World''s largest compressed air energy storage
A 300 MW compressed air energy storage (CAES) power station utilizing two underground salt caverns in central China''s Hubei
The “Energy Storage No. 1” project utilizes the caverns of an abandoned salt mine, reaching up to 600 meters of depth, as its gas storage facility. This allows for a gas storage volume of nearly 700,000 cubic meters, translating into a single unit power output of up to 300 MW and a storage capacity of 1,500 MWh.
This allows for a gas storage volume of nearly 700,000 cubic meters, translating into a single unit power output of up to 300 MW and a storage capacity of 1,500 MWh. The system conversion efficiency is about 70%. It can store energy for eight hours and release energy for five hours every day, and generate about 500 GWh of electricity annually.
"Compressed air energy storage", alongside pumped-storage hydroelectricity, is one of the most mature physical energy storage technologies currently available. It will serve for constructing a new energy system and developing a new power system in China, as well as a key direction for cultivating strategic emerging industries.
Many individual energy storage plants augment electrical grids by capturing excess electrical energy during periods of low demand and storing it in other forms until needed on an electrical grid. The energy is later converted back to its electrical form and returned to the grid as needed.
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