail systems.
This triggered all of the people who think Energy Vault has a remotely sensible technology and the tiniest chance of delivering anything of value, the people who like the ARES rail-based gravity storage nonsense and probably the ones who think unused office elevators, water towers, and mines and big piles of sand are a massive source of untapped storage as well.
So itās time, once again, for the basics and a bunch of examples so that people can stop fantasizing about elevator, cranes or trains and focus on water and existing hills instead.
![A panoramic image depicting a surreal scene where a large block of cement is hanging in mid-air above the Earth created by ChatGPT and DALL-E.](https://files.oaiusercontent.com/file-03i270utu6byoaIEE5cPD9bD?se=2024-01-16T05%3A50%3A01Z&sp=r&sv=2021-08-06&sr=b&rscc=max-age%3D31536000%2C%20immutable&rscd=attachment%3B%20filename%3D3754f94d-25c6-4c13-9aa5-81eec27367d4.webp&sig=fh0/Ymn/8cp0fxEomRxqODf3lyl/H3WQExOwlT4GJ1o%3D)
Letās start with the basics of the physics. Gravity storage works because of potential energy. Thatās simply a mass higher up. As it goes down, the potential energy turns into kinetic energy, the energy of movement. As it goes down, we can harvest that energy. It takes energy to move the mass upward, and can get varying degrees of energy back from it on its way down.
This is all subject to the laws of thermodynamics. Letās use British author and scientist C.P. Snowās version:
- You canāt win (that is, you cannot get something for nothing, because matter and energy are conserved).
- You canāt break even (you cannot return to the same energy state, because there is always an increase in disorder; entropy always increases).
- You canāt get out of the game (because absolute zero is unattainable).
What that means is that if you put 100 MWh into an energy storage system of any kind, you will get less than 100 MWh back. Thatās usually important, but not with energy storage systems that arenāt pumped hydro using existing hills. Thereās no way around the three laws, thereās no reinterpretation of them that permits them to be sidestepped (as one comment I saw recently said for their technology) and everyone has to play by the same rules.
Okay, so itās energy and weāre going to get less out than in. How do we figure out how much energy? Thatās easy. Multiplying the mass times the force of gravity times the height gets the potential energy, the maximum amount you can get back. Thatās in joules, which isnāt helpful for the average person who never uses joules, but a million joules is 0.277778 kWh. The other way around, a kWh has 3.6 million joules.
Because this is metric, we use meters, kilograms and gravity is measured in meters per second squared, 9.8 of them to be somewhat precise. Letās start with a hypothetical situation, a one metric ton or thousand kilogram block we move up 100 meters. Nice round, simple numbers.
1,000 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 * 100 m = 980,000 joules. That seems like a big number, but thatās only about a million joules which means itās equal to about 0.277778 kWh.
A Tesla needs about 14.4 kWh to travel 100 kilometers, so this one ton block move up 100 meters is enough to drive a Tesla just under two kilometers. Another way to think of it is that it is enough to boil a pot of water.
For those unfamiliar with metric, thatās close to the length of an American football field but straight up and 2,200 pounds. To boil a pot of water. Electric cars are really efficient.
![ChatGPT & DALL-E generated panoramic image showing a heavily laden train rolling up a very long hill.](https://cleantechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/DALLĀ·E-2024-01-15-21.51.17-A-panoramic-image-showing-a-heavily-laden-train-rolling-up-a-very-long-hill.-The-train-brimming-with-cargo-stretches-along-a-winding-track-that-asce.png)
Okay now that we have the basics, letās take a couple of examples. Letās start with the ARES rail system. I havenāt bothered to look at them closely because they are clearly nonsense and no one has annoyed me about them too much, but Iām fairly familiar with heavy freight rail and know that ARES has to play by the rules just like everyone else.
