Title :
The History, Present State, and Future Prospects of Underground Pumped Hydro for Massive Energy Storage
Author :
Pickard, William F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Syst. Eng., Washington Univ. in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract :
If our industrial civilization is to be sustained, it must find renewable sources of energy to replace its finite and rapidly shrinking reserves of fossil carbon. Moreover, these renewables, even if intermittent, must somehow be rendered reliable and dispatchable, most probably by developing super-massive storage facilities for energy. Historically this has meant pumped hydroelectric storage, a technology that is well developed, reliable, comparatively inexpensive, and seriously limited by a shortage of suitable reservoir sites. The obvious solution is to excavate an underground reservoir many hundreds of meters below surface level and to exchange water between it and a surface reservoir created immediately above it and diked using spoil from the excavation. This variant of hydro storage is called underground pumped hydro (UPH) and is described in detail in this review, where it will be shown that: 1) the cost per GW of pumping station could be reasonable and on the order of 1 G$US while 2) the cost of storage capacity could be less than 100 $US per kWh and in keeping with the U.S. Department of Energy´s cost goals.
Keywords :
energy storage; history; hydrocarbon reservoirs; pumped-storage power stations; fossil carbon; massive energy storage; pumping station; renewable energy sources; surface reservoir; underground pumped hydroelectric storage; underground reservoir; Electricity supply industry; Energy resources; Energy storage; Hydroelectric power generation; Hydroelectric-thermal power generation; Renewable energy resources; Reservoirs; Sustainable energy; Turbines; Electricity storage; intermittency challenge; massive energy storage; underground pumped hydro (UPH);
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/JPROC.2011.2126030