The first industrial-scale energy storage facility in the U.S. based
The Public Service Commission (PSC) has just approved the Columbia Energy Storage project—the nation''s first industrial-scale deployment of an innovative energy storage
Sign up for WPR's email newsletter. The Columbia Energy Storage Project would store excess energy from the electric grid by converting carbon dioxide gas into a compressed liquid form and then converting that liquid back into a gas, powering a turbine to generate electricity, according to the Department of Energy.
Alliant Energy filed an application with the state Public Service Commission on Aug. 7 to build a long-duration energy storage system in Columbia County. It would be the first project of its kind in North America.
Photo courtesy of Alliant Energy A first of its kind energy storage system coming to Wisconsin took a step forward this month, almost a year after the project was announced. Alliant Energy filed an application with the state Public Service Commission on Aug. 7 to build a long-duration energy storage system in Columbia County.
The gas will be stored in what officials call an “energy dome.” An Italian company named Energy Dome has already worked on the technology in a smaller-scale demonstration site in Sardinia, Italy. The Columbia Energy Storage Project would store excess energy from the electric grid by converting carbon dioxide gas into a compressed liquid form.
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