a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
From the Australian Financial Review
He is stuck in the Stone Age of electrical theory.
Modern big batteries, yes, including the ones from Tesla, can provide the stability a grid requires and even do it better than mechanical devices. They can respond instantly to problems.
www.afr.com
Paywalled sometimes. YMMV.
Before we argue about policy fixes, Australians deserve a five-minute engineering primer. Electricity is not a policy construct. It is physics. And the physics have not changed since Michael Faraday and the steam engine.
Electricity is moving electrons. To move them at grid scale, you need a generator: a magnet spinning inside coils of wire. No spin, no electricity. Almost every power station on earth – coal, gas, nuclear, hydro, geothermal, even solar thermal – is, at heart, a steam engine or water turbine driving that generator. Wind does the same with moving air.
Only solar PV is different – no moving parts, just semiconductors. All the others are mechanical beasts that deliver a priceless bonus – inertia – from multi-thousand-tonne rotors spinning at exactly 3000 revolutions per minute (50 hertz).
Wind turbines and solar panels provide almost none. Batteries provide none at all. Remove the spinning masses, and the grid becomes a nervous thoroughbred instead of a carthorse.
He is stuck in the Stone Age of electrical theory.
Modern big batteries, yes, including the ones from Tesla, can provide the stability a grid requires and even do it better than mechanical devices. They can respond instantly to problems.
Fix the electricity system in 2026 by returning to first principles
Electricity is not a policy construct. It is physics – and the physics have not changed since Michael Faraday and the steam engine.
Paywalled sometimes. YMMV.