Steel wheels on steel rails means that heavy trains require less than 2% grades otherwise they canāt go up hills. That means you need a very long set of rails to get very much height. The length of the train means that it canāt get it all up or down the hill, so you are working with a portion of the slope.
Letās load the rail cars up to the maximum 130 metric tons for heavy freight rail each. Letās use relatively standard 18 meter cars. Letās use 50 cars for a decent length and mass train. That makes it 900 meters, almost a kilometer long.
At 2% grade, youād need 10 kilometer of track to get 200 meters of head height. But the trains length actually means youād be only getting about 9 kilometers of rise of the center of gravity, so itās actually 180 meters.
50 cars * 130 metric tons is 6,500 metric tons total mass.
Mass * gravity * height = 6,500,000 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 * 180 meters = 11,466,000,000 joules. Thatās about 3.2 MWh.
The current Tesla Megapack is standard shipping container size height and width, 29 feet long and stores 3.9 MWh. You can put them in the corner of parking lots.
Yeah, an almost kilometer long train with ten kilometers of track has a lot less energy storage than a shipping container full of Teslaās batteries.
There are funicular railroads that go up steeper pitches, but they have vastly less mass because the strain on the cables gets so high that they snap. Shorter distances up steeper slopes involve similar heights but vastly less mass, so energy storage drops by one or two orders of magnitude.
I have no idea what ARES is actually claiming itās doing because itās not worth reading its website, but itās literally this stupidly bad.
This is bleedingly obvious to anyone who has spent any time doing mass and energy calculations, something taught in Grade 7, which is why people like me assume that things like Energy Vault will fail and disappear without a trace, forgetting the gullibility of venture capitalists, the venality of SPAC pump and dumpers and the credulity of retail investors. Fools and their money are soon parted. Hopefully this will inoculate a few people.
![A visual metaphor created by ChatGPT and DALL-E for the initial Energy Vault idea](https://files.oaiusercontent.com/file-xY3G40dIcx5IyzoC17GwPjxu?se=2024-01-16T03%3A12%3A58Z&sp=r&sv=2021-08-06&sr=b&rscc=max-age%3D31536000%2C%20immutable&rscd=attachment%3B%20filename%3D1ffc91bc-ac8a-425b-8a94-54b338497f0c.webp&sig=YIZ0RYNOforbpkl6Nj%2BT5IqWJuOrJXixE0H3ic%2BKtlE%3D)
Since weāre talking about Energy Vault, let me repeat my calculations from a couple of articles I wrote when the aforementioned gullibility, venality and credulity actually meant it had a market capitalization and getting lots of press.
Their first design, which they managed, remarkably, to make worse, had the crane in the center and a bunch of concrete blocks that it would pick up and stack on top of each other. The concrete blocks were supposed to be 32 metric tons and the maximum stack size was 120 meters.
32,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 120 = about 37 million joules or about 10 kWh. Thatās for one block going up the maximum distance.
But remember, they were stacking them. The average block was only going up half the distance, so every block was only about 5 kWh of energy. With a hundred blocks, a notional and likely maximum number possible in a circular system like that, thatās only half a megawatt hour (MWh) of electricity storage in the best possible case scenario.
The average home uses twice that much electricity every year. Itās only enough to charge five long range Teslas, and isnāt enough to charge a Tesla Semi.
So long before you get to the efficiency problem ā fairly poor ā and the operational challenges like wind and cracked blocks, Energy Vault is more like Energy Paper Cup.
![Image of an Energy Vault building concept collapsing under its own weight created by ChatGPT and DALL-E](https://cleantechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/DALLĀ·E-2024-01-15-21.49.59-A-panoramic-image-depicting-a-dramatic-scene-of-a-square-top-heavy-building-collapsing-under-its-own-weight.-The-building-designed-with-an-unusually.png)
Their second design solved for the wind problem by making the entire thing shorter and into a huge, 25 story, 75 meter heavy steel framed building with absolutely massive winches on top, with slightly smaller 27 ton blocks on rolling carts.
