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#26 2022-12-30 20:47:41

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,382

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

For SpaceNut .... Bing found this (to me quite interesting) discussion about vegetable oil for home heating...

https://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread208539/pg1

There is a nice mix of pro and con posts, with the best pro posts outshining the cons (in my opinion).

I did a quick search for oil furnaces, and found prices generally lower than the $10,000 you estimated, but your installation might need a lot more work than just the furnace.

One detail is that a vegetable oil burner requires a different feed system than a refinery heating oil.

Another detail that caught my eye was a reminder to keep the vegetable oil warm because it will gel, which is unlikely with refined heating oil.

Another detail that caught my eye was a reference to manufacture of biodiesel, which (apparently) involves blending lighter weight material with the vegetable oil.  I gather this improves the ignition capability of the fluid, and probably other properties as well, such as the aforementioned gelling behavior.

Another detail that caught my eye was a report that the first diesel engine was run on peanut oil ....

That would probably have been the Benz motor in Germany. (Will now go and check).

A bit later:

German engineer Rudolf Diesel (1858-1913) built his first diesel engine in 1892. He experimented at first with a number of fuel sources including coal dust suspended in water however by the 1900 World's Fair in Paris, Dr Diesel had his engine running on 100 per cent peanut oil!

Peanut-Powered Tractors?https://pca.com.au › ... › History of the Peanut Industry

Update a bit later.... 32 ounces of Peanut Oil was offered on a web site:

Meijer Peanut Oil, 32 oz
$4.49

That would be $18 per gallon or $42*18 >> 400+20+320+16 >> 756 per barrel.

The price of a barrel of heating oil in the USA today is $139.86 per markets.businessinsider.com

I would expect the price of a railroad tank car full of peanut oil to be less than 756 per barrel.

However, there may not be such a thing as a railroad car of peanut oil. From reading a bit about manufacture of oils for cooking, I get the impression that seeds are pressed in small batches.

I found a gallon jug of an oil for $16 a gallon. That was the lowest price.

I found a 420 pound barrel of soybean oil for $727.81

markets.businessinsider.com found a ton of soybean oil for $1651.l6

A spreadsheet from ERS, USDA reports farm prices showing about half of retail price for soybean oil, with the share fluctuating.

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#27 2022-12-31 07:26:35

tahanson43206
Moderator
Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,382

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

In another topic, (or several other topics) kbd512 has proposed capturing sunlight on a massive scale, to make hydrocarbon fuels to replace ground source ones.

I think this is a good idea, and I support his work, recognizing that an effort on this scale is comparable to the Normandy Invasion in scope, investment and personnel involvement.

The current idea of this topic, to enlist existing nano-machinery to make oil from sunlight and original source materials, is comparable in scope.

Of the two, enlisting plants to make oil, and extracting the oil for heating, seems to me a bit easier to sell to investors.

For one thing, the technology has (apparently) been around for 4000 years.  I ran across a citation yesterday, indicating that residents of ? Cypress ? were using olive oil to make molten metal 4000 years ago.  That is pretty impressive technology for that time period. 

The proposal of kbd512 has some advantages with respect to the proposal to grow plants to make heating oil.  For one thing, the plants need Nitrogen and other nutrients.  Both systems need an ample supply of fresh water, and both systems require plenty of sunlight.

On the face of it, I would imagine that both systems require plenty of land for all that sunlight.

In the case of growing plants, existing data provides a firm data set for acreage needed for a given volume of oil to be produced.  However, I expect the land needs to be given opportunities to grow other crops in the normal rotation.

The proposal of kbd512 requires construction of high tech equipment that does not currently exist.  The plant-to-heating-oil proposal does require more equipment, but nothing new is needed, and existing farm managers have the knowledge and skills needed.  The proposal of kbd512 will require enlistment and training of a massive army of personnel. 

To advance this topic, I'd appreciate assistance with developing a (tentative) working plan for a test facility to demonstrate the feasibility of the concept of plant-to-heating-oil.

While SpaceNut has started to develop a vision of how the concept might work for him, it is highly likely that most forum members live in circumstances where the proposed plant-to-heating-oil concept would make sense.

To restate the concept.... plant sourced heating oil would be accumulated in the six month growing season before winter, in sufficient quantity to keep the house warm for the six months of cold weather, and in addition, there would be enough fuel set aside to operate a small generator to provide power for the furnace.

This is NOT intended to be a replacement for all the power supplied by a utility to a home.  This is intended ONLY to keep the furnace running, and perhaps to recharge a battery or two.

