Coordinating smart appliances and electric cars may help balance supply and demand in the power grid, according to a new study.
In the power grid, supply and demand need to match exactly. If consumers demand more power than producers can supply, or if producers provide more power than consumers need, the result can be rolling blackouts. Power producers usually keep turbines spinning at a few offline plants, so they can ramp up production if demand spikes. Or they maintain coal-fired backup generators that can be fired up quickly. But these approaches are either costly, polluting, or both. In theory, the grid could employ a battery to keep supply and demand in balance, but existing battery technologies offer no cost savings over power production. In a new paper, however, MIT researchers argue that 'smart appliances' in homes and offices, such as thermostats that can be adjusted remotely, and electric cars that plug into the grid could, collectively, act as a massive battery, offering a lower-cost, lower-emission alternative to backup power generation in the grid.
TO READ THIS ARTICLE, CREATE YOUR ACCOUNT
And extend your reading, free of charge and with no commitment.