They are stacking blocks on the bottom so lose some height from that. They canāt get all the blocks to the top of the building. 50 meters is probably a reasonable average per block.
27,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 50 = about 3.7 kWh per block.
Letās suppose they managed to get five hundred of these massive blocks operating in the system. Unlikely, but letās pretend. Thatās only 1.85 MWh of storage, about half whatās in a single Tesla Megapack. In a 25 story high, thick steel framed building with mining grade winches on the roof.
They claim, of course 40 MWh of storage, which would require lifting about 11,000 of their blocks to the top of the building, where there is absolutely not enough room for them. There isnāt room for that many blocks in the entire interior volume of the building most likely.
Hmmm, I havenāt done that calculation. How much space would 10,800 blocks weighing 27 tons each of reinforced concrete take up? Itās 2.5 tons for a block a meter on a side. That means the 27 ton blocks would be three meters on a side, which for the Americans reading along, just under 10 feet on a side. Youād need about a meter between blocks at minimum for equipment, carts and those massive support steel girders, so letās extend that out by half a meter in all directions, making the space requirement four meters on a side, or 13 feet.
Letās make a big square of 10,800 blocks. How wide is that? The cube root of 10,800 is around 22. That makes a square stack of these blocks with a bit of room between them 88 meters high, 88 meters wide and 88 meters long. Does anyone notice anything wrong with this? Perhaps that 88 meters is 13 more meters than the Energy Vault building is tall, and with zero room for the blocks to move anywhere? Remove the spacing between them, and just the blocks that would store the energy that they are claiming is almost as big as the entire building. Yet someone they are going to fit all that into the top couple of floors? Magic space compression anyone?
Once again, everyone is forced to play the same game because thatās the law of thermodynamics and the sheriff is reality. Energy Vaultās storage claims are complete and utter fabrications which fail absurdly simple physics tests. Letās ask a question. When is this stuff taught in merely adequate schools. Answer? Grade 7.
This is literally a test a Grade 7 student could find on a test, yet people put a lot of money into it.
Oh, and even with their absurd efficiency, lifespan and uptime claims, all that concrete and steel would have meant every MWh for 40 years would have had a carbon debt bigger than burning natural gas.
Thereās a reason why once the dust settled after the pump and dump SPAC, Energy Vault hired a lithium ion battery site developer and started selling almost entirely lithium ion batteries in shipping containers as grid storage to clients. That some Chinese people are apparently also gullible and credulous and have actually bought and are constructing some of these things does not mean that itās a remotely useful energy storage device. That what investment money was left over after the SPAC Wall Street people took their massive cut is mostly going into the pockets of the two ā¦ eermmm ā¦ āinventorsā of this nonsense goes without saying. After trying for 20 years to sell this kind of nonsense to credulous idiots, they finally succeeded.
![An image of a water tower made of rubber was created by ChatGPT and DALL-E to make the inanity of water towers as energy storage devices clear.](https://cleantechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/DALLĀ·E-2024-01-15-19.28.30-A-panoramic-image-showing-a-surreal-scene-of-a-water-tower-that-appears-to-be-bending-over-as-if-it-were-made-of-rubber.-The-water-tower-typically-a-.png)
Okay, thatās enough kicking Energy Vault ā although really, I donāt think that they have been kicked nearly enough, itās just that Iām tired of doing it right now. Letās talk water towers.
By now, you know what the questions are. How tall is the center of gravity of the mass? How much mass is there? Feel free to use that incredibly difficult scientific tool, Google, to help you answer these questions.
Nah, Iāll just do it. They range from 40 to 50 meters. If youāve read this far, your spidey sense will be tingling already. Thatās just not that much. What about mass? On average, about 3,800 metric tons of water. Well, your spidey tense must be ringing alarm bells right now. But still, letās do the math. Letās give it a break and assume a 50 meter water tower.
