Comment Re: Capacity !=production (Score 1) 112
Well, I didn't really go into it there since I was just responding to the specific claims from the poster I responded to. For what you mentioned, I will first point out that an extensive power grid significantly mitigates Dunkelflaute. However, when it is nationwide, I should also point out that, in my post, I explicitly ignored other power sources and storage methods like geothermal and hydro/hydro storage. If we don't ignore those, we get an additional buffer. What I think is that we should have a tiered storage system.
This would mean batteries for the standard short term. Meaning enough to cover the average deep winter night with average usages that the poster I replied to mentioned and then a little bit extra. That would provide coverage nearly all the time. 99%+. To supplement that, a secondary tier based on locally available resources, such as geological ones. That means hydro storage of various kinds (reservoirs, polders, underground, etc.) where practical, compressed or liquefied gas in underground reservoirs where practical, thermal storage in, for example, molten salt, etc. Basically, whatever is cheapest and makes use of available local resources. Where tier 2 is less practical than tier3, skip straight to tier3. Tier3 is longer term stable storage. This means things like synthetic methane (or even hydrogen if you can store it effectively), or synthetic liquid fuels. Also other substances, for example metal powders such as aluminum powder that you can burn in a thermal power plant, or use in some sort of flow battery, etc. then collect the oxides and use an electrolytic process to turn them back to metal powder again after use. There are all kinds of other options. Dehydrating zeolites, reservoirs of salt water and and fresh water where you generate power across a membrane between the two tanks then reverse the process with reverse osmosis to recharge, or basically any chemical process you can use to store energy that can be reversed with a reasonable energy loss, is relatively cheap at large scale, and that you can store in volume.
Basically, you would size your renewable power generation so that it would produce just enough on average in the dead of winter to power everything during the day and overnight on battery, which would mean plenty of surplus during other parts of the year. Whatever surplus there is in winter could charge the tier2 storage and, if it doesn't get enough for that, tier3 could be tapped to top up tier2. With all the surplus in the rest of the year, tier3 could be filled up and for tier3 storage types, that could last very long term and for many of them, increasing how much you can store could be quite cheap and simple. Of course, the tier3 storage would generally have much lower turnaround efficiency than batteries, but that would not be a problem because the surplus would be wasted otherwise.