Categories: Automobile

Electric cars as batteries

Bidirectional charging has been possible on a technical level for a long time. So what is holding back the potential of this quiet revolution in the switch to renewable energies that has become known by the German term ‘Energiewende’?

- Advertisement -

Can electric cars help accelerate the transition to renewable energy sources? And can we solve the e-car issue of how to stabilise the irregular supply of renewable electricity?

- Advertisement -

It might still sound far-fetched and obscure, but the concept known in Germany under the term ‘bidirektionales Laden (EN: bidirectional charging) has already been designed ready for application in everyday use in the BDL Next project in Munich, to name just one. Imagine, for instance, a power outage, which is common in many countries. The consumer need not even notice; the lights do not go out and all electrical appliances continue to operate. This is not because an emergency generator kicks in, but because the electric car takes over. This is made possible by bidirectional charging: an electric car feeding electricity back into the home network.

- Advertisement -

The concept of bidirectional charging is based on a simple principle: not only does electricity flow from the grid to the vehicle battery, but it also flows in the opposite direction – from the car battery back to the home grid (Vehicle-to-Home, V2H), the public grid (Vehicle-to-Grid, V2G), or larger building infrastructures (Vehicle-to-Building, V2B). During periods of fluctuating electricity generation from solar and wind power, electric cars can act as mobile storage units, absorbing excess energy and releasing it as required. They can absorb excess energy and release it on demand. Since vehicles are stationary around 95 per cent of the time, there is huge storage potential sitting untapped in your garage.

- Advertisement -

Real potential for businesses

- Advertisement -

“The core idea is that we want to stabilise the grids using renewable energy from wind and solar power, and bidirectional charging. In order for that to work, the technology must be highly reliable,” explains Luca Husemann, a research assistant working on the BiFLex-Industrie project at the University of Duisburg-Essen. Specifically, he is investigating how company fleets could be used as flexible energy storage devices. The vision here is that millions of electric cars will absorb peak loads, stabilise the grid, and reduce households’ dependence on electricity prices. When many small storage devices react flexibly, they can compensate for bottlenecks in the power grid, reducing the need for fossil fuel reserve power plants.

- Advertisement -

Continue reading on Gateway to Automotive

- Advertisement -
TheNewsMarketTeam

Recent Posts

2025 Hot Wheels Legends Tour Global Champion: Mini Rally-Inspired Fiat From Poland to Be Immortalized as a Hot Wheels Die-Cast

Paweł Czarnecki’s small but mighty, mid-engine rally-inspired build will be immortalized as a 1:64 Hot…

4 hours ago

Chinas Top Baijiu Brand Moutai Showcases China’s Green Progress in Manufacturing at COP30

BELEM, Brazil--(BUSINESS WIRE)--#COP--On November 10 local time, the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30)…

4 hours ago

Iconic Asian Hall of Fame Inductees Highlight The American Dream

Role models convene from across the country, around the world LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12, 2025…

5 hours ago

Seoul Design Award 2025 Certifies Sustainable and Innovative Design Projects

SEOUL, South Korea, Nov. 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The 'Seoul Design Award 2025,' hosted by…

5 hours ago

KL Rahul Gets Candid on Therapy, Criticism and Life Beyond Cricket in Humans of Bombay's New Show 'Like an Athlete'

Humans of Bombay launches its latest original production, Like an Athlete, kicking off with none…

9 hours ago

Sonata Software Consolidated PAT grew by 10% QoQ, Declares second interim dividend of 1.25 per share

MUMBAI, India, Nov. 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Sonata Software (NSE: SONATSOFTW) (BSE: 532221), a leading…

10 hours ago