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Total, MIT to work on batteries that store solar

November 4, 2009 - by Lisa Sibley, Cleantech Group

French oil company Total said it has signed a research agreement with Massachusetts Institute of Technology to develop new stationary batteries designed to store solar power.

The agreement, valued at $4 million over five years, falls under the MIT Energy Initiative, which Total joined as a member in November 2008. The initiative is designed to help improve energy systems, with collaboration between MIT researchers and a broad range of companies focused on innovation.

The new Total and MIT research project is looking to develop a low-cost, long-life battery that can store power generated by solar panels. It also continues Total’s research and development of alternative energies, which has a focus on developing and deploying solar power.

“Total’s support for research in the storage of solar energy has the potential to be a game-changer,” said Ernest Moniz, director of the MIT Energy Initiative and former undersecretary of the U.S. Department of Energy, in a news release.

Total (NYSE:TOT) is already active in the solar industry, through its interest in two companies, Tenesol and Photovoltech (see Photovoltech to boost capacity to 260MW). Photovoltech makes photovoltaic cells based on a crystalline silicon technology, while Tenesol designs, manufactures, and operates photovoltaic energy systems.

In 2008, Total invested $45 million in Lowell, Mass.-based solar company Konarka Technologies as part of a R&D partnership, bringing its stake to nearly 20 percent. Konarka develops a flexible, thin-film plastic that converts light to energy (see Total grows solar push with $45M funding to Konarka).

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Comments

Energy Storage

That doesn't seem like a whole lot of money for an area that will be extremely important if we we put so many of our eggs into intermittent-supply baskets like wind and solar. I hope the technology will be applicable to batteries for electric automobiles. What is most needed if we hope to reduce our dependence on coal and oil is far greater use of nuclear, and perhaps geothermal, for baseload energy generation.

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