But that mass isnāt all 50 meters off the ground. Water has a thousand kilograms per cubic meter, which is an example of why the rational parts of the world use metric. That means 3,800 cubic meters in a ball. How big on a side is that with the shell? About 16 or 17 meters in diameter. My guess before calculating was 15 meters, which is 0.6 meters off the diameter if the ball of water was just floating in space. Not a bad guesstimate, and par for the course for anyone who spends any reasonable amount of time with this kind of thing. My being close isnāt a feature or something special in other words, itās just an occupational hazard.
Okay, so the center of gravity of the water is only 37.5 meters off of the ground. Big red lights and sirens should be going off now.
3,800,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 37.5 = around 390 kWh. Thatās maybe half a Tesla Semi battery back and a tenth of a Tesla Megapack.
But wait, thereās more. Why do water towers exist? To provide water pressure to communities so that water actually comes out of taps and fire hydrants when needed in sufficient volumes. What is water pressure? Energy. Oh, wait. If we take all of the energy out of the water as it comes out of the water tower, that means thereās no energy left for water pressure. Dribbling showers and fire hoses are no fun at all.
![DALL-E and ChatGPT generated image of an idiotic sand and mine energy storage system](https://files.oaiusercontent.com/file-HPm4HzicsczhGkElJKuQpWpJ?se=2024-01-16T03%3A37%3A17Z&sp=r&sv=2021-08-06&sr=b&rscc=max-age%3D31536000%2C%20immutable&rscd=attachment%3B%20filename%3D54c6c1f6-33b4-4982-8339-b4945d05e050.webp&sig=/NhYjDevgF191utbJDt686yniGVI4h2ZnSeezqocn3o%3D)
What havenāt I ripped to shreds with Grade 7 physics yet? Oh, yeah, mines and sand. I really wish people werenāt serious about this, but they are.
There are a couple of ideas, but the looniest one is sinking sand into an empty mine in big buckets with regenerating winches, dumping the sand out at the bottom and having big vehicles push the sand down side tunnels. To āstoreā energy, the vehicles working underground would scoop up the sand and dump it back into the buckets which would be raised to the surface.
Stop and think about that for a minute. Using a lot of energy underground to push sand around when the point is to store energy. Why is that being done? Well, sand isnāt a liquid, itās just a bit liquidy some of the time. Sand flows, but not like water. Pour water into a mine and it will fill every nook and crevice because itās molecules of dihydrogen monoxide.
Water molecules are 0.275 nanometers. Sand grains average a millimeter. Nanometer, millimeter, whatās six orders of magnitude among friends? Water molecules are about 4 million times smaller than sand, and they arenāt all lumpy, coarse and spiky. They slip past one another better than the finest high-thread count Egyptian cotton or silk sheets itās possible for you to imagine.
So this is clearly a deeply stupid idea, and yet Iāve seen people who seriously proposed it. The inefficiency is off the charts, and just imagine even autonomous electric front end loaders driving constantly through a dust cloud of smaller sand particles, getting in their gears.
The alternative idea is to put a lot of sand on a single elevator with huge winches that just goes up and down in a big, deep mine shaft. This one at least has the potential to be viable. Letās pretend we can find a kilometer deep mine shaft thatās abandoned and hasnāt filled with water up to the 30 meters below ground level mark. Oh, wait, we canāt find something like that because ground water? Ignore reality for a minute.
Mine shafts have a diameter of 5 to 20 meters. Letās pretend we have a huge 20 meter mine shaft thatās a kilometer deep and not full of water. Okay, how big a load of sand can we put on an elevator in a 20 meter diameter shaft? Letās assume we can put it in a big bin ten meters tall. So thatās 20 meters in diameters and 10 meters tall of sand. Thatās a lot. For Americans, thatās 66 feet across and 33 feet tall.
