The Truth About Pumped Hydro

Ғылым және технология

This video was created in partnership with Bill Gates, inspired by his new book “How to Avoid a Climate Disaster.” Find out more here: gatesnot.es/2ZnGCCg
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Writer/Narrator: Brian McManus
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References:
[1] www.irena.org/-/media/Files/I...
[2] www.irena.org/newsroom/pressr...
[3] www.esb.ie/docs/default-sourc...
[4]smartgriddashboard.eirgrid.co...
[5] smartgriddashboard.eirgrid.co...
[6] smartgriddashboard.eirgrid.co...
[7] www.sciencedirect.com/science...
[8] www.sciencedirect.com/science...
[9] www.hydroreview.com/business-...
[10] www.waterpowermagazine.com/fe...
[11] www.sciencedirect.com/science...
Thank you to AP Archive for access to their archival footage.
Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com/creator
Thank you to my patreon supporters: Adam Flohr, Henning Basma, Hank Green, William Leu, Tristan Edwards, Ian Dundore, John & Becki Johnston. Nevin Spoljaric, Jason Clark, Thomas Barth, Johnny MacDonald, Stephen Foland, Alfred Holzheu, Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Binghaith, Brent Higgins, Dexter Appleberry, Alex Pavek, Marko Hirsch, Mikkel Johansen, Hibiyi Mori. Viktor Józsa, Ron Hochsprung

Пікірлер: 5 500

  • @MyNoNeX
    @MyNoNeX3 жыл бұрын

    The Truth about Pumping Out High Quality Videos

  • @USSAnimeNCC-

    @USSAnimeNCC-

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ha

  • @amalirfan

    @amalirfan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nebula saved'em.

  • @Azakadune

    @Azakadune

    3 жыл бұрын

    “What is sleep?”

  • @moboxgraphics

    @moboxgraphics

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can't handle the truth

  • @RichRich1955

    @RichRich1955

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's funny what people write and get 100s of likes

  • @michaelmichael3007
    @michaelmichael30073 жыл бұрын

    I like what you said : "Not just one solution". Too often people are looking for a silver bullet instead of several solutions working together to solve a problem.

  • @rockyblacksmith

    @rockyblacksmith

    3 жыл бұрын

    And this comment section is full of them.

  • @johnking6624

    @johnking6624

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's the trouble. The world is full of idiots with simple solutions to complex problems.

  • @mandernachluca3774

    @mandernachluca3774

    3 жыл бұрын

    You're so right, hydrogen, batterys, pumped hydro, biomass. Theywillall e usedin some kind of area sooner or later.

  • @Kenneth_James

    @Kenneth_James

    3 жыл бұрын

    There is a silver bullet. Its called nuclear. wth

  • @natedunn51

    @natedunn51

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah you need a gun that can fire silver bullets and cartridges and all that jazz

  • @RealAwooMachine
    @RealAwooMachine2 жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: In Slovakia our largest pumped hydro plant Čierny Váh has 7 turbines with collective power of 735MW (6 Francis @ 122MW and 1 Kaplan @ 0,7MW) and head of about 400m. About 83% of our power is produced in 2 nuclear power plants and 11% in hydro plants. Only 5% of electricity in Slovakia comes from fossil fuels. That's one thing I can be proud of about my country. Way to go...

  • @GiorgosKoukoubagia

    @GiorgosKoukoubagia

    Жыл бұрын

    Nuclear and pumped hydro sounds like a great winning combo for the environment indeed! Too bad we don't hear a lot about your country's success on this matter, thanks for sharing.

  • @oskarmartin6486

    @oskarmartin6486

    Жыл бұрын

    That's amazing. I only wish Germany would be this ahead in carbon neutral energy production. Instead we went all in on natural gas while at the same time throtteling renewables and shutting down nuclear power plants. Now we have one of the worst energy productions, in terms of CO2 output, while also being among the most expensive in the world. 🥲

  • @leemarcus6123

    @leemarcus6123

    9 ай бұрын

    @@GiorgosKoukoubagia In news, its mostly negativity that gets all the attention, why post about some country's success when you could talk about dumb climate activist gluing themselves on the highway, or talk about nuclear disasters for the billionth time. Honestly if Slovakia's success were spread, maybe many more countries could be half way on their way to carbon neutral.

  • @grissee

    @grissee

    7 ай бұрын

    way to go slovaks! my country (Indonesia) is a net coal producer, so that's reflected on our electricity generation, and with neither soviets nor developed countries as our neighbor, putting up nuclear plant is kinda difficult

  • @fukkitful

    @fukkitful

    5 ай бұрын

    What about that last 1%, what produces it? 😁

  • @bartschrodernz
    @bartschrodernz2 жыл бұрын

    Good article! In New Zealand, there is active investigation (with $30M to fund the investigation) to use Lake Onslow as a 5TWh storage lake. That allows long term (as in seasonal) storage. Est cost $4B. New Zealand uses about 39TWh a year (before we all go electric), so the storage represents about 13% of the total use. Other solutions will help.

  • @kecuthbertson

    @kecuthbertson

    2 жыл бұрын

    I dont think a lot of New Zealanders appreciate the scale of the Lake Onslow Scheme, the total worldwide installed pumped hydro storage capacity is somewhere around 10TWh, Lake Onslow is currently penciled in to possibly be 5TWh, but it could theoretically be up to 12TWh if they go for the maximum possible. We could literally have the majority of the worlds pumped hydro capacity in one lake.

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kecuthbertson Is Science all you keep yourself updated about?

  • @kyh148

    @kyh148

    Жыл бұрын

    1/8 of the total ANNUAL consumption in one single storage site is insane

  • @ProfessorSyndicateFranklai
    @ProfessorSyndicateFranklai3 жыл бұрын

    Seeing footage of the actual area is so much nicer than the stock footage that we're usually bombarded with.

  • @v44n7

    @v44n7

    2 жыл бұрын

    still stock footage is quite good in this types of videos

  • @florabritannica
    @florabritannica3 жыл бұрын

    Can "an ungodly rush" be made an official unit for water? Also, that is a beautiful machine.

  • @snowstrobe

    @snowstrobe

    3 жыл бұрын

    The empirical measurement for a hydro-dam flow, Good Friday shoppers' stampede, and a horse pissing,

  • @abalakrishnan4152

    @abalakrishnan4152

    3 жыл бұрын

    Truly a beautiful machine. I love engineering, especially when it comes to renewables, but this makes me love it 10000x more

  • @ImplodedAtom

    @ImplodedAtom

    3 жыл бұрын

    Perfect name for a metal band.

  • @insertyourfeelingshere8106

    @insertyourfeelingshere8106

    3 жыл бұрын

    That implies the existence of a Godly rush. Ungodly is water flowing down and godly is water flowing up?

  • @user-eq9xs5fz9u

    @user-eq9xs5fz9u

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why not? we already have "fuckton" anyway

  • @tbix1963
    @tbix19633 жыл бұрын

    Nice video, having worked in the power industry in system operations for over 3 decades operating 2 pump storage facilities you were very accurate with most of the video. I only found one slight misunderstanding, the pony motors are used to bring the unit up to speed and synchronize the main motor/generator to the grid smoothly in the pumping mode. Once unit is tied into grid the pony motor is shut down. They are not needed in generation mode since you have water to spin the water wheel. Once unit is synchronized in pump mode the air is purged and gates opened, pumping starts the instant the water hits the wheel. At one time there was talk of sea level pump storage being built in NYC and was proposed to use subterranean caverns carved out of the bedrock as the lower reservoir. Idea was shot down but have to believe it might be used in other locations.

  • @michaeldowson6988

    @michaeldowson6988

    2 жыл бұрын

    I worked on a sewer trunk line once that required crossing a creek and then scaling a hill. Once built the pump pushed sewage up the hill, and was then shut off, as a siphon effect kept it flowing.

  • @johnnysystem2579

    @johnnysystem2579

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sea or Ocean exchange is exactly what I was thinking. I wonder how many natural locations there are. My first thought was Dover Cliffs in England. There should multiple location in the Americas in a variety of locations. Either way this is good basic tech with minimal operating costs, good efficiency and durable.

  • @tbix1963

    @tbix1963

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnnysystem2579 the main problem with pump/storage now days is the deregulation of the power industry has leveled the prices between day and night. In the past the price extremes between very low at night and astronomical in the day have ruined the business model for pump storage to be cycled daily, it is now being used more now as a source of reserve in emergencies since the difference between day and night costs seldom covers the pumping losses. At best they are typically not better than 67% efficient. There are other situations where greater efficiency can be had but not in a simple isolated pump/ storage hydro plant. With the experience I’ve had in pump/storage, the greatest element when storing energy is the cycle efficiency. Every time I see mention of grid tied electric cars for storage it makes me laugh. Never have i ever seen a number for the charge/discharge efficiency of a lithium battery, lots of other information but not that, oh and you have a limited cycle life, and your going to waste charging cycles helping out the power grid for pennies in exchange. Not something I would ever do.

  • @johnnysystem2579

    @johnnysystem2579

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tbix1963 I agree with some points but not with others. The efficiency for LI batteries is freely available, there is even a video done by this channel. Leveling out the day/night cycle would result in massive savings. Where I live we dump power every night in huge quantities. If you understand power then you know the effect on power factor. By moving all consumer power to electric you move the problem to the source and make it that much easier to effect change in the future. No one said this was easy and there is no one solution and I don't believe we will get there on time to stop irreversible climate change but at least one, maybe two generations get to live on earth. After that bend over and kiss your ...

