A company called Intelligent Land Investments (ILI) is proposing a huge 2.4 gigawatt-hour pumped hydroelectric project right next to the shores of Loch Ness in Scotland. The project, called "Red John" after the Scottish name for a source pool in the area, could deliver up to 400 megawatts of power for six hours—a feat that Wired UK says could double Scotland's already-considerable wind capacity.

Pumped hydro is an old concept, and such systems have been used to store energy long before utility-scale chemical batteries were economically feasible. Pumped hydro projects need a lower reservoir as well as a higher reservoir. When electricity is plentiful, pumps work to lift water from the lower reservoir to the higher reservoir; when electricity is scarce, operators use gravity to send water from the higher reservoir through a turbine and back down to the lower reservoir, generating greenhouse-gas-free electricity.

The advantage of pumped hydro is that it's disbatchable. While wind turbines and solar panels require the wind and sun to make electricity, energy from pumped hydro is ready whenever we want it. Scotland in particular has been aggressive about adding offshore wind to its energy mix, but you can only build out so many wind turbines before you need to add energy storage or develop massive transmission projects, because if the wind slacks in one region, power has to be added to the grid to maintain a constant frequency.

A pumped hydro project like Red John could meet that need, allowing more offshore wind buildout for Scotland. In 2017, offshore wind buildout increased by 37 percent in the country.

Currently, the project has a long way to go. It must be approved by appropriate regulatory agencies and it could then take years to build. The Red John project would require a 5.4 million mupper reservoir, according to ILI's website , and it could result in loss of habitat and other negative effects that often come with hydro projects. Still, according to the BBC , the developers of the project say they can landscape the upper reservoir to look like the surrounding lochs.

The BBC also notes that there's another hydro-electric and pumped hydro power plant on the eastern shore of Loch Ness, so this one wouldn't be the first at the site.