The volume of a cylinder that size is 3,142 cubic meters. By the way, calculating that is taught in 8th Grade. Weāve advanced all the way to 13 year old children in basic schools in our math and physics.
Sand has a density of about 1,600 kilograms per cubic meter. Thatās about 5,000 tons of sand. Hmmm. Do we have winches that can lift 5,000 tons? Errr. No. Thatās almost exactly ten times bigger than massive winches for deepwater construction. Okay, letās pare that back. Maybe a 1,000 tons of sand? Cut the depth to two meters instead? Sure. Letās do that math, once again, for this fictional, huge, water free, deep mine shaft, one of which might exist in the world.
1,000,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 1000 meters = about 1,360 kWh. Thatās 1.4 MWh.
That isnāt very impressive. A kilometer deep shaft with a massive elevator full of two meters of sand worked by a couple of the biggest winches ever built and itās only as much as a third of a Tesla Megapack thatās 29 feet long and 8.5 feet tall.
By the way, sand is dirt cheap and the physics of winches means that it really doesnāt matter if you make the weight denser, for example by using lead. Doubling the weight still only gets to 2.8 MWh, which is an awful lot of engineering and construction for a return well below something you can order and have dropped in the corner of a parking lot.
![ChatGPT & DALL-E generated panoramic image of a sweaty and flustered office worker pushing a heavily laden dolly into a freight elevator.](https://files.oaiusercontent.com/file-5ro8PSRcwVLl7E10WfkD1ppl?se=2024-01-16T05%3A59%3A33Z&sp=r&sv=2021-08-06&sr=b&rscc=max-age%3D31536000%2C%20immutable&rscd=attachment%3B%20filename%3Dd99effcd-0633-4d85-9265-7bb18aa8b93d.webp&sig=JeNv5SLJELkE%2BZK6pM%2BEqawVHQ6WizlnCSDiZdpNxs0%3D)
Are we done yet? Not a chance. There are a bunch of people who think that office building elevators are an untapped resource of energy storage.
They think that at night, big dollies of heavy stuff can be shoved into freight elevators in the basement, lifted up to the 75th floor, and rolled into executive offices and board rooms, then in the morning, dropped down again to generate electricity.
I really wish people werenāt saying this seriously. I really, really do.
Okay, letās make believe for a bit. How much weight can office building freight elevators lift? Big ones can manage 9 tons. Whatās that sound? The sirens of spidey sense whooping. Whatās that noise? The multicolored lights of spidey sense flashing. Nine tons? Weāve been talking about thousands of tons. Nine of them? Really?
Okay, but 75 stories. Thatās a lot, right? Thatās like, really high? Sure. Maybe 225 meters. Okay, Grade 7 math time again.
9,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 225 meters = about 5.5 kWh.
Some sweaty lackey is going to load nine tons of paper or sand or stale birthday cake onto a massive dolly, grunt it into a freight elevator, then grunt it into board room, then reverse this process the next day, and this is an energy storage solution?
Letās just throw a big bucket of ice water onto this already absurd nonsense. Have you heard of counter weights? Elevators have these massive weights that go up when elevators go down and vice versa to counteract all the weight of the elevator, cable, friction and the office workers. The point of that is efficiency in moving weight up and down. All of those elevators donāt have even 5.5 kWh to spare because theyāve been designed to avoid needing it.
The people who think this idea is good have zero knowledge of energy, Grade 7 math or the absolute basics of elevators. Perhaps they were home schooled in the prairies by Luddites or something. Pick your reason why this completely absurd idea was actually gaining traction.
