Revov is a local company specialising in selling batteries into various verticals, from industrial to residential. The batteries it sells are not the usual lead-acid batteries, but lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries.
Lance Dickerson, one of the founders of Revov, has many years of experience in the telecoms industry in various African countries where he learned the value of reliable batteries in areas where the electricity supply could not be relied upon to keep communications going 24x7.
On his return to South Africa, Revov was started as a distributor for BYD batteries. BYD is the largest manufacturer of electric vehicles and accessories in the world. These LFP batteries are used in a variety of vehicles, but reach the end of their working life (specifically their working life in vehicles, not the batteries; overall working life) after between 1500 and 1800 cycles. Since the batteries are designed for between 5000 and 7000 cycles, Dickerson saw an opportunity to sell what Revov calls second-life batteries into the local market. (The company also supplies new LFP batteries when required.)
Revov imports these batteries from BYD, tests and refurbishes them, placing them into more usable enclosures for the verticals it serves (mostly in 5 kWh or 10 kWh packages and can build configurations with up to 20 000 batteries) and distributes them through its channel partners. Batteries can be built into containers, which can be linked to provide up to 7200 kWh for more high-voltage applications.
Dickerson says the batteries should last for 10 years (or more), depending on use. If they complete a full cycle each day, that would be about 3650 cycles over 10 years, which they can easily handle.
Revov works with its resellers to make sure the batteries are installed correctly and deliver the best service when used with solar panels and other off-grid solutions – and it has the skills onboard to provide additional support if required. Naturally, the batteries don’t need to be used with solar or other renewable sources, but can be used during peak electricity hours and charged in off-peak hours. And of course, they are invaluable when Eskom breaks its toys and we end up with load-shedding.
Currently the cost of a solution is only slightly more than Eskom’s fees, but once the next round of increases occurs, the solution will actually be cheaper. With a return on the infrastructure investment in about five years, Dickerson says the numbers speak for themselves, with a 0,01% return rate over the past 42 months during which it has supplied around 110 MWh in total. Each battery has a warranty for 10 years or 3500 cycles.
Why LFP?
When asked why Revov’s LFP batteries would be a better choice than traditional lead-acid batteries, Dickerson offers a number of benefits. The first is temperature. While Revov’s batteries and lead-acid batteries cost about the same, the LFP systems operate at a higher ambient temperature (between 33°C and 35°C without degradation) as opposed to 25°C of lead-acid batteries.
This makes the 12 V options suited for outdoor perimeter security around farms and other remote areas, for example. The outdoor heat will reduce the lifespan of lead-acid batteries far faster than LFPs, making your battery investment last longer.
In addition, while discharging lead-acid batteries to less than 50% of their capacity can reduce the battery’s full lifespan faster, LFP batteries can use almost 100% of their capacity without such deterioration. Finally, LFP batteries are also smaller and weigh less.
Revov has a direct presence in Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg from where it supports its South African partners and customers and it has partners in Namibia, Zimbabwe and Botswana.
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