Spare part warehouse acts as energy buffer
Along with its battery subsidiary Deutsche Accumotive GmbH and partner company enercity of Hannover, the carmaker is planning to build a energy storage system with a capacity of 15 MWh one of the largest ones in Europe. The unusual thing about this energy store is its business model. Daimler neither plans to sell it as a product nor is the company utilising old, used, batteries from cars that have reached the end of their life. Instead, the consortium will tap some 3000 new traction batteries that are awaiting their use as spare parts for electric vehicles of the Smart electric drive subcompact cars in Daimler’s spare part warehouse in Herrenhausen near Hannover.
Charging and discharging is good for the batteries, Daimler says: In order to be ready for use as a spare part, the batteries need to be conditioned cyclically in a well-defined, careful manner to avoid deep discharging which would in turn damage the batteries. Traditional warehousing would thus be associated with high operating costs. Daimler avoids this operational effort with its innovative approach and at the same time makes profit: The batteries are connected to the grid and the operators participate in the energy market by offering primary balancing power services. The continuously varying primary balancing power demand in the grid along with the battery management system developed by Deutsche Accumotive ensures that the batteries are always in the best condition. According to Daimler, this process has no negative effect whatsoever on the aging of the batteries but instead acts “as a fountain of youth.”
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