  • @tbix1963

    @tbix1963

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnnysystem2579 over 30 years ago when I first started in the industry there was plenty of dump energy that you could get to the pumps and it was a wonderful experience turning waste energy into a useful product the next day. Unfortunately after deregulation the market I live and used to work in has been modified to protect the reliability of the system ahead of economics. There is plenty of dump energy out there at times but it’s usually limited behind transmission constraints that prevent it getting to where it’s needed. Deregulation took a system that worked and modified it so uninvolved persons could play in its market and make money off of the ratepayers. In doing so system reliability had to be preserved and limiting rules were created to allow the market to function without endangering the reliability of the system to the ratepayers. Just took a peak at the publicly available data from yesterday. For the region with pump storage and the next cheapest region. Daytime $44/MW and next door $34/MW. Night time. $128/MW in the pumping region and next door $44/MW. Very interesting data, from my experience I can tell you that they were likely pumping to restore required reserves for reliability driving the prices to insane levels in that region. Pumping at $128/MW will result in a price in the pond of $191/MW in the pond plus the typical adder of $5 for maintenance. The energy put back into the pond will now need to sell at $196/MW just to break even. In the old days we used to have an in the pond price of $12.4 in the pond and typical daytime prices were between $18 and $38. There was plenty of room to make savings that we passed on to the ratepayers. Today all the savings are eaten away by the overhead of the market and extra involved players that didn’t exist pre deregulation. As for the efficiency of LI I’ve seen numbers posted but never actually put in context so it would be useful. I seriously doubt the numbers they post are applicable to be used for actual economic calculations, hopefully I’m wrong. Just what are the cycle efficiency of LI batteries anyway? Just take the energy needed to charge and the actual energy you get out. I know that for the pump/storage I used to run that for every 100MW we pumped we only got back 67MW and that was after being upgraded to state of the art. For LI you would need to compare the energy into the charger than the energy received after the inverter since the energy into the battery has to come from somewhere and the DC in the battery isn’t very useful until it’s converted back to AC. The efficiency of the battery alone isn’t very useful, you need the efficiency of the entire system used to store and deliver the energy to the doorstep of the plant.

  • @lukasgadzijevas7163
    @lukasgadzijevas71633 жыл бұрын

    "there's always rain in Ireland" yup... makes me wanna cry ,but then there would be even more water :(

  • @XMarkxyz
    @XMarkxyz3 жыл бұрын

    That man at 2:13 must have been very careful to not lose his head as soon as he walks away P.S. this series of video about energy storage is the most well done I've seen about this topic

  • @kangirigungi

    @kangirigungi

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ugh. Work safety standards were not so high back than.

  • @ronwesilen4536

    @ronwesilen4536

    3 жыл бұрын

    He was just drying his hair

  • @MinneapolisRaven

    @MinneapolisRaven

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh my God, clearly pre-OSHA work conditions.

  • @ninjafruit816

    @ninjafruit816

    3 жыл бұрын

    You better hope he never has a eureka moment down there...

  • @aronseptianto8142

    @aronseptianto8142

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@CaptainBill22 and how does this correlate to a man doing maintenance below a giant spinning wheel of doom

  • @vedatveziroglu9436
    @vedatveziroglu94363 жыл бұрын

    i must be in an alternate reality where Real Engineering posts 2 videos in 2 days

  • @MarkWTK

    @MarkWTK

    3 жыл бұрын

    let's hope Bill gate's book can keep sponsoring Real Engineering :)

  • @chandankuamr8887

    @chandankuamr8887

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yup

  • @marcusjackson5837

    @marcusjackson5837

    3 жыл бұрын

    But do u know how much lobbying cost, pretty sure thats changes subsidies especially with competition. Remember when Saudi oil didn't like American fracking competition? And what also just happened just one year ago. kzread.info/dash/bejne/dpmW0sOjgaq4hpM.html They were trying to flood the market and that dropped prices to being free for a full month in the american market due to them using all their ships at once and only so much oil can be refined at a time while ships have to keep moving otjer wise it cost them money. My dude, the subsidies are not the issue when it comes to constant market control globally and constant regional monopolies that want to be the only game in town. Crack open a book.

  • @pspicer777

    @pspicer777

    3 жыл бұрын

    I like that reality.

  • @shadowgod1009

    @shadowgod1009

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@marcusjackson5837 Who are you talking to?

  • @sudombd1230
    @sudombd12303 жыл бұрын

    "Imagine having to pollute the world in order to make relatively short-lasting batteries made from scarce materials so you can store green energy in" - This post was made my pumped hydro gang.

  • @dangerous_safety

    @dangerous_safety

    3 жыл бұрын

    "imagine having to excavate large amounts of material and ruin the natural environment to store energy" - Not sure if this post was made by battery storage or pumped hydro because both do this.

  • @dairallan

    @dairallan

    3 жыл бұрын

    Elon Musk is in danger of stealing Thomas Midgley Jr's crown as history's most toxic organism. Pushing batteries for green energy storage, pushing his idiotic transport schemes harming viable mass transit projects not to mention there being a good argument that his disruption of the EV market will delay mass market penetration by years if not decades.

  • @BrokenLifeCycle

    @BrokenLifeCycle

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@dairallan ...What? I'd argue that if Tesla did not popularize EV, we might not be seeing a huge surge in the EV market within this generation. I mean, I never expected old-auto like GM, Chevy, and others to come out with an electric car *ever* and take it seriously. The only exception would be Nissan with their Leaf but barely anyone liked that car until the later versions when its range got better. Perhaps Musk did not revolutionize anything, but he and his company definitely made the waves to get the others to hustle, and that's something to consider. And that's how I can summarize Elon Musk: the wavemaker. Whether or not he personally succeeds or fails is irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. He's influencing others to haul ass or be left behind whether it's in the EV market, solar, power storage, space industry, internet, and tunnel boring --- whatever. I'd argue that people are innovating faster because of him and it's resulting in newer, greener technologies.

  • @dairallan

    @dairallan

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@BrokenLifeCycle The standard product model for manufacturing sees established producers adopt new technology, then leverage the cash stream from high value Early Adopters to fund bringing the line to the mass market. Musk has subverted that cash flow with, albeit clever manifacture of hype, and with no ability to bring EVs to the mass market. indeed established manuifacturers (with often far superior products) have seen failure after failure to entice early adopters and severaly hampered the standard model. Musk has easily added 10 years to EV adoption which was building significantly driven by established players unti lhe "disrupted" the market.

  • @porcus123

    @porcus123

    3 жыл бұрын

    It isnt black or white, transportation of eletricity over great distances leads to loses and not every place can build a dam, there are alot of ways to store energy hydrogen production and "hot rock" ar the ones I think have a lot of potencial

  • @MervynPartin
    @MervynPartin2 жыл бұрын

    When I worked in the UK electricity industry (before it was ruined by privatisation) I saw the value of pumped storage (during a training visit to the South Western Grid Control at Bristol) not just for peak-lopping but when 2 large generators had tripped in close succession whilst we were there. Dinorwig came up to full generation within seconds and maintained stability of the grid. Very impressed.

  • @VonSchpam
    @VonSchpam3 жыл бұрын

    2:12 Hi! What's your job? Oh, I crawl under the highspeed whirling death machine and read the meter and record it on my notepad with this pencil.

  • @Brian_Friesen

    @Brian_Friesen

    3 жыл бұрын

    If he grew his hair just a little bit longer...........

  • @GregRobsonUK

    @GregRobsonUK

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ah yes, the days before Health and Safety was invented!

  • @williamswenson5315

    @williamswenson5315

    3 жыл бұрын

    Two words. Remote readout.

  • @rpfeiffa2150

    @rpfeiffa2150

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Brian_Friesen he would get free haircuts.

  • @JG-mp5nb

    @JG-mp5nb

    3 жыл бұрын

    Don’t wear long sleeved shirts.

  • @TylerWitucki
    @TylerWitucki3 жыл бұрын

    That very accurate wind forecasting for the wind turbines had me saying WOW out loud, quite impressive 9:25

  • @Thermalions

    @Thermalions

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'd be a little more impressed (or maybe not) if I knew what the prediction timeframe was. 5 minutes, 30 minutes, 12 hours. It needs to be sufficient to enable load balancing from whatever is providing the base load generation (whatever that might be).

  • @thomas.02

    @thomas.02

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Thermalions there are dates on the x axis, I think we’re looking at a (roughly) one month graph

  • @Thermalions

    @Thermalions

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@thomas.02 But that doesn't reflect how far in advance that fairly accurate prediction is being done for that month. It's like weather predictions generally - they naturally get more accurate the closer you are to the time being predicted.

  • @thomas.02

    @thomas.02

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@Thermalions oh I see what you mean, my bad for the confusion i guess the general rule would be they'd do it as accurate as required say if they need a couple of hours to spin up the backup generators when demand increases then they'd need to predict the wind at least a couple of hours in advance

  • @matsv201

    @matsv201

    3 жыл бұрын

    Its not that hard to predict wind turbine power for 5-7 days ahead.. Its to some extent easier than prediction the weather. Also its not that hard to predict how the average wind will be over the next season, we have plenty of data for that. The issue is that predicting is not the same as controlling. While the pump power storage look huge.. in matter of time they can give power, its really just matter of hours, possible a day or two ... But we really need it to last at least two weeks. A other issue is the efficiency. Even with 80% efficiency (and that is really the high end), you really don´t wan´t to run them if you don´t need to. That is.. wind and solar unplanability is not solveable with pumped hydro, batteries or hydrogen. Nothing will work. Also even the largest pumped hydro stations are tiny. 292MW of power is a pittyfull amount. Compare that to one single nuclear reactor at 1600MW, and that is 24/7. The irony of it is that a nuclear power reactor that PRODUCE power is actually cheaper MW per MW than all storage alternatives. Pretty much rendering wind and solar utterly useless.

  • @nwjlions
    @nwjlions2 жыл бұрын

    First video I've watched on this channel. Very impressed with the effort and depth of the video. Nice job!

  • @thomasdavis8117
    @thomasdavis81172 жыл бұрын

    Easily the most impressive thing in this video is how closely the predicted wind generation matched actual production.

