Solar and batteries can power the world

https://nworbmot.org/blog/solar-battery-world.html

blog | nworbmot:tombrown

The article is just wrong. And only mentions energy used for heating in passing. Heating requires MASSIVE amounts of energy.

I should know bc I have a whole house battery and solar system (almost 30 kWh battery and 24kW solar). It keeps the lights on, but not heating. I live in a mild climate.

The reality is that battery/solar requires major quality of life and activity time shifting trade-offs.

I live in a northern climate and I know multiple people who are net zero with solar+basic battery.

Proper insulation and good windows go a very long way. For instance, I set my heat to 66F during the day and 60F at night. When I wake up in the morning, the register is usually still above 60F.

Net zero. But not effectively zero. They sell energy during the day when no one needs it and buy it an night when we all need it. If we all switched to solar and heat pumps there would be blackouts and an energy crisis

What? They store the surplus in their batteries during the day and use it at night.

I genuinely do not understand why people are so afraid of solar. It's baffling.

They've fallen victim to a catastrophically easy scare tactic, unfortunately. "The sun only shines during the day therefore solar is bad!" Dumb, but easy.

And in my experience as someone who is actually trying to DO something, is exactly right.

But to be clear, it's less about night vs day and more about summer vs winter.

^ This.

I had a 20kWh array and 18kWh of batteries in Texas and it was GREAT in the summer. It'd start charging by 6am and be charged by 9am, even with simultaneous usage. Then we'd live off solar for the day (even with HVAC), go back on batteries around 9pm and they'd be out around 4am. No problem.

But during an overcast winter day, the stack wouldn't get power until 8/9, not make it to 50%, start discharging by 4/5pm, and be out by 10/11pm. It would easily be 8-10 hours where we were wholly dependent on the grid.

Not a problem, just a constraint to acknowledge and plan for.