I'd like to see cost estimates for the home installation, on one hand, and for the farm-processor-delivery segment of the package on the other.

It should be possible to arrive at solid figures for the amount of Earth surface needed for the growing process, given solid figures for the amount of fuel needed to sustain a household for a winter.

None of this is rocket science.  It should be possible to work up these numbers using traditional accounting techniques.

Here is a hint about the use of olive oil to melt metal: (per Google)...

MESOPOTAMIAN CUSTOMS, LIFE, HOMES. CLOTHES, DRUGS ...
factsanddetails.com › world › cat56 › sub363 › item1522
By 3500 B.C. mirrors were fashioned from polished metal in Mesopotamia. ... olive oil, sesame oil, cypress (or juniper) oil/resin, and oil extracted from ...

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#28 2022-12-31 07:36:35

tahanson43206
Moderator
Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,382

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

For SpaceNut regarding costs....

There are folks alive on Earth today who could afford the heating method proposed earlier in this topic.

To the extent those folks convert to plant sourced heating oil, the oil (or gas) they ** would ** have consumed will be available for distribution to others with less means.  This ** should ** mean pressure on the price of traditional under-the-ground-sourced heating oil, because demand will be reduced.

I'm hoping this argument will encourage members of the NewMars forum to help to advance the discussion in order to arrive at a proposal that can stand up to the intense scrutiny it will receive by the investor community.

The immediate need is to know with some accuracy, the exact quantity of vegetable oil that is needed to keep a home warm for a winter in the Northern latitudes.

Any NewMars member who has access to records for a home heating exercise for a winter could contribute to understanding of the scope of the problem to be addressed.

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#29 2022-12-31 18:21:01

SpaceNut
Administrator
From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

commercial off the shelf equipment to execute the process is built on site to the industrial process as designed to meet the goals.

Sure, what the commercial manufacturing companies are doing can is scalable downwards.

These are make do systems with regards to low volume needs.

http://www.floridabiodieselinc.com/comm … l-sysyems/

https://farm-energy.extension.org/comme … n-systems/

ProcessFlowSchematicForBiodieselProduction.jpg

https://farm-energy.extension.org/intro … eneration/

https://farm-energy.extension.org/intro … biodiesel/

https://farm-energy.extension.org/oilse … roduction/

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#30 2022-12-31 18:30:31

Steve Stewart
Member
From: Kansas City (USA)
Registered: 2019-09-21
Posts: 161
Website

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

SpaceNut,
Are you familiar with outdoor wood furnaces? If you have a supply of wood maybe this would work for you. I know several farmers that use these. The fire is outside, so it lowers the risk of a house fire and saves space in the house. You may need to put up a metal roof over them though.

Farmers I know who use outdoor wood furnaces have no problem finding wood. Just cleaning up dead limbs in an area near and around their house gives them plenty of wood to burn.

Trees grow with energy from the sun. The carbon that is released from burning wood originated from the atmosphere (same as vegetable oil). Unlike fossil fuels wood doesn't add carbon to the atmosphere.


koldoU7.jpg

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#31 2022-12-31 18:43:57

SpaceNut
Administrator
From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

Thanks, Stewart, for looking out for ideas that might solve the heating issue.

Would need to create an enclosure...building permit hell of course.. fire inspection ect...for an outside use but possible for inside as I have a chimney to make use of in the basement. But that is the issue in that it's just heating the cold of the basement of sort of a split-level ranch style home and not providing heat to the upstairs where we live.

I just saw a video that made a sand battery as they called it in the UK as the person had a home with no chimney, so the solution was a heavy but portable unit containing heated sand. It sorts of looked like a propane hot water tank in that the flue came up through the center of the basically drum of sand. A couple hours of burning wood under it would allow it to heat for several hours upon being it inside the home.

update
Today was met with a title change 1-1-23 where the solar fuel was changed from synthetic to natural as well due to inclusion of wood sources for energy.

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#32 2023-03-10 13:26:17

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,382

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

This post is about battery storage of renewable energy, and an intention to try to integrate thousands of home battery storage devices with the national network.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/itochu-quiet … 00136.html

This report is about an attempt to coordinate home battery installations. According to the article, the government of Japan is working on integration of home systems such as described in the article, with utility electric supply systems in 2024.

The integration regulations, equipment and software (apparently) do not exist today.