  • @JabelldiMarco

    @JabelldiMarco

    8 ай бұрын

    Not really: centuries of observation give you an incredible amount of data to work with or train your NN; I think any European coastal area could duplicate this; ...and then you add earth observation satellites.

  • @lylestavast7652

    @lylestavast7652

    2 ай бұрын

    the Texas grid ERCOT site has panels for about a dozen key stats which update all day. Well worth a watch - one of them is the projected day output for both wind and solar. Pretty accurate projections, and I say that knowing the time intervals they're using are a bit blocky. Its just ercot and a business domain ending - then look for dashboards. You can do things like watch the fuel mix panel, current day and see what percentage is currently coming from which generation sources at various hours ... pretty decent site and you can see the correlation between prices and such as well. I'm sure as time passes, their increased data set for weather and use patterns will get more and more accurate as well. TX is the largest electricity generating state in the US by almost 2x over FL. Last year they got about 32% of annual total from just wind and solar as a set.

  • @shzhe02
    @shzhe023 жыл бұрын

    this is the fourth time I've woken from a nap to see a Real Engineering video uploaded 20 seconds ago

  • @RealEngineering

    @RealEngineering

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’m watching you

  • @NegetiveRizz

    @NegetiveRizz

    3 жыл бұрын

    🤨

  • @MichaelLear

    @MichaelLear

    3 жыл бұрын

    he is like santa or a stalker

  • @lennyfieldy

    @lennyfieldy

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RealEngineering oh no

  • @greatcanadianmoose3965

    @greatcanadianmoose3965

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'd close your curtains

  • @szeth14
    @szeth143 жыл бұрын

    5:30 PM, when several million electric kettles are put on simultaneously ;)

  • @RandomAmbles

    @RandomAmbles

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is actually a really incisive point. One of the ways of reducing energy problems is by smoothing out energy loads. Right now the grid is like an 87 lane wide highway with all the cars next to each other. It has to be wide enough to carry the very worst traffic during rush hour without slowing down at all. If that load can be spread out it would significantly reduce the amount of power necessary to store. One way I've proposed of solving this problem is by offering government subsidies directly to people who log internet-of-things-automated appliances in to an online controller, which would use location and energy data to determine when those appliances turn on in order to spread their loads. This means that clothes driers and dish washers and such could be filled when people are home, but activated to turn on while they're at work, or even asleep. You get your clothes and dishes done for you (to some extent) and even get some money for doing it (which could easily come from energy production savings) and the grid itself gets smoothed-out energy draws. Something similar is being practiced in California, I'm told, but the state-subsidies idea is my own, which I intend to propose to lawmakers once the automated appliance technology is sufficiently developed. As for that... I'm working on it. Similarly, passively heated housing and housing that stores thermal energy will likely flatten that particular curve as well.

  • @kimchipig

    @kimchipig

    3 жыл бұрын

    My father was an area controller for a power company all his life and he said just this. When 500,000 stoves come on, it takes a fair bit to power them.

  • @RandomAmbles

    @RandomAmbles

    3 жыл бұрын

    Technically tax credits, not subsidies.

  • @mattj2077

    @mattj2077

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RandomAmbles 00

  • @bepropheta6665

    @bepropheta6665

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RandomAmbles This is already being done in Pennsylvania with water heaters, kind of... Well, with the electric cooperatives at least. With a load control device installed on the water heater, the co-op can shut this off during times of high electric usage. Members who have them, get a credit or discount on their monthly bill.

  • @mikebradley4096
    @mikebradley40962 жыл бұрын

    As an engineer with 40 years experience in power and renewables, working on various other solutions, I found this to be an absolutely excellent, balanced and very well informed analysis. I just wish you hadn't entitled it "the truth about..." because most YT videos with that sort of title are full of conspiracy theory, lies, deception and misinformation. But otherwise, very well done. Mike

  • @davebauman4991

    @davebauman4991

    Жыл бұрын

    Disagree. While truthful, this was wholly incomplete with no mention of any of the preexisting hydroelectric dams that have yet to be augmented by water reclamation pumps. Therefore, the number of storage reservoirs necessary is inflated.

  • @ltcuddles685

    @ltcuddles685

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davebauman4991 you could possibly say this video was on a very specific topic and idea.

  • @markuswurm3535
    @markuswurm35352 жыл бұрын

    As someone working in the hydro energy industry, I really liked and appreciate your video. Not only are the quality and informations top notch, I also liked the more detailed look on the turbines/generators. And most important, it will help to get the information out to the people, that this important technology exists! As in my oppinion, this is a technology that we should usw much more around the globe! Not only because I work in this industrie, but also because I think that it makes much sense seen globaly, to try to catch the energy spikes in the grid with pumped hydro! And get some 24/7 basic energy production with run-of-the-river power plants, which is my more specific sector.

  • @RealisticCookingIRL
    @RealisticCookingIRL3 жыл бұрын

    I just want to say, as an Irish man (from South Armagh), seeing someone explain how energy is stored in Ireland on KZread on such a popular KZread channel (which has about half the population of Ireland as its subscriber base) makes me feel ecstatic. I feel so proud of my fellow countryman. I love your videos, and I hope your subscriber base will grow, and you continue to tell subjects about Ireland. I had no idea this power station existed in Ireland, and I'm glad I know it now :) I have one question, however. Would it not be beneficial to have one pump for pumping water up to the reservoir, and one electricity creating turbine for water coming down? It seems in my mind that the price of the energy needed to pump may increase in the time it takes to swap directions, and over a long time, would this not be beneficial? I know there's a compressed air system, but would a section/gate redirecting the water to the other system not be more efficient? It just interests me that we could maybe make more efficient decisions about how the water flows through the system in each turbine/motor. For example, a Pelton wheel design may be more beneficial for energy creation, but not good for pumping water upwards. I bet that someone has already figured this out, but with a place with so much wind, we really should be taking more advantage of it. Thx for your videos, they are a massive inspiration to not just me, but my wee cousins and other young people. Iontach maith Brian, you're a saint. Unlike the story of the lake at the top of Slieve Gullion in which Fionn mac Cumhaill had his hair turned grey by a witch, this video about pumped storage provides hope about lakes on top of mountains, and rejuvinates the hope of the future generation. Slán abhaile mo cara

  • @oadka

    @oadka

    3 жыл бұрын

    I have a feeling they might be using a variable pitch impeller....

  • @sixstringedthing

    @sixstringedthing

    3 жыл бұрын

    Aussie here, not a hydroelectric engineer but I looked into this some time ago when the climate change denialists started banging on about the "waste and pointlessness" of our Snowy Mountains pumped hydro project, since I had the same questions mentioned here. As with many significant choices on large infrastructure projects, the design comes down to money; in this case, total operating cost over the projected lifespan of the facility. For a pumped hydro station, the electrical generation/interconnection side of things is largely a solved problem that can be budgeted pretty accurately. Most of the complexity/uncertainty (therefore the lion's share of the costs) comes down to hydraulic engineering, "where the rubber meets the road" or more accurately where the water meets the wheel. That "ungodly rush of water" necessary to generate meaningful power requires some insane levels of robustness and safety/redundancy in all the pipework, valves, control systems etc., costs commensurate with requirements and rising exponentially with added complexity due to the engineering time and specialised manufacturing required. More equipment and pipework means more earthworks are required, so capital costs are higher there too. Maintenance over the operating lifespan is also a major concern; basically a fixed cost for the generators, much harder to predict for the hydraulic stuff. Long story short, simpler is better, cheaper, easier to maintain, more economically attractive. All of those considerations outweigh the relatively small efficiency gain to be had by running seperate pumping/generation systems and their associated water handling components.

  • @sixstringedthing

    @sixstringedthing

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@oadka I wondered about that too, but I don't think so. The Engineering challenges in building a variable-pitch impeller with that kind of mass that can spin at 500rpm and deal with the forces involved would be.... considerable. Not impossible, but very very expensive. And think of the maintenance costs! I'm fairly certain that the impellers are solid units which are optimised through simulation to be as efficient as possible when generating flow in either direction. Typically the design would lean more towards efficiency in generation mode, since you want to get the absolute maximum out of the potential energy when required. Pumping the water back uphill can stand to be a little less efficient since it's being done off-peak when power costs are cheaper.

  • @ValirAmaril

    @ValirAmaril

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Donegal, sure we could go 100% wind, there's bare wind all the time.

  • @ffrr4886

    @ffrr4886

    3 жыл бұрын

    good luck for Ireland

  • @hgbugalou
    @hgbugalou3 жыл бұрын

    Renewables + nuclear is the only logical way forward. I really wish people would get educated about nuclear energy and radiation.

  • @TheRepublicOfJohn

    @TheRepublicOfJohn

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes! It may be the most important public education campaign in human history!

  • @mrmobius

    @mrmobius

    3 жыл бұрын

    I get that Nuclear plants are inherently safe, but the waste is a long-term nightmare.

  • @recklessroges

    @recklessroges

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mrmobius Thank you for providing an example for the comment above yours. (fission fuel cells can be used it other types of reactor, so it isn't long-term waste, it is "future fuel".)

  • @Its-Just-Zip

    @Its-Just-Zip

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mrmobius which is why we need to actually work on a plan for that, probably at the same time we work on the climate change one. Thorium reactors are an important step that should be pushed forward because it's less dangerous in the waste aspect. And that long term storage site that the US started building but has never used would be nice to get running

  • @manojpatra2840

    @manojpatra2840

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can reuse the waste moreover use can use much cleaner and cheap thorium, convert it to uranium from the energy by waste reusing but setting up these types of combination plants require a shitload of money So no one wants to invest in building one rather people are focusing on hydrogen

  • @Ancient_Hoplite
    @Ancient_Hoplite3 жыл бұрын

    Quality of these videos just keeps getting better and better, fair play.

