一家初创公司的电力海洋储存之旅
A startup’s quest to store electricity in the ocean

原始链接: https://techcrunch.com/2025/10/22/one-startups-quest-to-store-electricity-in-the-ocean/

## 大规模储能:将抽水蓄能带入海洋 受意大利独特水库的童年经历启发,马努埃莱·奥菲耶罗与他人共同创立了Sizable Energy,旨在解决陆基抽水蓄能水电的局限性——这是一种大规模的能源存储解决方案。虽然有效,但传统的“抽水蓄能”需要特定的地形,并且无法快速扩展以满足风能和太阳能等不断增长的可再生能源的需求。 Sizable的创新方法将这项技术搬到海上。他们的系统利用两个密封、柔性的水库——一个漂浮在水面,一个位于海底——通过管道和涡轮机连接。通过在两个水库之间抽水和释放超盐水,他们产生电力,本质上是“提升”了一块盐。 这种海上设计允许大规模生产和标准化,将成本大幅降低至约23美元/千瓦时——是目前电网级电池价格的十分之一。Sizable已经成功测试了一个模型,并计划在2026年进行试点部署,目标是靠近海上风电场和任何可接入至少500米深水域的电网。他们旨在提供长期、有韧性的能源存储,这对于以可再生能源为动力的未来至关重要。

## 海洋储能:摘要 一家初创公司Sizable正在利用海洋盐度差异开发一种新型储能系统。他们的方案是使用大型封闭水库储存高浓度盐水(重盐水),并释放盐水通过涡轮机发电——本质上是一种使用盐水代替淡水的闭环抽水蓄能系统。 该公司目标是实现23美元/千瓦时的储能成本,远低于目前的大规模电网级电池。然而,评论员们对效率、潜在的生态影响(尽管声称系统是封闭的)以及在恶劣海洋环境中(尤其是在风暴期间)维护大型基础设施的结构性挑战表示担忧。 虽然该技术需要深海通道(500米以上),但全球有大量人口居住在合适的地点范围内。其可行性取决于克服工程障碍,并证明长期耐用性和最小的环境破坏。该项目目前处于试点阶段,预计2026年商业部署。
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原文

When Manuele Aufiero was a child, his parents would take him hiking along a reservoir in northern Italy. It wasn’t a typical reservoir, though. This one drained and refilled constantly, with pumps raising the water level when electricity was cheap. When nearby cities needed electricity, the pumps would reverse, turning into generators as the water drained out of the reservoir.

The technology, known as pumped-storage hydropower, or “pumped hydro” for short, has been around for over a century. Such facilities are some of the biggest “batteries” humans have ever built. Globally, pumped hydro reservoirs store 8,500 gigawatt-hours of electricity, according to the International Energy Agency.

Pumped hydro can generate electricity for hours on end, and the power plants have grown in importance as intermittent energy sources like wind and solar have become more widespread. But there are only so many places on Earth with suitable topography to host a pumped hydro reservoir.

“I’m in love with pumped hydro,” Aufiero told TechCrunch. “It’s just not enough to keep up with renewables.”

So he decided to solve that problem by moving the technology to the sea. He co-founded a startup, Sizable Energy, to turn his idea into reality.

Sizable recently raised $8 million in a funding round led by Playground Global with participation from EDEN/IAG, Exa Ventures, Satgana, Unruly Capital, and Verve Ventures, the company exclusively told TechCrunch.

The startup’s power plant looks something like an hourglass. Sizable’s concept specifies two sealed, flexible reservoirs, one that floats at the top and another that sits at the bottom on the seabed. They’re connected by a plastic tube and some turbines.

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When power is cheap, the turbines will pump super salty water from the bottom reservoir to the top. When the grid needs energy, Sizable will open a valve, and because the water in the reservoir contains more salt than the surrounding seawater, it’s heavier and will fall down to the lower reservoir. As it flows through the pipe, it spins the turbines, which act as generators.

“From the energy balance point of view, what we are doing is lifting a block of salt. But instead of using cranes, we dissolve it and pump it just because it’s easier, simpler,” Aufiero said. “Other than that, we are just lifting a heavy amount of salt.”

By moving pumped hydro to the ocean, Sizable is hoping to mass-produce the technology, something that isn’t really possible on land.

“Every time you build pumped hydro on shore, you have to design a concrete dam for that specific site, and you have to adapt the technology there,” Aufiero said. “Building offshore allows us to streamline the production, and everything we do is identical, regardless of the final deployment site.”

Sizable has tested a small model of the reservoirs in wave tanks and off the coast of Reggio Calabria, Italy. It’s now deploying a pilot of the floating components in advance of a full demonstration plant. By 2026, it’s hoping to deploy several commercial projects at sites around the world. 

At full size, the turbines would generate around 6 to 7 megawatts of electricity each, and there will be one for every 100 meters of pipe. Deeper sites would have more storage potential, and each commercial site would host multiple reservoirs. Sizable hopes to deliver energy storage for €20 per kilowatt-hour (about $23), about one-tenth what a grid-scale battery costs.

The technology would pair well with offshore wind projects since sharing an electrical connection to the shore would reduce costs. But Aufiero said that Sizable’s reservoirs could connect to any grid that’s near waters that are at least 500 meters (1,640 feet) deep.

“We believe that long duration energy storage is required not only for renewable integration, but also for just making the grid resilient,” he said. “There is no way we can keep up with that with traditional pumped hydro or batteries. We need something new.”

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