Itochu quietly assembled a gigantic home battery network in Japan

Julian Spector

Thu, March 9, 2023 at 6:45 PM EST

TOKYO, Japan — Small-scale renewables and batteries could team up to replace large fossil-fueled plants — it just takes a whole lot of little devices to match what big, old power plants can do.

For now, truly massive fleets of decentralized clean-energy devices, also known as virtual power plants, remain a rarity. The clean energy industry needs to deliver more proof that decentralized energy can provide reliable, clean energy on a large scale.

One company is on its way to achieving this — not an electric utility or a Silicon Valley startup, but the decades-old Japanese trading house Itochu. The company manufactures a home-battery product through subsidiary NF, then sells it with the Gridshare software developed by British startup Moixa (which was acquired by Lunar Energy last year — see Canary Media’s recent deep dive on what makes that software special). Since 2017, Itochu has quietly built up a fleet across Japan of 36,000 home batteries under its control, and that’s just the beginning.

“We want to expand to 100,000 units,” said Maiko Mori, team leader at Itochu’s Energy Storage Business Section, when Canary Media met with her on a recent visit to Tokyo.

The current contingent totals 352 megawatt-hours of storage. That aggregated storage capacity rivals some of the largest grid-scale battery plants in existence, suggesting that thousands of tiny batteries really can add up to the scale of big central power plants. At the same time, the home-battery collection runs up against the limits of the decentralized format, at least as it currently exists in Japan.

The regulations aren’t yet in place to enable all those little batteries to participate in the broader workings of the grid. So the virtual power plant is doing what it can, helping each household until the pieces fall into place for the batteries to take on a more robust role in Japan’s energy system.

The challenges Itochu has overcome offer lessons for anyone trying to build up localized clean energy portfolios. In Japan, just like any other region trudging toward a cleaner, more decentralized energy system, the progress thus far only illustrates how much more is possible.

The limits of the virtual power plant today
Itochu’s world-class virtual power plant remains limited in scope because, as Isshu Kikuma, Japan analyst at energy research firm BloombergNEF explained, “the government doesn't allow power sources connecting at a low-voltage grid to export power to the grid under the current regulation.”

That leaves Itochu’s battery fleet caught at an intermediate stage of evolution.

“It’s a massive fleet of batteries,” said Chris Wright, who co-founded Moixa and now serves as SVP of software tech at Lunar Energy. But, he added, “We’re not dispatching them in aggregate as a virtual power plant right now. […] This is all behind-the-meter optimization.”

That means that Itochu’s fleet can’t deliver some of the most lucrative and valuable services for the broader power grid, such as maintaining the right frequency for the wires to operate properly or delivering electricity at moments of high demand. Granted, not many places around the world have figured out how to incorporate small, local batteries into macro-level grid operations. But Germany and parts of the U.S., for instance, have shown it can be done effectively.

In place of paying customers for their services to the grid, Itochu has made do with saving them money by smartly managing their solar production and arbitraging power by storing it at times when it costs less and dispatching it at times when it costs more.

“Right now, Gridshare is working for the customer’s economical benefits, but it could work for the power company as well,” Mori said.

Lunar Energy’s Head of Software Product Sam Wevers put a number on those benefits: “We add 14 percent additional savings beyond the battery’s default mode,” he said. Batteries come from the factory with settings to maximize consumption of a household’s solar production or optimize around time-varying rates, which apply to most battery customers in Japan. But Gridshare internalizes each home’s consumption patterns and anticipates 48 hours into the future; the AI calculations figure out strategies that a default setting isn’t capable of, Wevers said.

That’s enough savings for Itochu to market a competitive edge in the battery-vendor landscape. But more roles for the fleet could be forthcoming. The latest word from the government is that rules for distributed-energy participation in large-scale grid services will go live in 2024, Wright said. “It’ll come online soon enough,” he said; once that happens, Itochu’s fleet can play a “nationally important” role in Japan’s grid-decarbonization efforts.

Why does Japan need a virtual power plant?
For a virtual power plant to amount to more than confusingly worded grid jargon, it needs to solve a tangible problem for someone. In Japan, like elsewhere, the looming challenge is how to decarbonize the grid without sacrificing reliability, and virtual power plants can help.

Japan’s isolated island grid relies on imported fossil fuels for all the electricity it can’t generate with nuclear or renewables. But Japan cut back on nuclear production after the Fukushima disaster. And renewables are more expensive to build there than in many other countries because of limited available land and rugged, mountainous terrain, said Kikuma, the BNEF energy analyst.

“Rooftop solar has a huge potential due to Japan's land constraint,” Kikuma noted.

