A couple of weeks ago we had a power interruption in the U.K. We lost around 2 GW of supply, and hence had a frequency drop, for about 15 mins. The distribution frequency was fixed by disconnecting some users, most notably part of the rail network, and then bringing on relief supplies. If there had been 250,000 cars connected willing to give up 8kW for 15 minutes the need for disconnects would not have been there.Jolle wrote: ↑18 Aug 2019, 18:05Also, the way we use and demand electrical power. Up til now, most is on demand, putting up a lot of stress on the power grid. EV's could be used to balance out the grid to keep the power more stable.henry wrote: ↑18 Aug 2019, 17:25There are many ways in which we might need to change our thinking. Starting each journey with 100% may be replaced with starting with a percentage required dependant on previous journey patterns, planned and scheduled activities, priority of battery life versus availability and many I can’t imagine right now. Cars will become part of the integrated home managed to meet your needs and lifestyle.Jolle wrote: ↑18 Aug 2019, 12:19With charging EV's you have to forget about how we use petrol fuel stations.
With petrol engines we refuel when we're running out of petrol, almost always while we on route. EV's can charge while we are not on route. This way you start your journey almost always with a 100% charge.
Currently there are currently around 250,000 plug in vehicles, most are hybrids, maybe 50,000 EVs. The overall car fleet in the U.K. is 26 million so there doesn’t need to be a huge changeover to start to make grid support look realistic.