At first glance, electric vehicles appear like rolling disasters for the power grid. Surely the ancient, creaky network in the United States can’t handle the need for charging those massive batteries. But a new analysis suggests that just a fraction of EV owners could create the grid more flexible and trustworthy by plugging into a system called vehicle-to-grid charging (V2G), or bidirectional charging.
V2G means that when need spikes, utilities can pay EV owners to tap into their idle car batteries—a distributed network of ready-to-go backup power. That’ll be critical as we transition to renewables: Wind and solar power won’t always be available, so we need to bank energy when supplies are low. “We can use some energy that’s already stored in our EVs to give back to the grid,” says Chengjian Xu, an industrial ecologist at Leiden University in the Netherlands and lead author of the paper, which was recently published in Nature Communications. Last year, the Natural Resources Defense Council estimated that if California exploited all of the 14 million EVs it’ll have by 2035, they could power every home in the state for three days.
Xu’s modeling finds that by the year 2030, only 30 percent of the world’s EV owners would need to opt in to V2G programs to meet energy storage demand. That’s a global average; each country differs in how quickly it’s adopting EVs, how much energy it uses, and the pace at which it’s switching to renewables, among other variables. Depending on the country, the modeling found that participation rates of between 12 and 43 percent of EVs would suffice.
Better yet, the paper suggests that over time, the system won’t even need to rely on parked cars—their old batteries could be semi-retired and repurposed into vast stationary power storage arrays. EV batteries usually need replacing once they obtain to 70 or 80 percent capacity and a vehicle’s range begins to suffer. Depending on how much you drive and the climate where you live, a battery might last 10 to 20 years—which means that batteries in early models of popular EVs, like Teslas and the Nissan Leaf, are now reaching retirement.
The team’s modeling finds that if we did that for half of used batteries, we’d need less than 10 percent of EV owners to participate. “Thankfully, battery degradation doesn’t appear to be limiting the complete available energy that could be used for V2G,” says Paul Gasper, a staff scientist at the National Renewable Energy Lab who studies battery degradation and coauthored the paper.
Using parked cars as battery banks is a powerful way to shift energy demand. If drivers charge their cars during the day at offices or as they run errands (when the sun is shining and there’s lots of solar power being fed to the grid), they can drive home and provide extra power to their community in the early evening, right as need soars because individuals are returning home and switching on appliances. EV owners would also agree that their power company could tap into their battery during extreme heat events, when lots of individuals are running air conditioners.