Starting in 2009, households in Japan that installed rooftop solar could get paid for the power the system exported to the grid via a generous feed-in tariff. But that payment scheme only lasts for 10 years from the date of enrollment, so the first wave of adopters began rolling off the program in 2019, after which they started earning much less for sending power to the grid.

Annual residential solar installations have declined slightly since the 2019 peak of 1,165 megawatts, but the sector still added 1,000 megawatts or more in both 2021 and 2022, according to BNEF data. That’s a robust market, but every year, more households with rooftop solar find themselves losing the feed-in tariff and needing a new plan to make the most of their power production.

Japanese customers had already been interested in batteries as a backup power source in case of outages from the various disasters that periodically strike the country — most acutely, earthquakes and typhoons. But the loss of the feed-in tariff makes batteries attractive for economic reasons too, to enable using more rooftop solar generation outside of the sunny hours.

Residential battery installations have risen steadily over the last five years, according to BNEF data. In 2022, Japanese households added 313 megawatts and 877 megawatt-hours, making this one of the most active home-battery markets in the world. In fact, BNEF’s numbers show that Japan installed far more home-battery capacity annually than all of the U.S. from 2017 through 2020; the U.S. market finally overtook Japan in 2021.

Itochu has capitalized on this trend. Its subsidiary NF manufactures models of the Smart Star battery pack with 9.8 kilowatt-hours or 13.1 kilowatt-hours of storage capacity. It comes AC-coupled, which makes it easier to attach to Japan’s many existing rooftop solar installations. Smart Star has sold 55,000 units in Japan, mostly going to Itochu’s fleet.

A virtual power plant, then, provides economic justification for the small-scale clean energy that Japan desperately needs, given how tricky it is to build large-scale clean energy there. If batteries eventually start taking over roles currently served by fossil-fueled plants, they will further reduce the need for carbon-emitting imported fuels. That looks all the more attractive given the global scramble for fossil gas imports in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“The energy-security argument in Japan is very powerful, for various geopolitical reasons,” Wevers noted.

Lessons from Itochu’s massive virtual power plant
Still, it takes thousands of houses with batteries to add up to the capacity delivered by a typical gas-fired power plant. For virtual power plants to live up to their name and their promise, they need to operate on a massive scale.

Few initiatives have come close to that. One of the longest-running American VPPs, controlled by Vermont utility Green Mountain Power, had more than 4,000 home batteries participating as of last summer. The unexpectedly prolific, utility-led Wattsmart program in Utah enlisted 3,000 homes in just a couple of years. A new virtual power plant pilot program in Texas could end up with far more than that across the state, but it’s still getting started.

German home storage company sonnen has gotten further, with 120,000 battery units installed around the world; the bulk of that is in Germany, where the company operates its fleet like a decentralized utility, performing grid services and supplying customers with power at cheaper rates.

Virtual power plants, then, are still in a nascent stage globally, and the constitutionally conservative utility industry tends to resist new concepts and technologies until there's no way to ignore them any longer. What Itochu learned early on is that it couldn’t wait for other power industry players to sign on; it had to go build the thing on its own.

“At first, nobody was interested in this,” Mori said. “But we scaled to 36,000 [units]. We have deployed these batteries — [power companies] can use them at their convenience.”

In other words, now that Itochu has the capability built and ready to use, more traditional providers are taking notice. Itochu is working with electricity retailers, including Tepco, Chubu, Kyushu and Tohoku, to prove that its battery fleet can respond predictably and reliably enough to save those companies money.

It’s those companies’ job to source enough power for their customers at all times. But at some times of day, it’s simply more expensive to buy or produce power. Using batteries to arbitrage between expensive and cheap hours reduces the cost of keeping customers’ lights on, and that’s attracting attention from Japan’s power providers, especially as electricity costs have risen.

These power companies could eventually buy the batteries themselves and lease them to households; this would give customers the benefits they want without the big upfront expense, while giving the companies more direct control of the equipment for their own uses.

“We want to change the energy business,” Mori said. “The virtual power plant could make the Japanese energy business more resilient and bring benefits to all the parties.”

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#33 2023-03-11 13:27:37

SpaceNut
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From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Home Heating and Power on Earth using Renewable (Solar) Resources

9.8 kilowatt-hours or 13.1 kilowatt-hours

Since my average AC power needs are typically at its lowest of 24kwhr upward to winter heating increase to 50kwhrs we are going to need several of these to make it possible for the average home use.

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