CleanTech Bites

ARENA, CEFC back plan to recycle EV-batteries for household storage

Published by

Australia’s two biggest clean energy financiers are putting money into a new venture by Melbourne-based start-up Relectrify that proposes to re-use electric vehicle batteries for household storage.

Electrify says it has developed “advanced battery control technology” that reduces the cost of repurposing EV batteries, while boosting performance and lifetime.

The technology combines both power electronics hardware and battery optimisation software, which overcomes the problems of having one “dud” cell in a field of many from large scale batteries.

It says that that once EV batteries reach the end of their life, and struggle to provide the driving range and acceleration required of motor transport, there is still 80 per cent of their storage capability that can be used in household situations. That means a further 2,000 cycles.

Relectrify was co-founded by Daniel Crowley and Valentin Muenzel in 2015, and the company is an alumni of the Melbourne Accelerator at the University of Melbourne. Its technology

Muenzel, the company’s CEO, says recycled batteries can be repurposed widely, including for 12V batteries, household solar battery systems and grid-scale storage.

“Batteries are becoming a fundamental building block of the new energy industry and seeing significant uptake across households, businesses and the power grid. And this is just the beginning. There is an immense need for affordable and capable storage across almost all parts of our lives now and in the future.

The company has raised a total of $1.5 million in “pre-Series A” financing, a type of financing used by start-up companies.

This includes $750,000 in early stage equity investment from the $200 million Clean Energy Innovation Fund, which to date remains the single initiative on clean energy yet achieved by the Turnbull government.

The CEIF is jointly managed by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC) and the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA).

ARENA CEO Ivor Frischknecht said Relectrify’s technology to recycle batteries would reduce waste and make home storage more affordable.

“Relectrify is led by bright and passionate Melbourne-based founders who are looking to bring an innovative idea to renewable energy storage solutions that can significantly lower the cost of energy storage in a sustainable way.

CEFC CEO Ian Learmonth said potential applications for Relectrify’s forward-thinking technology can be adopted across the whole economy to have a significant impact on the way Australians use energy.

“Although home batteries are only a tiny part of our energy storage today, industry experts are saying they could be capable of storing around 15 gigawatt hours by 2035. That’s enough stored electricity to power South Australia’s current summer peak demand for five hours.

“And while electric vehicles currently make up only around 0.2 per cent of vehicle sales in Australia, by 2035 they are expected to represent just over one quarter. That translates to an increasing supply of lithium ion batteries that are no longer useful in cars, but are still incredibly capable for other applications.

 

 

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australia’s leading offshore wind project slashes turbine numbers and lifts blade gap to protect sea birds

Australia's likely first offshore wind project has cut its turbine numbers as the machines get…

20 November 2024

“Quiet revolution:” Wind and solar slash electricity emissions by 40 pct in just 10 years

Renewables growth from 2015-2025 is on track to cut Australia’s electricity sector emissions by nearly…

20 November 2024

World’s largest onshore wind turbine powers up for first time

The world’s largest onshore wind turbine, a 15MW behemoth capable of powering 160,000 households with…

19 November 2024

EnergyCo seeks new CEO after James Hay decides on shift to government

EnergyCo, the authority charged with the rollout of the NSW government's renewable energy zones and…

19 November 2024

Queensland government joins cornerstone investors in backing of major climate tech fund

Queensland Investment Corporation joins a Big Four bank and federal green bank in latest fundraising…

19 November 2024

Big batteries and EVs to the rescue again as faults with new nuclear plant cause chaos on Nordic grids

Europe's newest and most powerful nuclear reactor – delivered more than a decade late and…

19 November 2024