A startup’s quest to store electricity in the ocean

(techcrunch.com)

51 points | by rbanffy 4 hours ago ago

47 comments

  • perlgeek 2 hours ago

    It sounds quiet inefficient to me. The energy differential comes from the different salt concentrations, so you have to move a lot of water to exploit a relatively low mass differential.

    Mentions of efficiency are conspicuously absent from the article.

    Another potential problem is marine ecology: pumping high-salt sea water to the top and releasing it en masse might lead to much larger fluctuations in salt concentration than what the ecosystem is used to.

    That said, we need many different approaches to solve energy storage, and I hope to be wrong, and that they end up very successful.

    • garbthetill 2 hours ago

      Yeah no mention of how it would effect marine ecology is bad, but the avg startup/mega-corp doenst care see how far people are trying to make deep sea mining legal, even with its obvious implications of destroying the sea

    • perilunar an hour ago

      According to the article, both the reservoirs are sealed — the brine won't affect salinity in the surrounding water.

  • alex_duf 2 hours ago

    What I don't understand is how the top reservoir is floating when filled with brine. Are the small floaters enough to hold it up?

    Otherwise I love the fact that's simple. Simplicity scales. It's also salt water, so assuming they're not putting anything else than NaCl, it can break and it's no big deal

  • sixtyj 3 hours ago

    From the article:

    [Company] has tested a small model of the reservoirs in wave tanks and off the coast of Reggio Calabria, Italy. It’s now deploying a pilot of the floating components in advance of a full demonstration plant. By 2026, it’s hoping to deploy several commercial projects at sites around the world.

    At full size, the turbines would generate around 6 to 7 megawatts of electricity each, and there will be one for every 100 meters of pipe. Deeper sites would have more storage potential, and each commercial site would host multiple reservoirs. Sizable hopes to deliver energy storage for €20 per kilowatt-hour (about $23), about one-tenth what a grid-scale battery costs. —-

    Testing in calm reservoire is different from potentially .wild offshore (ocean/sea)

    What happens to 100-200 m long pipe in underwater waves when e.g. a hurricane or a storm comes?

    • curiousObject 2 hours ago

      What happens to 100-200 m long pipe in underwater waves when e.g. a hurricane or a storm comes?

      That’s an excellent question, but it is also similar to asking what will happen to wind turbines in a storm.

      Maybe some will break. Maybe that’s an acceptable outcome. Probably they can be improved to reduce that risk

      • sixtyj an hour ago

        This platform (from video in the article) seems fragile compared to wind turbines or oil rigging platforms.

        I know that underwater is calm even during storm but happens to the top part that is connected with pipe to bottom part?

    • alex_duf 2 hours ago

      It's anchored to the seafloor. Also surely we have the technology to hold a pipe in high sea, as this is what petrol platforms are doing.

      • sgt an hour ago

        Waves and weather can literally make concrete attached to rocky shores go flying... so one must not underestimate those forces.

      • anotheryou 2 hours ago

        platforms are on stilts, no? Quite different from floating. But yea, seems doable.

        • wasmitnetzen an hour ago

          There are floating platforms as well if the water is too deep for stilts.

    • closewith 3 hours ago

      > What happens to 100-200 m long pipe in underwater waves when e.g. a hurricane or a storm comes?

      Nothing, to a rounding error. The effects of surface storms are only noticeable to ~2x wave amplitude.

      There are plenty of other forces at work, especially tides, but storms will only affect the surface plant.

    • vkou 3 hours ago

      Even in a storm, just a few meters below the surface (half the wavelength), the sea will be calm.

      The bigger issue with this idea is that it's a megastructure sitting in the ocean, and salt water turns everything it touches into shit. Oh, and there's very little energy storage potential from just a salt gradient. You need to move way more water, to get less energy, but your container costs are fixed.

      Land-based pumped hydro has no shortage of engineering problems (and risks if, you know, you get a dam collapse), but this has colossal capex costs.

  • Gabrys1 3 hours ago

    My understanding of this technology is that it's closed-circuit. No water is exchanged between the power plant and the ocean once filled with ocean water.

    • badestrand 2 hours ago

      To be honest, I find it a bit hard to understand even from the video. The top part doesn't look like it has any container at all.

      • anotheryou 2 hours ago

        right? really badly explained visually (no matter how visible the tanks are in reality)

        • Gabrys1 an hour ago

          I must have missed the video apparently...

  • anotheryou 2 hours ago

    Do I get this right?

    - they concentrate salt water once to get "heavier than sea water" brine. Hope not chlorinated.

    - it's then a closed system shuffling between bottom and top tank(s)

    - everything floating is soft, so no strong forces unless a wave crashes on top

    - advantage of ocean: "free standing" within height/depth margins, free water for initial fill

    And really not visible in the video:

    - the disk you see floating is a V shaped bladder with the storage in the V below surface and floatation sprinkled all around and segmented in to "cake wedges".

  • theoreticalmal 2 hours ago

    Wait a second $23/kWh? I pay ~ $0.15/kWh for power at my residence the majority of the year. Is this a proof of concept number? What am I not understanding such that the power this produces is 4 orders of magnitude more expensive than what’s in place currently?