  • @cyndicorinne
    @cyndicorinne2 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely love your clearly presented equations and charts.

  • @MrGtubedude
    @MrGtubedude3 жыл бұрын

    This guy inspires me to get through college while I’m studying engineering.

  • @phineas7423

    @phineas7423

    3 жыл бұрын

    Honestly same

  • @bartosrobert

    @bartosrobert

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same here 😂 electrical engineering* 😂😂

  • @sallyvanhetten5980

    @sallyvanhetten5980

    3 жыл бұрын

    He inspires us all

  • @socas_nic

    @socas_nic

    3 жыл бұрын

    He is keeping me away from homework and online lectures🤣

  • @GreenTimeEagle

    @GreenTimeEagle

    3 жыл бұрын

    Godspeed man. I thought I would be able to become an engineer for the sake of the renewable revolution but I found the maths and physics too difficult for me

  • @kubectlgetpo
    @kubectlgetpo3 жыл бұрын

    So we not gonna talk about the B-roll at 2:15 with a dude chilling under a massive spinning turbine with his head 12 inches away from it?

  • @ABrit-bt6ce

    @ABrit-bt6ce

    3 жыл бұрын

    Elfin Safety would love that setup :)

  • @Wanted797

    @Wanted797

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep. Don’t stand up.

  • @eds6889

    @eds6889

    3 жыл бұрын

    Caught my eye as well.

  • @tn15_

    @tn15_

    3 жыл бұрын

    2:13

  • @lahmyaj

    @lahmyaj

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol that’s his hiding spot at work 😹

  • @brillo9
    @brillo93 жыл бұрын

    Great video and information. From working in the hydro industry, it's great to see this kind of useful information shared! Thank you!

  • @NathanielMiller
    @NathanielMiller3 жыл бұрын

    I'm curious, on Point #1, what's the subsidy comparison measured in per MW, rather than raw numbers?

  • @orion1two

    @orion1two

    2 жыл бұрын

    SShhhhh

  • @_capr_545

    @_capr_545

    2 жыл бұрын

    Don't ask intelligent questions. Just go along with the narrative.

  • @NACAM42

    @NACAM42

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nuclear starts looking real good when you ask that question.

  • @Leggir

    @Leggir

    2 жыл бұрын

    Coming from decades of experience in the oil and gas industry, they're just as reliant on subsidies as anyone, especially since 2016. I don't have a problem with subsidies either way, but the way they are used. For example I worked on a significant compressor upgrade subsidy, entirely paid by the provincial government. A few teams of 20 guys and equipment went around the province and upgraded about 200 each. It was good work and we were paid for it. Now the equipment was supposed to produce less nox and be about 10% more efficient. Sounds good, except the oil companies sold a significant amount of the upgraded units outside of the country. So inevitably the subsidy only padded company coffers and did little for the environment locally.

  • @kylesenior

    @kylesenior

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, that my my immediate thought as well. He did not refute the statement at all.

  • @pinkgoergefloyd8340
    @pinkgoergefloyd83403 жыл бұрын

    “Solar and Wind have reached maturity” So they’re renewable and ready to mingle? Edit: You guys are looking into this too much. I just wanna take one of them out for dinner

  • @AxxLAfriku

    @AxxLAfriku

    3 жыл бұрын

    GAGAGAGAGAGA!!! I watched this video and it is really not that good compared to my perfect videos. GAGAGAGAGA!!! This is NOT self-promotion! This is the reality! This is the world! We are the people! Don't disl****ke my vide*****s, my dear oscae

  • @murci6891

    @murci6891

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AxxLAfriku wtff

  • @godassasin8097

    @godassasin8097

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AxxLAfriku ok

  • @godassasin8097

    @godassasin8097

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AxxLAfriku i disliked

  • @taylorc2542

    @taylorc2542

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's unfortunate that Bill Gates has co-opted this channel. It's just a religion now.

  • @colonelgraff9198
    @colonelgraff91983 жыл бұрын

    2:12 That dude, that hair, and those propellers spinning overhead

  • @PnlBtr

    @PnlBtr

    3 жыл бұрын

    No PPE either. Simpler times.

  • @3dpyromaniac560

    @3dpyromaniac560

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@PnlBtr manlier times

  • @ceilinglight1413

    @ceilinglight1413

    3 жыл бұрын

    He's gonna get a haitcut

  • @ChristianB90

    @ChristianB90

    3 жыл бұрын

    *OSHA has entered the chat*

  • @PinataOblongata

    @PinataOblongata

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@3dpyromaniac560 Pointlessly riskier times. Being maimed so you're no good to anyone doesn't make you manlier. Sure, some OH&S stuff goes over-board and is annoying, but lowering accidents and deaths in general across a number of types of work is only a good thing. Insurance crap stopping stuff from happening - now that's another issue.

  • @leifcian4288
    @leifcian42882 жыл бұрын

    With progressive watershed management there could be created a lot of catchments, overflows and spillways with small generators. Would help to protect areas more and more prone to flood and assist in irrigation too.

  • @cyrild.3205
    @cyrild.32053 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this very documented work !! I have especially appreciate the scintific article of your [11] bullet "Projecting the Future Levelized Cost of Electricity Storage Technologies" : a bit complex but readable and VERY interesting

  • @Martin42944
    @Martin429443 жыл бұрын

    0:37 - minor note, but subsidy cost per KwH would be a better and more accurate comparison. It would drastically change that graph and I wouldn't be surprised if biofuels are actually the most heavily subsidized.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those US maize subsidies are pretty hefty, I've heard.

  • @michaelpapadopoulos6054

    @michaelpapadopoulos6054

    3 жыл бұрын

    If I remember correctly, he said that more renewable capacity was installed. For renewables at least, the main cost is installation. For me the best comparison would be subsidies per new kw of capacity installed times the load factor.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@C4pt41nN3m0 some of those skilled do seem to be inordinately ... fond ... of a good corn-cobbing.

  • @grae_n

    @grae_n

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't cost per KwH be misleading in a different way? Subsidizes tend to be given to new electric generation moreso than maintenance. He mentioned that 75% of new electric sources are renewable.

  • @aurorawaxwing5866

    @aurorawaxwing5866

    3 жыл бұрын

    That makes sense to use absolute over per kwh because to really get into where the subsidies are going it would become to long to fit into the video and per kwh would be even more misleading in own ways.

  • @davidwayneprins
    @davidwayneprins3 жыл бұрын

    I live an hour from one such facility. Ludington, Michigan has been in operation nearly 50 years.

  • @TS6815

    @TS6815

    3 жыл бұрын

    Came here to post this!

  • @TheMCLand

    @TheMCLand

    3 жыл бұрын

    In another post, I asked if it works in freezing weather, but if it works in Michigan then the cold must not be a problem.

  • @Captain-Axeman

    @Captain-Axeman

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hermonie voice : How can it be nearly 50 years?

  • @rabidmoonmonkey1090

    @rabidmoonmonkey1090

    3 жыл бұрын

    I live an hour from turloc hill, the facility he referenced in the video.

  • @Sinyao

    @Sinyao

    3 жыл бұрын

    How are your property values? Is it an eyesore? That seems to be one of the arguments people make against them lmao.

  • @fenrir834
    @fenrir8343 жыл бұрын

    i just understood why just listening to yo voice feels so good. there is some background music in this video that is very soft.

  • @kennarajora6532

    @kennarajora6532

    3 жыл бұрын

    I had to put my volume to the max to hear it, but yeah, it's there.

  • @lmechb3305
    @lmechb33052 жыл бұрын

    Great video. On the compressed air system, I understood this to be for rapid loading (in seconds) of the generator as pumped storage of this era was to help grid with demand of kettles going on with popular tv show advertisement breaks. The compressed air system enables the turbine and generator to be spun at synchronous speed (generator locked to grid freq and driving the turbine as a motor). When rapid demand is made the water inlet can be opened and immediately load the generator, no delay in synchronisation. Most sites refer to this mode of operation as Spin-Gen.

  • @shanelmurray3448

    @shanelmurray3448

    2 жыл бұрын

    In New Zealand hydro the compressed air system is referred to as tail water depression (TWD) which allows the rotor to spin unimpeded. I think on this mode they can generate reactive power to counteract imbalances from inductive devices.

  • @Think_Inc
    @Think_Inc3 жыл бұрын

    Hey! Both Real Science and Real Engineering have released videos on the same day!

  • @mitchell16
    @mitchell163 жыл бұрын

    Really interesting video, it's a shame we haven't built any others in Ireland since the late 60s even in spite of the issues you mentioned in your video

  • @jeffhuff1000

    @jeffhuff1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    Pumped storage are mainly installed to support nuclear stations by consuming electricity when demand is low and generating when it is high. Their main function was to regulate the grid when the demands is low as you can't regulate a nuc plant down in output. The pumping plants were built as part of the nuclear project. The main issue stopping more which plants is the economics. There is no real economics vehicle to pay the plants for regulating the grid as an independent plant storage from a nuclear plant. They get paid for just straight power production and that doesn't provide a reasonable return on investment

  • @Pique147

    @Pique147

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ireland's geography is a major hurdle. Not enough of the right kind of hills. Plus, considering the way the country does budgets, (cough, New Children's Hospital) we'd spend more on it than ITER are spending on their fusion reactor.

  • @kaitlyn__L

    @kaitlyn__L

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@laredobenjamin7438 recent reactors can go down to 25%, which still isn’t totally off. Back in the ‘70s, you were lucky to be able to bring it down to 50%, 75% was more common if any at all was done. Though I agree with your point about baseload, yet the original point Jeff made about the build planning to be to support the nuclear project was true. It was projected to need a lot more storage with a majority-nuclear grid. That’s where the political will for pumped hydro came from. Even though they can be useful for any baseload supply today. Not to mention, absorbing the unused power at night is only part of it. Another contributing factor was being able to absorb _demand spikes._ Even if you’re able to ramp up your nuclear from 50 to 100, you don’t want to have to cut off supply while it’s rising. It’s demand-shaving, like most grid scale batteries are offering now, and like water towers and gasometers always allowed. Again, as part of the political idea in the ‘60s and ‘70s of using nuclear for basically everything, not just baseload, they figured they’d need to be able to absorb pretty large demand spikes. Thus, pumped hydro was presented as the solution.

