Bowen says that agreement on new standards means that EV owners will be able to use vehicle to grid technology – effectively using their cars as batteries on wheels – by the end of the …
You would have an individual V2G charger for each parking spot. Future designs could potentially handle multiple spots per charger but I don’t think there are many such designs yet.
Bigger issue is getting strata committees to actually agree to install any at all
Yeah, for sure. There will no doubt be some serious anti-EV, and the usual anti-anything people to try and convince too.
Also, most apartment car parks are underground or covered, you would only be capable of using the car as a source of power, and not as a store of newly generated power. Unless an apartment block put solar on their roof, which opens up another can of worms about who gets how much power and when. Messy.
Your parked car could be used as a kind of day trader for power. Use power from your car at peak, charge at lowest?
If you haven’t got your own solar source of power (eg solar on roof), buy an electric car that has solar cells on it? The only one that I’m aware of that gives practical daily range is the Aptera, but you’re not looking for daily range in this case. Meh, I don’t think solar cells on a footprint the size of a car are efficient enough to power an apartment…
Lol, people will be fighting over car spots on the street where there are no trees or shade so they can charge up their cars while they go to work.
I’m still struggling to see benefits of V2G in an apartment. There’s only that ‘day trading’ thing I mentioned above, which idk if it’s significant enough to do.
The idea isn’t to use V2G just to store power for the building, but to act as storage for the entire grid. So instead of building large battery farms to store power, you use EVs are the batteries, which reduces infrastructure costs and can accelerate the transition.
Obviously you’d want to have other grid level energy storage too, and some incentive to get owners to allow their EVs to be such a storage device, but thats the idea.
Transferring energy into and out of an EV does result in non-negligible energy loss.
Having a dedicated, stationary battery is a much more space and resource efficient way to provide a grid buffer. Pb-Acid and Iron-air batteries are much better for the environment than Lithium, and much more stable. They are much heavier, but still lighter than a Lithium battery powered EV.
You would have an individual V2G charger for each parking spot. Future designs could potentially handle multiple spots per charger but I don’t think there are many such designs yet.
Bigger issue is getting strata committees to actually agree to install any at all
Yeah, for sure. There will no doubt be some serious anti-EV, and the usual anti-anything people to try and convince too.
Also, most apartment car parks are underground or covered, you would only be capable of using the car as a source of power, and not as a store of newly generated power. Unless an apartment block put solar on their roof, which opens up another can of worms about who gets how much power and when. Messy.
Your parked car could be used as a kind of day trader for power. Use power from your car at peak, charge at lowest?
If you haven’t got your own solar source of power (eg solar on roof), buy an electric car that has solar cells on it? The only one that I’m aware of that gives practical daily range is the Aptera, but you’re not looking for daily range in this case. Meh, I don’t think solar cells on a footprint the size of a car are efficient enough to power an apartment…
Lol, people will be fighting over car spots on the street where there are no trees or shade so they can charge up their cars while they go to work.
I’m still struggling to see benefits of V2G in an apartment. There’s only that ‘day trading’ thing I mentioned above, which idk if it’s significant enough to do.
The idea isn’t to use V2G just to store power for the building, but to act as storage for the entire grid. So instead of building large battery farms to store power, you use EVs are the batteries, which reduces infrastructure costs and can accelerate the transition.
Obviously you’d want to have other grid level energy storage too, and some incentive to get owners to allow their EVs to be such a storage device, but thats the idea.
That makes sense, but those incentives better be good for you to be putting any wear and tear on my battery that has limited cycles.
Batteries are heavy, even lithium batteries.
Transferring energy into and out of an EV does result in non-negligible energy loss.
Having a dedicated, stationary battery is a much more space and resource efficient way to provide a grid buffer. Pb-Acid and Iron-air batteries are much better for the environment than Lithium, and much more stable. They are much heavier, but still lighter than a Lithium battery powered EV.