![A panoramic image depicting a surreal scene of a gigaliter of water contained within a gigantic transparent bubble, suspended 400 meters above the ground created by ChatGPT and DALL-E.](https://files.oaiusercontent.com/file-cV1ltZMUpfWoCClQOVDEnEGZ?se=2024-01-16T06%3A12%3A59Z&sp=r&sv=2021-08-06&sr=b&rscc=max-age%3D31536000%2C%20immutable&rscd=attachment%3B%20filename%3Dd918581f-68ff-4776-970b-8fefcd963c25.webp&sig=p3ymgcNvBeKH7CxsRa2BV5DZa9odbVRaskRkABOTDwk%3D)
So letās talk closed loop, off-river, pumped hydro storage. As the article headline says, itās the only real gravity storage option. Why? Well, because it has billions of kilograms of mass hundreds of meters of distance between top and bottom. Geography creates the height for free, just requiring a 10 meter diameter tunnel be dug through it, which admittedly is expensive and risky. And waterās tiny molecules donāt need any help to organize themselves. None of those sweaty stressed office workers. None of those massive front-end loaders pushing sand down tunnels. Just pumps.
The mass and height are both big numbers. The mass especially is a really big number. And water is dirt cheap. This isnāt filtered, bottled, purified, chlorinated water. Itās just lake or river water. The water isnāt consumed. It goes up. It goes back down. It goes up again. Ad nauseum. If water could get bored, it would. Some of it evaporates every year, so the system needs to be topped up. Nothing burger.
Okay, letās do some math. Letās go to the Australia National University green field GIS study of potential paired reservoirs that werenāt on existing water pathways, that were close to transmission, that werenāt on protected land and that had over 400 meters of distance between top and bottom reservoir. It found 100 times the potential capacity for energy storage as the entire global requirement for energy storage in the end game.
Only 1% of the sites have to work out in order to provide all the energy storage for a fully electrified world powered by renewables. And a few blockers have already been eliminated. Close to transmission and not on protected land, remember? Someone complained to me recently that exactly one of 616,000 sites identified had 14,000 people that would be displaced. So go to the next site already.
Math though. Letās pick a 500 meter head height site. Letās pick a billion liters of water, a gigaliter weighing a billion kilograms, a million tons. Wait, whatās not happening? Your spidey sense isnāt flashing lights and blaring alarms. These are big numbers on both sides.
1,000,000,000 kilograms * 9.8 m/s^2 * 500 = 1.4 GWh of grid storage.
Oh. GWh. Significant grid storage. Okay, now weāre talking!
Letās take the three Intelligent Land Investment sites in Scotland, including the Loch Ness Red John site that was recently sold to Norwayās Statkraft. They are designed to use lochs as their lower reservoir and turkeyās nest reservoirs on overlooking hills as upper reservoirs. Lots of water. Lots of height. Free water because itās just sitting there in the lochs, waiting to be pumped uphill in a very low environmental impact way.
2.5 GW of power capacity. 60 GWh of energy capacity.
Tesla Megapacks can deliver about 2 MW of power. This is like 1,250 of them. They can store about 3.9 MWh of energy. This is like 15,000 of them.
Well, those must be big reservoirs, right? No. A square kilometer up top, a square kilometer at the bottom. Ponds.
Pumped hydro is the only real gravity storage solution because it uses a dirt cheap, high mass, easily pumped mass and uses existing geographical feature to create big height differences. Every other gravity storage solution is kids playing around in a sand box.
Iāll repeat this. Grade 7 math is all thatās required to figure this out. Entitled Hollywood trust fund kids Chad and Buffy, who get gold stars for attending class, are expected to be able to do this really basic math in tests to pass and get to Grade 8, perhaps with examples of caviar on side tables falling on the floor. Anyone who thinks that anything other than pumped hydro is remotely sensible is one or more of a few things. They are stupid. They never made it through Grade Seven. They are deeply lazy. They are credulous. They are gullible.
Donāt be that person. This is about the lowest bar in energy that itās possible to find. If you canāt figure this out, you arenāt remotely competent to have discussions about any of the actually interesting stuff in energy, like Ohmās Law or substituting aluminum for copper in HVDC cables or why baseload energy is an archaic term left over from tiny grids enshrined in regulation long past its sell by date.
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