  • @jeffhuff1000

    @jeffhuff1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@laredobenjamin7438 you are correct that it "can" be done... however, it takes a long time to change load and stabilize thereby making it so you need an alternate method of consuming the electricity... hence pumped storage...

  • @peglor

    @peglor

    3 жыл бұрын

    There was a group a while back called 'The Spirit of Ireland' that wanted to dam off hydraulically isolated valleys facing towards the sea on the west coast (They found a few suitable sites) and use them as reservoirs for pumped seawater. Nothing came of it because every square mm of land in this country is owned by someone, and even if they're sub-subsistence farming (Couldn't survive on farming income without EU grants) it - they would still delay any construction for decades or indefinitely in the courts. Irish people are not fans of taking people's land - even if they're extremely well compensated for it.

  • @Apistevist
    @Apistevist3 жыл бұрын

    You've committed a fallacy when discussing the subsidies of each industry. The fossil fuel industry is 3-4x bigger than renewable, so it's more intellectually honest to consider what % of each sector is subsidized.

  • @LMSI998

    @LMSI998

    3 жыл бұрын

    Fossil fuel industry is more than 4x bigger. But I thought that too, because fossil fuels are dominating the energy sector and renewables are a fraction of that. Moreover, fossil fuels are highly taxed.

  • @Snuggle093
    @Snuggle0933 жыл бұрын

    Have you considered making a video on biomethane as a storage option? It's being pursued actively in my home country (Denmark) as a way to use the existing gas grid as a storage option for peak load hours, that also contributes to emission reductions in agriculture. Main purpose is to use it for industry and transport - but storage option is an important secondary benefit.

  • @skyvenrazgriz8226
    @skyvenrazgriz82263 жыл бұрын

    I always knew australia was a war torn country, must be the Emus again! They are fighting the coal exports or so ;P

  • @edwardanderson4678

    @edwardanderson4678

    3 жыл бұрын

    I was a Bush Walloper many years ago and I shot a number of roos and emus that tourists thought were friendly until the animal concerned gutted them with one kick, some men and women were not killed but they weren't ever going to have children. Most of the kids died very quickly.

  • @RandyTWester

    @RandyTWester

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@edwardanderson4678 Yeah they usually show polar bears on TV after the blood's been rinsed off.

  • @everything9118
    @everything91183 жыл бұрын

    Man. With amount of work u put in. U deserve every bit. Never compromise with quality. Your channel will grow more and more.

  • @tpobrienjr
    @tpobrienjr2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for a good exposition on pumped energy storage. My area doesn't have enough nearby good hills for pumped energy storage, but we have plenty of wind - and hot air from politicians.

  • @MVargic

    @MVargic

    Жыл бұрын

    With proper voltage, even over 500 km of power lines can have negligible losses.

  • @olavogazzola2650
    @olavogazzola26503 жыл бұрын

    This channel is very interesting with the new calc explanations, I really enjoy that!

  • @Oscar-vf9tg
    @Oscar-vf9tg3 жыл бұрын

    Such amazing production quality. I've been watching you for a long time and it's always a treat when a new video comes out! Concise and clear with enough details to get a good grip of the topic. Keep up the good work!

  • @blacx2
    @blacx23 жыл бұрын

    You should take a look at the "El hierro hydro-wind plant" in the Canary Islands, it uses an old volcanic caldera and sea water.

  • @RealEngineering

    @RealEngineering

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh for real? I tried to find cool examples, but that didn’t come up in my search.

  • @Gornemant

    @Gornemant

    3 жыл бұрын

    Indeed, the El Hierro 100% renewable island has been huge for a while, said to be the best example of such a solution, and it is.... Because it's a massive failure, the whole thing is so far from the claimed 100% renewable that it is laughable. No wonder it doesn't pop up anymore besides being used as an example of what such a "solution" brings: - Massive price increase in power cost - Blackouts - Still more than 50% of all electricity is produced by diesel generators This is exactly what this solution brings and is that perfect example of what _NOT_ to do.

  • @Gornemant

    @Gornemant

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RealEngineering www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/11/10/2812/htm Easy to find information on that, but some pro-renewable sites have removed all mentions of it, I wonder why...

  • @julianshepherd2038

    @julianshepherd2038

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RealEngineering for a visit Cruachan (built1965) is a cracker and the climb up the Ben (Cruachan) is dramatic and almost lunar.

  • @VerifyTheTruth

    @VerifyTheTruth

    3 жыл бұрын

    El Heirro: What Kind Of Pumps Do They Use? Wind? Perhaps They Could Also Include A Battery Of Freznel Based Solar Condensation Pressure Boilers, With Hydraulic Pistons, Check Valves, And Inline Drop Points, Similar To A Combination Of Heart Pump Mechanisms And Transpiration, To Supplement To Pumping Operations? In Proper Applications, It Can Not Only Basically Combust Water Instantaneously, But Distill It As Well, While Producing Excess Extractable Energy. Fo Realz.

  • @PanzerDave
    @PanzerDave3 жыл бұрын

    The only downside to a salt water reservoir system as mentioned is the greatly increased maintenance required as well as a reduced service life. I have sailboats and the ones that use raw water cooling require more maintenance than the fresh water cooled boats. Additionally, the cooling systems wear out sooner than the fresh water systems. I am sure that it can work, but the costs will be higher. Thank you for yet another excellent video!

  • @orppranator5230

    @orppranator5230

    Жыл бұрын

    You basically just said “salt water bad” in like five different ways.

  • @suspiciousskepticism6306

    @suspiciousskepticism6306

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if they could desalinate the water during the conversion to make up some of the lost efficiency somehow... or get the added benefit of turning salt water to fresh water before it gets pumped. No more extra maintenance due to the salt and its drinkable...🤷‍♂️

  • @ZeeCaptainRon

    @ZeeCaptainRon

    11 ай бұрын

    imagine the number of salt water organisms that will be killed as they are pumped back and forth through a salt water system. Then the amount of maintenance keeping the barnacles from growing and clogging it up. I'd say there were lots of downsides to it.

  • @kstricl
    @kstricl2 жыл бұрын

    Deep in the heart of Alberta's oil production fields (traditional, not sands) sits a large reservoir that is being converted to pumped hydro. The reservoir was built in 1965 and the plans are to increase capacity for generation from 355 MW to 900 MW. The operator is closing down its oldest coal fired plant 150 km away this fall and will be closing its newest and cleanest coal plant at the same site (10 years old) in 4 years. I believe there is still a place for natural gas fired plants in the renewable future, but we definitely need to reduce them to the minority and get them to the point of being backups, instead of primary sources.

  • @James-sk4db

    @James-sk4db

    Жыл бұрын

    Energy = life, The more energy the higher the standard of living and the less poverty. The less poverty the less unnecessary death. Deliberately choosing to not use the most energy dense per £ invested sources is amoral. It is choosing someone elses life over your feelings.

  • @kstricl

    @kstricl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@James-sk4db Are you arguing for or against renewables? Gravity battery or lithium ion?

  • @James-sk4db

    @James-sk4db

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kstricl Im arguing against anti-fossil fuel, but i'm all for renewables, so long as they are cost effective, hydro-electro and geothermal come to mind as well as nuclear. If you have £1bn to invest in energy you should use it to use it to generate the absolute most energy possible as the more you produce the less scarcity there is in the rest of the world.

  • @patrykwesoowski8873
    @patrykwesoowski88733 жыл бұрын

    Two medium sized nuclear power plants and Ireland is safe in terms of electricity. And space taken by them is laughauble in comparison to water reservoires required to operate to cover the needs of a country.

  • @bearcubdaycare

    @bearcubdaycare

    3 жыл бұрын

    Though, of course, you'd have to build pumped storage for the nuclear power. That's what pumped storage is mostly used for, at least on my continent.

  • @bee5440

    @bee5440

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bearcubdaycare the continuous operation of plants would help reduce the need for that, although cooling pools and just water supplies for plants in general takes lots of water

  • @aronseptianto8142

    @aronseptianto8142

    3 жыл бұрын

    again, the right tool at the right time and place Ireland need both base load power generation and fast acting power storage we need both, not one or the other

  • @johnuferbach9166

    @johnuferbach9166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bee5440 continuous operation doesn't help you when its night and nobody wants the energy... if you only have slow reacting nuclear powerplants you need a ton of storage aswell or you will have to discard most of their power most times of the day

  • @daafip
    @daafip3 жыл бұрын

    Nice that ur releasing earlier on Nebula

  • @RealEngineering

    @RealEngineering

    3 жыл бұрын

    Trying to be better about that. We have been behind schedule for a few months, but gradually catching up.

  • @tylerm.9408
    @tylerm.94083 жыл бұрын

    Man, your videos are always SO great

  • @SirBalageG
    @SirBalageG3 жыл бұрын

    God bless you, you’ve opened my eyes in the last year or so that I want to pursuit Smart Grid as a uni specialisation and later on as an electrical engineer, you have my ethernal thanks Also, congrats on 3mills :)

  • @danielhdidouan
    @danielhdidouan3 жыл бұрын

    @15:25 You used some of my research group's findings in paper [11] - Oli is gonna have such a big head when I tell him his "fantastic paper" was featured XD

  • @RealEngineering

    @RealEngineering

    3 жыл бұрын

    Been using that paper for a lot of this energy storage series. Primary reference paper really. Lovely graphics.

