Reprint

Seasonal Energy Storage with Power-to-Methane Technology

Edited by
August 2022
146 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-4889-0 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-4890-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Seasonal Energy Storage with Power-to-Methane Technology that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary

For a sustainable future, the need to use renewable sources to produce electricity is inevitable. Some of these sources—particularly the widely available solar power—are weather-dependent; therefore, utility-scale energy storage will be more and more important. These solar and wind power fluctuations range from minutes (passing cloud) to whole seasons (winter/summer differences). Short-term storage can be solved (at least theoretically) with batteries; however, seasonal storage—due to the amount of storable energy and the self-discharging of some storage methods—is still a challenge to be solved in the near future. We believe that biological Power-to-Methane technology—especially combined with biogas refinement—will be a significant player in the energy storage market within less than a decade. The technology produces high-purity methane, which can be considered—by using green energy and carbon dioxide of biological origin—as a Renewable Natural Gas, or RNG. The ease of storage and use of methane, as well as the effective carbon-freeness, can make it a competitor for batteries or hydrogen-based storage, especially for storage times exceeding several months.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
seasonal energy storage; power-to-methane; wastewater treatment plants; techno-economic assessment; power-to-gas; regulation; energy storage; biogas; biomethane; power-to-methane; disruptive technology; seasonal energy storage; decarbonization; innovation; Power-to-Gas; Power-to-Fuel; P2M; P2G; P2F; biomethanization; biomethanation; power-to-methane; competitiveness; hydrogen utilization; decarbonization; Hungary; Power-to-Gas; Power-to-X; Power-to-Hydrogen; Power-to-Methane; hydrogen; methanation; sector coupling; sectoral integration; energy transition; eFuels; electric fuels; 100% renewable energy scenarios; power-to-gas; thermophilic biogas; fed-batch reactor; Methanothermobacter; metagenome; starvation; H2 and CO2 conversion; methane; acetate; n/a