Unconventional battery tech start-ups look to seize market share

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Rival technologies still have a way to go to catch the lithium-ion juggernaut, but the market will be so large they can’t be ruled out.

Tivan bought the world’s largest hard rock vanadium deposit from King River Resources in February and plans to develop a vanadium processing business and ultimately VRFB battery-making business in the Northern Territory’s Middle Arm Sustainable Development Precinct.

But how can they overcome their current cost disadvantage? The CSIRO’s road map puts the levelised cost – or all-up capital and operating cost – of VRFB battery storage at just under 45¢ per kilowatt-hour in 2025, compared to just over 25¢/KWh for lithium-ion; by 2050 it sees these numbers at 25¢/KWh and just under 15¢/KWh.

But, it says, zinc bromine flow batteries are still “sitting at the pilot-scale demonstration stage” – based on Redflow’s 2 MWh existing system in California – and “it is unclear whether” they will be able to meet medium-duration grid storage demand by 2030. It isn’t clear whether Redflow’s latest contract win would change CSIRO’s assessment.

 

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