  • @johnuferbach9166

    @johnuferbach9166

    3 жыл бұрын

    nice :D

  • @danielhdidouan

    @danielhdidouan

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@RealEngineering he said it "made his day"! If you need any more contacts with researchers on this, subscribe to my channel... (sorry I couldn't resist) but drop me a message and I can try link you with people :)

  • @krselj
    @krselj3 жыл бұрын

    Can you really compare abolute values invested subsidies into fossil vs renewable?? It should be price per kwh generated not the entire industry.

  • @julianatlas5172

    @julianatlas5172

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why did fossil received any subsidies at all? The gov is paying the companies that are destroying the planet :/

  • @rodchallis8031

    @rodchallis8031

    3 жыл бұрын

    Even trickier is the definition of "subsidy". Some would just take the amount in cash grants as subsidy, and draw the line there. Others would take a look at the entire costs of fossil fuels paid for by government-- including the cost of clean ups and disaster compensations, and consider that part of the whole subsidy picture. There's little doubt in my mind that if the full costs of environmental clean ups various governments have paid for over the years showed up directly at the gas pump, we'd have been either peddling bikes or driving electric cars for decades already. The only thing that makes fossil fuels so attractive, price wise, is that it's probably our biggest "social program".

  • @gabbar51ngh

    @gabbar51ngh

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@julianatlas5172 renewables aren't much better either. Nuclear is the way to go.

  • @ProfessorDingus

    @ProfessorDingus

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@julianatlas5172 agreed, also a carbon tax to account for the negative externalities of fossil fuels would level the playing field until renewables become a real solution to feed our industrial energy hunger.

  • @speak_the_truth5380

    @speak_the_truth5380

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@julianatlas5172 Define destroying the planet. I want you to take a beach or mountain vacation only to see a wind farm. I want you to give the ok to have a wind turbine set up in your back yard and a water storage unit installed above your family home? Everything is fine until it directly impacts you or your property value. Or better yet do your part and live without electricity, gas and oil. Take your whining to the polluting counties that are the real root cause of this so called "global warming" instead of fixing a problem that has little to do with the western world. www.ventusky.com/?p=33;-126;1&l=pm25

  • @Rkcuddles
    @Rkcuddles3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video as always. It’s often a treat to find them on topics I am interested in. The one question I was really hoping you would answer...why water? When the power is flowing, it seems we could be lifting anything we want and just letting it back down when we want that energy back. So why use water? Ok you don’t want to suspend giant boulders cause extracting the potential energy has to be safe and non destructive... But can’t we increase the plants maximum capacity by just suspending heavy things in the water that we are already working with? Everything is already in place, just load up a barge with a bunch of rocks and thorn the whole thing into free extra capacity for the system. I am sure I am missing something obvious

  • @kekero540

    @kekero540

    2 жыл бұрын

    Because water is abundant, heavy, and the technology for its use is basically the same as any other hydropower setup so the expertise for its use is cheaper than a novel design.

  • @Chopper153

    @Chopper153

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're missing everything. Water and wind are fluids, that's why we can use pumps and turbines to store/release energy. Please see the mass flow rate in a typical hydro turbine and calculate how many boulders you'll need per second to generate that kind of electricity.

  • @Rkcuddles

    @Rkcuddles

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Chopper153 I get that we don’t want to rebuild the entire infrastructure to use boulders. What I am suggesting is you put an old cargo ships on the water and load it up with weights. Wouldn’t that increase the total gravitational potential that we are storing and give us a way to get more out of the system? I feel there is a flaw in my thinking, just can’t think my way to find it.

  • @Chopper153

    @Chopper153

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Rkcuddles How will floating a heavy mass on the top lake increase potential energy? Potential energy depends on height of water body, not on things floating on it.

  • @mukansamonkey

    @mukansamonkey

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Rkcuddles In order for a ship to float, it has to displace the same weight of water as the ship weighs. So if you want to float a thousand ton ship, you lose a thousand tons of water (at the same height in the reservoir). Ultimately you aren't raising and lowering the weight of the ship as far as you are the water.

  • @keithplymale2374
    @keithplymale23742 жыл бұрын

    I was involved in a construction job several years ago that put pipes underground for a reason. To check the system they pumped water through it before it went into operation. At the man holes you could hear the roar and feel the ground vibrate 100 feet away.

  • @williams.779
    @williams.7793 жыл бұрын

    Even as an interdisciplinary engineering major, I completely forgot that you can just store potential energy like that 😂 but it makes sense, y’know.

  • @jasonreed7522

    @jasonreed7522

    3 жыл бұрын

    I took a class on energy systems, people have some dumb ideas about energy storage like in mechanical kinetic systems (flywheels), blocks on hills (rail storage), and heating a large block for later use. And the worst offender is lithium ion batteries which degrade by cycle lives to need replacement every 2-3 years. But then there are some good methods like electrolyzing hydrogen for later and pumped hydro.

  • @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158

    @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jasonreed7522 why do you need peak density for a lithium ion battery when it’s for the grid. Use recycled lithium ion batteries smh

  • @altrag

    @altrag

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jasonreed7522 Not sure what you see a "dumb" about any of those ideas..? Flywheel is probably the worst of them because of the massive friction losses, but there's a lot of work on reducing that via maglev systems and the like (yes the magnets would induce a loss of their own, but as long as that's less than the loss due to friction in something like a ball bearing wheel, its still a net win). Of course you're never going to scale a single rail car to 292Mw or whatever the number was, but there's also no reason you'd have to - just have a whole fleet of them covering a mountainside. Perhaps not the most aesthetically pleasing structure in the world but entirely doable. All of those methods have drawbacks yes, but so does pumped hydro and so does hydrogen electrolysis.. and so does not even trying and just continuing to burn a shit ton more fossil fuels. And every individual power station's needs will be different (political, geological, etc) so having many options available with different benefit/drawback tradeoffs is never going to be a bad thing.

  • @Bird_Dog00

    @Bird_Dog00

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@altrag Modern flywheels don't need to have massive friction losses. You can run them in a vacum chamber on magnetic bearings. The loss is below 10%/day. Doesn't work for long-term storage, but for short-term storage and compensating fluctuation in the grid, it strikes me as an interesting option. The flywheel can switch from storing to releasing energy in a fraction of a second and unlike a battery, it can provide some grid inertia. Not sure how well it scales though.

  • @altrag

    @altrag

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Bird_Dog00 Battery systems like Tesla's installation in Australia can switch in milliseconds. Speed definitely isn't an issue with batteries. As for scaling.. that's not really _hard_ per se - just build a bunch of them and hook them together. There's definitely going to be an engineering limit for building bigger and bigger individual flywheels, but not really for building as many as you want in a row. That's mostly a cost and land use issue.

  • @cheaterman49
    @cheaterman493 жыл бұрын

    8:40 Hahaha, the kettle peak! Them tea-drinkers :-D

  • @WeRlostAndFound
    @WeRlostAndFound3 жыл бұрын

    7:37 made me and my sleep paralysis demon chuckle more then it should have

  • @Sciguy95
    @Sciguy953 жыл бұрын

    I'd love to see you do a video on concentrated solar power. The idea of using mirrors to reflect the suns light and heat water to produce steam, so that we can generate energy is really cool.

  • @VachicorneOld
    @VachicorneOld3 жыл бұрын

    The thing is calculating the price of a renewable energy withtout calculating the cost of its backup power source is pointless. Period

  • @deformercr6680
    @deformercr66803 жыл бұрын

    The animations are STUNNING!

  • @insertyourfeelingshere8106

    @insertyourfeelingshere8106

    3 жыл бұрын

    You’re stunning

  • @deformercr6680

    @deformercr6680

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@insertyourfeelingshere8106NO YOU'RE STUNNING!! lmfao you made my day.

  • @TylerSolvestri

    @TylerSolvestri

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@deformercr6680 You are stunning

  • @TylerSolvestri

    @TylerSolvestri

    3 жыл бұрын

    And Brave 😎💅

  • @MorphingReality
    @MorphingReality11 ай бұрын

    Incredible how well they can predict wind patterns ahead of time.

  • @rickrudd
    @rickrudd3 жыл бұрын

    Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia is a great example of a pumped storage hydroelectric lake that provides a tremendous amount of energy for peak demand while maintaining a largely constant surface level. Check it out. Only fluctuates a couple feet under normal conditions.

  • @veronicathecow
    @veronicathecow3 жыл бұрын

    "Hydrogen looks poised to seize long duration energy storage". It's been poised for 50 years now. Now hydro using old mines.... You can also extract heat from the returning water for process or district heating.

  • @stefanr8232

    @stefanr8232

    3 жыл бұрын

    If the fuel cell is inside a home you can use (un)waste directly as heating and create sterile drinking water.

  • @andrewscott8892

    @andrewscott8892

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can also incinerate trash to boil water thus turning it a steam turbine, we can almost eliminate land fills

  • @bra1nsen

    @bra1nsen

    3 жыл бұрын

    50 years ago, climate wasnt part of the equation

  • @Alexander_Kale

    @Alexander_Kale

    3 жыл бұрын

    Co2, when pumped back into the ground, takes up more space than the stuff it was mined from. You will run out of old mines before you make a meaningful impact on the problem, and most surface or close to surface mines cannot be used for this at all, for obvious reasons...

  • @thepostapocalyptictrio4762

    @thepostapocalyptictrio4762

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s like they say about fusion.. “Hydrogen’s the wave of the future, and it always will be”😆

  • @jamesdavison6290
    @jamesdavison62903 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! You answered many of my long standing questions about pumped hydro. Energy storage is the greatest challenge for the new generation of engineers. Your videos are powerful way of disseminating this information and leave me thoughtful for many hours after I have watched them. Superior work!

