It references Statkraft, the Norwegian power company. When they talk about storing power in batteries, they mean lakes and reservoirs at altitude. They are basically giant batteries.
Pumped hydro is apparently really efficient, cheap, and very high capacity. It's just geographically restricted. Probably can also double as a water reservoir for a local town/city.
Christ, the entire Norwegian coastline is a battery in that case.
I just buy a bunch of these biodegradable PLA straws instead. They work well https://amzn.eu/d/dKIyKxE.
Not missed the old plastic straws apart from when at a burger joint that gives you the useless paper ones. The bagasse and PLA straws do not disintegrate as quickly and work as well as the old ones.
Whether they are actually more environmentally friendly is another discussion.
Any normal measurement unit here is going to be hard to grasp on it's own without translating it into an equivalency; XXXXXX olympic swimming pools or XX Y ocean.
The title was in suspended animation so I added the answer from the article. The article is trying to make its primary audience, the Americans, easier by converting it to miles.
I'm an American, and I like to think that I can comprehend liters, but I think for enormous volumes like this it's easier to visualize distances cubed.
Like for a million cubic miles, I know that's a cube with 1,000 mile sides. That's like New York to Miami (don't ask me about cities in Europe...okay I'll go out on a limb: Paris to Rome?). I can visualize that cube of water on a globe.
But how many liters or gallons is that? A lot! But billions? Trillions? I probably would instinctively say billions, but with a tiny bit of mental arithmetic I'm suspecting it's up in the trillions.
edit: I came back to confess that indeed I am an ignorant American who has no intuitive sense of exaliters. My SI volume comfort zone doesn't extend much past teraliters.
But everyone knows how long a mile is, and can imagine a cube one mile long one mile wide and one mile high. Though we can't truly grasp the scale, we can at least understand the magnitude of a value of ~ten million.
But quoting a value of 4.4 x 10^19 liters is meaningless for most people.
"Of course, that's 22,000,000,000,000,000,000 two-liter soda bottles!"
So cubic miles seems like a reasonable unit for this pop-science article, despite the fact that you likely wouldn't use it in a published journal article.
Yeah. Long. I doubt most people can eyeball something in the distance and say with accuracy "yeah that is about a mile away" because a mile is really long and people are bad at estimating things. Now do it for 10 miles.
A relatable example like someone has mentioned "its about 10 dead seas worth" would have been a better play.
I’d guess a lot of Americans can look at a globe and eyeball 100 miles or 1,000 miles. At least American adults with a lot of driving experience. When you get into the millions of cubic miles of water, I think the best way to visualize it is a cube sitting next to the globe.
I am sure they will eventually, but quicker and less friction to expand to EU countries and later maybe to other EEA countries.
It will not be a hardware issues. All costs, red tape and priorities.