    • NooneAtAll3 2 hours ago

      "An average lithium battery costs around $139 per kWh in 2024" - random result from first page of googling in ddg

      https://www.renogy.com/blogs/buyers-guide/how-much-does-a-li...

    • Maxion 2 hours ago

      I think they mean kWh of storage capacity – your talking about your energy costs which in a battery is the round-trip cost.

      Battery capacity and energy consumption are measured in the same unit.

    • alex_duf 2 hours ago

      kWh of capacity, as compared to a kWh of capacity on a battery, over the lifetime of the product.

      On each of these kWh you'll have (hopefully) multiple orders of magnitude of charge cycles

  • edarchis 2 hours ago

    Relying on a salinity differential, even between salted and unsalted, seems like a terribly small amount of energy. There are projects to put large spheres at the feet of offshore windmills to pump water in and out. That has some pressure challenges but store a lot more.

    The advantage I see for the salinity difference is that you can make them a lot larger than the pumped water ones. But is worth it, I'm skeptical.

  • jnovacho 2 hours ago

    How exactly are they pushing the brine against the ~50BAR pressure differential?

    • joha4270 2 hours ago

      They're not dealing with a pressure differential. Or at least I don't think so.

      I don't think the Journalist who wrote the article understood the technical details, but from digging a little at their website I think what's going on is they're moving heavy brine up and down, all of it equalized with local pressure.

      Despite them describing it as pumped hydro, I think its better framed as a cousin of the "chunk of concrete suspended over a mine shaft" style gravity battery. Replace the mineshaft with water and the concrete with salt.

      • jnovacho an hour ago

        Oh, right thanks for clarification. They are indeed not pumping just any salt water, but much heavier brine (which they get who knows where).

        So if there is any leak in the system, it will kill local wildlife right, like the brine pools under ice in Antarctica.

        • Filligree 39 minutes ago

          If there’s a catastrophic collapse, sure.

          If there’s a leak? I don’t see why it would; the brine will be immediately diluted.

  • CMYKninja 2 hours ago

    The maintenance on this will be a real killer and by the time you build the robotic infrastructure to maintain it you’re not a power company anymore kindof how Amazon isn’t a bookseller.

  • world2vec 3 hours ago

    Maybe I'm missing something but won't submerged structures like these get all covered in barnacles in a few months?

    • marcyb5st 2 hours ago

      I don't think it is a problem for the outside shell, or maybe just a minor one. For the interior of the reservoirs, I guess the hyper salty water will kill everything that tries to grow there.

  • klntsky 3 hours ago

    > Sizable’s reservoirs could connect to any grid that’s near waters that are at least 500 meters (1,640 feet) deep.

    How many big cities are there on earth with that depth available nearby?

    • OtherShrezzing 3 hours ago

      It depends on the definition of "near", but there's a sizeable population within ~40km, which is a reasonable distance for an offshore wind-farm.

      Almost the entire Mediterranean is >500m depth within just a few km of the shore, and that's half a billion people. All of the eastern seaboard of the North+South American continent is available at 100km distance (another 100-200mn people). Most of west Africa, all of Australia, and almost all of the western flank of the Pacific.

      Maybe a quarter of all people live within 40-50km of a 500m deep sea. Definitely a large TAM.

    • tiarafawn 3 hours ago

      Could also be interesting in case the idea of under water data centers ever returns

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Natick

      Or it could help offshore wind farms provide a more stable/predictable output.

  • worldsayshi 3 hours ago

    80% round-trip efficiency sounds very good. What am I missing?

    • Cthulhu_ 2 hours ago

      It's in the ocean, which corrodes and destroys All.

      • Filligree 38 minutes ago

        I’ll stick with my freshwater fish tank. Fewer bobbit worms as well.

    • marcyb5st 2 hours ago

      That to store enough energy with just haline gradient the reservoirs need to be enormous

      • jillesvangurp 2 hours ago

        And under water construction is expensive. And durable construction in a marine environment is challenging (and makes things more expensive).

        That doesn't mean it's a bad idea but they are factors that add to the overall cost. 20$/kwh is very attractive of course. But that's also a number that e.g. CATL is chasing with sodium ion batteries. And they are going to be making those by the gwh/year from next month.

  • cyberax 2 hours ago

    So they have to build megastructures that withstand 10-20 bars of pressure changes? I don't get it otherwise.

  • Mistletoe 3 hours ago

    Is the salt NaCl?

  • foota 4 hours ago

    This seems like it could mess up local weather by bringing up water of different temperatures if deployed at scale (and if not at scale, what's the point?).

    • robertlagrant 4 hours ago

      > if deployed at scale (and if not at scale, what's the point?).

      The "at scale"s might be very different between "what would be enough to affect local weather" and "what would store all the excess electricity generated in non-peak hours".

  • pandemic_region 4 hours ago

    Whatever this is, leave the ocean alone unless this is beneficial to its inhabitants.

    • alias_neo 3 hours ago

      Should we not do the same on land too, since it's significantly more scarce than ocean?

    • the_gipsy 3 hours ago

      This seems relatively non-invasive. It seems like the thing is closed-circuit, so there isn't even a brine / freshwater problem.