  • @bennyl7224

    @bennyl7224

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nuclear has pretty incredible energy storage

  • @birgerjarl4391
    @birgerjarl43912 жыл бұрын

    Other problems with wind other than storage: 1. 15 year lifespan, creates lots of waste 2. Makes lots of noise 3. Kills birds

  • @budjohnson7958
    @budjohnson79582 ай бұрын

    I am a retired power electrician with 37 years experience. In my career I worked on hydro electric stations, steam power station, Ac to Dc and vice versa convertor and invertor station, Distribution stations, Control, protection and metering. I understand electric power. I like this idea in the video and also like the honesty that it could be part of the solution. Adding new load i.e. electric cars to the existing power system will only delay the time coal and natural gas power stations can be phased out. We need to build the renewable energy sytem first and work on more effecient uses of our fossil fuels meanwhile i.e. use trains to move more of good instead of trucks, create a mass transit system that is more convient than using your own vehicle, change business so there is less comuting etc. Another source of storing water for electric energy would be to use existing hydro electric stations combined with wind and solar energy. More generation would have to be added so the water resivour could be used at a higher rate for short durations and then hydro generation dropped when solar and wind energy available to refill the water resivour. Of course there would have to be a study on this for feasability. There is always a lot of politics that go along with all this stuff i.e. not in my back yard.

  • @Werdapple
    @Werdapple3 жыл бұрын

    2 videos in under a week That’s what I like

  • @flynnthedemon934
    @flynnthedemon9343 жыл бұрын

    Overall a great video, but I would like to point out that the subsidies statement is quite misleading, as coal produces a lot more power. If you calculate it as dollars per TWh, for coal you get around $10.19M/TWh, and for wind you get around $89.51M/TWh. (These numbers are based on 2019 numbers from ourworldindata.org/grapher/global-primary-energy for the energy generation, and the subsidies are sourced directly from the video)

  • @sterlingsilver6461

    @sterlingsilver6461

    3 жыл бұрын

    Amen dude, was thinking the same thing!

  • @threelowlys

    @threelowlys

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is certain agenda being pushed from this channel, to me, it's no longer 'True Engineering' but a marketing channel. It's really a shame though.

  • @johnsimpson99

    @johnsimpson99

    2 жыл бұрын

    Valid point, and something I had wondered about when seeing that in the video. From another point of view: Why are there still subsidies for coal? If anything, there should be penalties for it's continued use.

  • @castratedbob

    @castratedbob

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@threelowlys Yeah if he's taking sponsors from eugenicists like Bill Gates he can go get fucked. Enjoyed a lot of older videos but he seems to be on an agenda as an ideologue now. It is a shame.

  • @alphazuluz

    @alphazuluz

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnsimpson99 do you realize how much of the world depends on coal and fossil fuels just to survive? Do you realize how many products are made from fossil fuels? If you ended them tomorrow, or started penalizing people for using them, it would destroy the economy and cause mass starvation. This isn’t combing from some rando on the internet. The world economic forum claimed that something like 10-50 million people would die if we immediately abandoned fossil fuel use. People like you have these grand, utopic ideas that are totally disconnected from reality. It is clear that you have zero idea how things are made, or how the world works.

  • @Wasalami
    @Wasalami Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video with awesome explanation. But sticking to the same decimal separator would be really help full :D

  • @MrLancar
    @MrLancar3 жыл бұрын

    Man, you've become really skilled at making these look good. As someone who's been a subscriber since the early days of this channel, I'm impressed to see the development. Keep up the good work!

  • @metanevets91
    @metanevets913 жыл бұрын

    I feel like all the comments currently in chat haven't had enough time to actually watch the video

  • @Think_Inc

    @Think_Inc

    3 жыл бұрын

    Obviously. It was uploaded less time ago than the length of the video.

  • @recklessroges

    @recklessroges

    3 жыл бұрын

    3.1x speed is a thing.

  • @metanevets91

    @metanevets91

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@recklessroges I believe that only serves to prove my point.

  • @requited2568

    @requited2568

    3 жыл бұрын

    While there will always be people who comment just from seeing the title, most of the comments stem from his opening statement that renewable energy is cheaper than traditional power generation without doing the math and showing the proof. It may even actually have become cheaper with the increases in technology but he has provided no way of knowing and the one graph he supplied may as well be comparing apples to oranges. Both are fruit but have different components making up the whole and an analysis would only have taken a couple more minutes and silenced at least some of his critics. It always comes down to actually doing the math and starting at the beginning.

  • @julianshepherd2038

    @julianshepherd2038

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's 2021. Folk don't need facts to have opinions. Are some sort of swivel eyed Communist?

  • @rickrys2729
    @rickrys27292 жыл бұрын

    Nice video. RethinkX suggests overbuilding solar and wind to reduce the need for storage, suggesting it is cheaper to curtail or find uses like generating hydrogen with extra power. Extra power is likely in the spring which has good sunshine, strong wind and lower heating or A/C loads. Some existing hydro plants took 3 years to fill. Here in the North America we have 35 GW of hydro in Quebec that would match nicely with the massive offshore wind potential.

  • @Cerberus984

    @Cerberus984

    2 жыл бұрын

    Would you agree catastrophic weather related events are increasing? Do you agree putting all your eggs in one basket is risky? Now consider long term durability of renewables in an ever more volatile environment. One hurricane, tornado, or even wildfire vs countless square miles of power production. Now compare it to more traditional power stations protected by a concrete building in those same volatile weather events. Don't gamble everything playing roulette on the rare one tile of green.

  • @rickrys2729

    @rickrys2729

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@Cerberus984 A grid with distributed renewable generation is well suited to be reliable and improved recycling will allow perpetual maintenance. Renewables have won the competition for lowest cost generation. Large central power plants can work if they are carbon free, safe, and low cost, but current fossil and nuclear plants don't meet those requirements at low cost. We do need a highly interconnected grid with open markets and hardening of transmission and distribution especially in weather prone locations.

  • @karlgustafson179
    @karlgustafson1792 жыл бұрын

    Great video! Great channel! I have a facility like this near me in the US (Northfield Mountain), and toured it pre-911 days. It was impressive. That said I always understood water was pumped up by cheap electricity during low demand times, and released to generate more valuable electricity during peak demand times. But I’ve always thought of it as a means of generating money for investors, rather than adding net power to the grid. While I now understand pumped hydro more as a “battery,” and see the value in that, I am still left with the question of whether the amount of power generated truly offsets the amount of power necessary to pump the water into the storage area. A civil and intelligent answer to this would be appreciated!

  • @timcrawford2221

    @timcrawford2221

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think the electricity used is about 80% of the electricity generated.

  • @iasonkostellenos8341

    @iasonkostellenos8341

    2 жыл бұрын

    It also has to do with they way the power grid works. It's not like a water tap, where there's pipes with water constantly running through it. kzread.info/dash/bejne/qpys0ZSoiLXPmdI.html This video from Wendover, beautifully explains how the power grid works. For example, in England they used to (not sure, if they still do) have to buy electricity from France during the ad-breaks of the most popular tv shows, because a big part of the population would get up and make tea at the same time, which consumed more electricity than England could produce. That's why energy storage is such a huge issue right now. Hope that helped!

  • @Eugen_Belyaev

    @Eugen_Belyaev

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why does it not occur to anyone to compare the energy consumption for lifting water with the energy generated by falling from the top. After all, then, humanity will receive a real "green"! The famous experiment of Pascal B. had to abandon the pumped storage tank, replacing it with CLOSED WATER CIRCUITS that provide a CIRCUIT of water!

  • @mukansamonkey

    @mukansamonkey

    2 жыл бұрын

    The mistake you are making is thinking of it as "storing when cheap". What storage like this does is "stores when excess is being generated". The supply to the grid has to be adjusted continuously. Feedback loops that work in less than a second, in some cases. So when a gust of wind increases avaliable wind power, there are three choices. Other generators drop their output, some electricity gets diverted to storage... or the windmills disengage their blades and lower their output. Basically if you want to capture as much energy as possible from wind and solar, you need storage. The grid can't use erratic inputs.

  • @Eugen_Belyaev

    @Eugen_Belyaev

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mukansamonkey You need to start with definitions: You are completely confused! First, give clear scientific definitions of MASS, ENERGY, GRAVITY; in accordance with the logical law of IDENTITY! Energy is not something tangible that you can store and accumulate! Concentrate, stop raving!

  • @20_percent
    @20_percent3 жыл бұрын

    damn the sponsorship was smooth af, that's how you do it so it blends with the video

  • @johndee2990

    @johndee2990

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, and how you lose hundreds of subscriptions if not thousands

  • @hebl47

    @hebl47

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@johndee2990 Losing conspiracy nutjobs isn't really a big loss.

  • @johndee2990

    @johndee2990

    3 жыл бұрын

    Trusting a guy who wants to eliminate crypto like Bitcoin, who wants inefficient green tech yet was fully supporting the nuclear power industry when he was still in competition with Mac (think 90's) A guy who is tied up with African vaccine scams and contaminations from his "relief" efforts.. A guy who expressed interest in depopulation.. Yeah I wouldn't tust that guy if he was just some random neighbor, so why should I trust him if he has money? Epstein had money, and he was a demon in the flesh.. and there was less to research about that guy and his thoughts until finally he shot the bed.. So trust known liars for all I care. As far as I am concerned, dismissing your own best interest is what nutjobs do.. not guarding against a possible threat to one's livelihood

  • @20_percent

    @20_percent

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@johndee2990 hmm 🤔

  • @bencoad8492

    @bencoad8492

    3 жыл бұрын

    yea its gross bill gates really ewww

  • @zachb1706
    @zachb17063 жыл бұрын

    0:35 That doesn’t take into account how much each source is used. Sure, overall fossil fuels might get more subsidies- but per MWH?

  • @kevlarandchrome

    @kevlarandchrome

    3 жыл бұрын

    How dare you ask for important contextual information!

