"We now have increasingly widespread and affordable battery storage at the home and the utility scale," said Christopher R. Knittel, professor of energy economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. "That allows renewable energy produced during the day to be stored and used at night or during demand spikes."
Storage of wind and solar power is "commonly done in California and Texas today, among other locations," Borenstein said, contributing "significantly" to the electricity supply...

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