Today’s Solutions: December 05, 2025

When you coil a spring, you load it with a bunch of potential energy that gets released when you let go. Using the same basic principle, a Scottish company called Gravitricity is creating an energy storage facility that uses weights instead of springs to store energy.

The idea is to hold 500 to 5,000-ton weights aloft using powerful cables and winches. Then, when energy is needed, these weights can be lowered down to a mineshaft to spin the winch and feed electricity into the grid. The new facility is meant to be a prototype unit of gravity-based energy storage.

Gravitricity believes these units could have peak power outputs of between 1 and 20 MW and could function up to 50 years with no loss of performance. Plus, because the system can go from zero to full power in under a second, it can quickly release its power payload in as little as 15 minutes or slow it down to last up to eight hours.

When the giant mechanical battery needs to be recharged, electricity from renewable sources can power the winches to lift the weights back to the top. In the end, the demonstration facility will feature a tower that stands at 52.5 ft tall and is expected to be ready for testing Spring 2021.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Europe’s low-carbon future: Denmark’s North Sea oil field is now a carb...

Once a symbol of fossil fuel extraction, the remote Nini oil field in the North Sea is preparing for a new role: storing millions ...

Read More

Grace Richardson makes history as first openly gay Miss England: ‘I’ve achiev...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM When Grace Richardson took the stage at the Miss England final in Wolverhampton, she wasn’t just chasing a ...

Read More

World’s first hydrogen-powered cargo vessel to set sail in Paris this year

In a world's first, a commercial hydrogen-powered cargo vessel will make its maiden voyage later this year. Developed by French shipowner Compagnie Fluvial Transport ...

Read More

A guide to self-kindness: transforming negative self-talk into positive affir...

As we go through the motions of daily life, it's tempting to listen to our inner critic's constant commentary. Negative self-talk, or the constant ...

Read More