Posts

What is Tranche‑based approach ?

“Tranche‑based approach” generally means splitting a pool of cash flows, funding, or risk into layers (“tranches”) that have different priorities, risk/return profiles, and rules for how they get paid or funded. It’s widely used in structured finance , project/program funding , and credit risk management . Below is a clear, practical breakdown—pick the context that fits your work best. 1) Structured Finance / Securitization (ABS/MBS/CLO/CDO) Core idea: Pool many assets (e.g., loans), then issue securities in tranches : Senior tranche (AAA) – lowest risk, paid first in the waterfall Mezzanine tranche (A–BBB) – mid risk, paid after senior Equity/Jr tranche – highest risk, paid last ; absorbs first losses Cash-flow waterfall (simplified): Collect interest + principal from the underlying pool. Pay fees/servicer. Pay senior interest & principal (until target balance). Pay mezzanine interest & principal. Pay equity remainder (if any). Benefits: Tailors securities to differ...

What if seasonal storage became economically viable? [29]

Summary of the Article: Seasonal energy storage (SES)—solutions capable of shifting surplus renewable energy across months —is the missing complement to today’s hour‑to‑day storage. If SES were economically viable at scale, three things would change quickly: (1) renewable overbuild becomes an asset instead of a curtailment problem; (2) firm capacity for long, weather‑driven shortages (dunkelflaute/monsoon) is available without fossil back‑up; and (3) sector coupling (power‑to‑heat‑to‑power, and power‑to‑molecules) accelerates. Techno‑economic evidence indicates that low‑cost thermal seasonal storage (e.g., pit thermal energy storage in district heating) and subsurface storage of hydrogen (salt caverns or porous formations) are the most credible near‑term SES vectors, while pumped storage remains the system anchor for multi‑hour to multi‑day balancing. For India, the confluence of an 87–150+ GW pumped‑storage pipeline , the National Green Hydrogen Mission , and geological potentia...

What if every home had a small-scale storage unit? [28]

Summary of the Article: If household‑scale batteries became as common as broadband routers, power systems would gain a massively distributed, fast‑responding buffer that: (1) absorbs low‑cost surplus (midday solar, off‑peak generation) and returns it at peak , (2) hardens resilience against growing outage risks, and (3) enables virtual power plants (VPPs) to provide grid services at scale. The timing is favorable: lithium‑ion pack prices fell ~20% in 2024 to ~$115/kWh on a global average, with stationary storage rack prices around $125/kWh , improving household unit affordability and VPP business cases. [about.bnef.com] , [renewablesnow.com] International experience demonstrates momentum. Germany added ~600,000 home batteries in 2024 , taking the installed base to ~1.8 million units (≈15.4 GWh residential capacity) , while South Australia’s Tesla‑led VPP has orchestrated thousands of Powerwalls to deliver grid services and social‑housing bill relief—now being expanded under utili...

What if gravity storage became mainstream? [26]

Summary of the Article: If gravity energy storage (GES) — beyond pumped‑hydro — scaled to mainstream adoption, power systems would gain a long‑lived, low‑degradation storage class that complements batteries and pumped storage across the 4–12‑hour band, with selective ability to stretch to multi‑day where topography, mine shafts, or rail grades are available. Early commercial proof points (e.g., Energy Vault’s 25 MW/100 MWh EVx in Rudong, China; ARES’s rail‑based GravityLine in Nevada; shaft‑based collaborations like ABB–Gravitricity ) indicate that gravity platforms can provide fast ramping, frequent cycling, and long asset lives (30–40+ years) with minimal performance fade — provided civil/mechanical risks and permitting are well managed. [businesswire.com] , [enlit.world] , [new.abb.com] Mainstreaming would require: (i) bankable RTE and LCOS at scale (target 70–85% RTE; LCOS converging toward ~$110–160/MWh in high‑utilization use cases); (ii) site archetypes (towers, rail g...