  • @Alexander_Kale

    @Alexander_Kale

    3 жыл бұрын

    As of 2010, estimated subsidies per unit of energy produced were about 6 times higher for solar. That would not have looked quite as good in the video, I assume...

  • @calamityjean1525

    @calamityjean1525

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Alexander_Kale 2010 was over a decade ago. The price of solar, and the subsidies for solar, have gone down significantly since then.

  • @donotstalkme

    @donotstalkme

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is the main thing that makes me skeptical when listening to any green energy advocate: the amount of intentional misinformarion. I was also really surprised to see this "fact" at the beginning of the video and went looking for the real number.

  • @ticthak

    @ticthak

    3 жыл бұрын

    Factor in over TCO- subsidies for installation (and maintenance) ve. subsidies for installation, maintenance, AND ALL FUEL USED. There's no comparison, fuel is a continuing cost of operation.

  • @sailorbob74133
    @sailorbob741333 жыл бұрын

    Could you please provide the source for the FF vs renewables subsidies?

  • @sc20910
    @sc209102 жыл бұрын

    So many awesome options now to take the place of pumped hydro. Grid scale storage solutions are amazing. See the just have a think channel for some great ones.

  • @K-Effect
    @K-Effect3 жыл бұрын

    I want to see more nuclear power plants

  • @bronzedivision

    @bronzedivision

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but that would mean something that actually works and no one seems to want that. :P

  • @ConsultingHumor
    @ConsultingHumor3 жыл бұрын

    I like how you went straight for the shut down on the subsidy argument 👍👍👍

  • @ChildOfTheLie96

    @ChildOfTheLie96

    3 жыл бұрын

    He should do a collab w/potholer54

  • @taylorc2542

    @taylorc2542

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those numbers are brought to you by Bill Gates, so take with a huge grain of salt.

  • @GenJoseGhost

    @GenJoseGhost

    3 жыл бұрын

    The argument in the video is really bad. Total subsidies are not relevant without knowing the total expenses in the sector, nor the total product.

  • @leerman22

    @leerman22

    3 жыл бұрын

    He didn't compare the subsidies with the actual energy generated per year (his graph was back in 2017 at 0:30). Fossil fuel subsidies are pretty mundane when you look at the productivity, not that I like those subsidies. Don't compare installed capacity either, compare actual energy generated since solar and wind have an annual capacity factor of 10-20% and 10-50% or so. Even the Hover Dam is drying up and its capacity factor is like 20% when the dams near me are around 50%.

  • @similar_username

    @similar_username

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@taylorc2542 Not really since he had to do his own research for the vid, bill was just supporting the vid. it's real engineering research. and to be honest, when is bill wrong he's right most of the time.

  • @Tomm9y
    @Tomm9y2 жыл бұрын

    I think you are correct about the solutions. I believe the opinion in Ireland is currently focused on investment in battery storage technology. It seems a significant issue with pumped storage is the initial cost of the investment. Turlough hill is a huge success and an awesome site, having visited it myself. Even the development of wind farms face hurdles where the funding and regulatory approvals are out of step. Some of this needs to come at a state level, as the innovative Shannon scheme and Turlough hill did in their time.

  • @philipklein6847
    @philipklein68472 жыл бұрын

    I would really like to see a break down of Energy Vaults's solution using cranes and stacked blocks in place of hydro

  • @Pastori1988

    @Pastori1988

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/m3t7scx9j7LacbA.html There you go.

  • @dinandv1178
    @dinandv11783 жыл бұрын

    i love your vids, can you do one on delta wings sometime? id be very curious to know how the j-35 drakens and the mirages went obsolete and why they worked

  • @dsdy1205

    @dsdy1205

    3 жыл бұрын

    Millennium 7 has very good videos on the delta wing and its adoption, abandonment and re-adoption and the underlying dynamics / physics reasons for it, worth a look!

  • @puirYorick
    @puirYorick3 жыл бұрын

    Can't we all just get along? This is a great option where the topography is suitable but no single option will make ALL of the others realistically go away totally any time soon.

  • @ljkking622

    @ljkking622

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s about power but it’s political power not electricity.

  • @ppapshrek4485

    @ppapshrek4485

    3 жыл бұрын

    Even if we could, even if we respected each other's opinions. Would we be able to fix our global climate.

  • @ljkking622

    @ljkking622

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ppapshrek4485 that’s if the climate needs fixed. Way to many lies and inconsistencies to be sure.

  • @puirYorick

    @puirYorick

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Robert Sears Very well then, perish together it is... Free will and all that good stuff, eh?

  • @puirYorick

    @puirYorick

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ljkking622 What humanity needs to do before our era comes to an end in one way or other is to figure out a way to fashion our human ecosystem into a more flexible enduring type that's able to withstand whatever happens with the planet... at least until we figure out how to make the jump into being a true space-faring species. As George Carlin and others have intimated, The Earth doesn't care. It will carry on regardless. It's only *our* survival that's at stake. There's probably not enough time or resources left to use before we move past too many tipping points to keep going down blind alleys with mega projects that don't lead to meaningful success. We're doing stupid things like wasting precious helium gas on party balloons. We're still burning off methane from landfills as a nuisance in some places without getting any work from the power. The list goes on. Being rival fanboys for various sorts of systems due to personal or national politics or employment/educational affiliation is NOT going to allow a rigorous scientific conclusion to be formed.

  • @RedBatteryHead
    @RedBatteryHead2 жыл бұрын

    Great explanation. I think the answer here is liquid Air battery or gravitational storage to help the reservoir.

  • @twaddington
    @twaddington3 жыл бұрын

    Pretty excited to find out that there's a closed-loop pumped hydro project being planned two hours East of Portland, Oregon along the Columbia River Valley. It's called the "Goldendale Energy Storage" project.

  • @zakiducky
    @zakiducky3 жыл бұрын

    Bruh, 2 videos in one week? Make sure you sleep lol

  • @patrickalthaus7992
    @patrickalthaus79923 жыл бұрын

    I'am from switzerland. Thanks to the alps we acually had nuclear reactors and hydro power / pump storage for decades. So less a problem for us i think : )

  • @pdeuart1306

    @pdeuart1306

    3 жыл бұрын

    Most of your electricity is from France

  • @marcosteiner3619

    @marcosteiner3619

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@pdeuart1306 I think you forgot to substract the exports from that number... But it is true that we run our pumped hydro plants with nuclear energy from France

  • @xcw4934
    @xcw49342 жыл бұрын

    Would it be feasible to upgrade regular hydro electric dams to pumped hydro? Build a reservoir at the bottom of the dam and install a generator that can also pump water uphill. Currently hydro simply stops when grid demand falls below supply but in future if renewables account for a much larger portion of the supply can regular hydro do more than simply stop generating and start storing power?

  • @squirrel6338
    @squirrel63383 жыл бұрын

    Great video thanks. Can you do a similar video of wind to Hydrogen storage. Particularly with regards to losses and overall efficiency

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan3 жыл бұрын

    2:12 Workplace safety on the level that cost my grandfather a leg.

  • @Indpendent01

    @Indpendent01

    3 жыл бұрын

    yeah dont sneeze!

  • @homownerjoe
    @homownerjoe3 жыл бұрын

    Hon Mayoooo! Shame it didn't go ahead. I've hiked up ta Turlough Hill before, it's an impressive sight and the engineering, even more so.

  • @felixyusupov7299
    @felixyusupov72994 ай бұрын

    One overlooked pump storage option is the Salton Sea and Pacific Ocean in California. Pump water out of the Salton Sea at night using geothermal energy and produce hydroelectric power during the day by adding Pacific ocean water to the Salton Sea. The surface area of the Salton sea is 343 square miles. There is a 225 feet of elevation difference between the Salton Sea and Pacific Ocean. They have already bored a hole in the mountain between the imperial valley and San Diego to transport fresh water. They could drill another one for this battery storage idea. Another advantage is you effectively reduce the high salinity of the Salton Sea while improving air quality of the imperial valley by covering the entire dry lake bed.

  • @muhendislikteknoloji2836
    @muhendislikteknoloji28363 жыл бұрын

    Hello, I am doing a thesis on hydroelectric power plant design, but I could not find a clear enough source. If there is a source that explains the principles of hydroelectric power plant design step by step, could you suggest you know?

  • @GwynRosaire
    @GwynRosaire3 жыл бұрын

    Environmental concerns halting projects to address environmental concerns. Sounds like the paradox of our time

  • @ultrascreens5206

    @ultrascreens5206

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly lol its like ‘dont use plastic its bad, use paper instead as it degrades’ Then ‘stop using paper you’re cutting down too many trees’

  • @BrentTJo

    @BrentTJo

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ultrascreens5206 In grad school (environmental engineering) we read a published research paper on the environmental impacts of paper vs plastic. It was interesting and broke down the number of plastic bags needs vs one paper and the electrical requirements to recycle both etc. Still came out nearly even, but the educational message that there is no magic bullet solution and improvement is the key.

  • @tactics1056
    @tactics10563 жыл бұрын

    MAN POSTED 2 VIDS IN A WEEK POGGGGGG

  • @simonnygaardjensen1367

    @simonnygaardjensen1367

    3 жыл бұрын

    GOAT

  • @philmatthews3537

    @philmatthews3537

    3 жыл бұрын

    What have you been doing on your keyboard to make the G key so sticky?

  • @pauljnellissery7096

    @pauljnellissery7096

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@philmatthews3537 you may not wanna know that

  • @EB-pm2hy

    @EB-pm2hy

    3 жыл бұрын

    Phil Matthews CCi z da r

  • @jerrymoxlow8249
    @jerrymoxlow82492 жыл бұрын

    How many gallons of water would you need to run a ( which one would work best ) water turbin for your home with battery backup?

  • @mikebikekite1
    @mikebikekite12 жыл бұрын

    Do you have a link to the paper (mentioned at 15:25) on levelized cost of storage?

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