Biden’s Infrastructure Plans Could Boost Startups

on November 18, 2020

As President-elect Joe Biden readies his transition team and sets the agenda for his first 100 days in office, startups can expect to see some movement on long-stalled infrastructure initiatives that could mean big boosts to their business.

Infrastructure is high on the list of priorities of the incoming Biden Administration as the former vice president hopes to make good on his campaign promise to “build back better.”

American infrastructure has been crumbling for decades without significant investment from the federal government, and much of what will be replaced will also be upgraded with new technology, according to people familiar with the Biden plan.

That means tech companies focused on next-generation telecommunications and utility infrastructure, transportation, housing and construction tech around energy efficiency could see new dollars pour in over the next four years.

“Infrastructure and build out of the clean energy economy … doesn’t necessarily mean large wind or large solar projects. It could mean advanced metering … it can be new engine technologies,” said Dan Goldman, a managing partner at Clean Energy Ventures. “We think that that can be a huge opportunity for job creation … not only putting people back to work but putting people back to work in high quality jobs.”

And there’s a willingness to encourage these infrastructure projects in less partisan ways in states like Massachusetts, Virginia and Florida, which are actively building out electric vehicle infrastructure and renewable energy projects, Goldman said.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsBiden’s Infrastructure Plans Could Boost Startups

California Demonstration Brings Prosumers into Energy Markets

on November 18, 2020

A prototype community southeast of Los Angeles, California, aims to demonstrate the advantages of prosumers in a disadvantaged community selling into electricity markets and reaping a cleaner environment plus income and resilience.

The Basset-Avocado Advanced Energy Community (BAAEC) is funded in part by a $9 million grant from the California Energy Commission’s  EPIC program, said Luis Felipe Cano, CEO of Community Electricity. His company has partnered with The Energy Coalition, Energy Web, UCLA and others on the project, the second phase of which is expected to be completed in 2023. The Energy Coalition is the prime contractor for the EPIC grant.

The total investment for the prototype project’s first and second phase will be about $20 million, which includes matching funds from partners that include vendors, he said.

Initially, a prosumer network made up of 50 single family homes equipped with PV and energy storage will be created. Also critical to the project will be a resilience hub, based on a microgrid, located at the Evergreen Baptist Church campus. It will consist of rooftop PV solar, community solar, electric vehicle (EV) charging and battery energy storage.

Residents will be equipped with a mobile app, called iDecarb, that will help community residents become prosumers, showing them how to generate revenues by selling electricity and renewable energy credits into California markets while at the same time decarbonizing the community, Cano said. The app connects to a platform, Energy Web, that allows members to sell green energy and allowances to California markets using a community operating system. For now, the possible sales are simulated because all of the regulatory frameworks aren’t in place to allow for the sales.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsCalifornia Demonstration Brings Prosumers into Energy Markets

Form Energy Raises Another $70M for Long-Duration Storage

on November 17, 2020
Greentech-Media

Form Energy raised a $70 million Series C to scale its super-long-duration energy storage technology.

That investment was first reported by Reuters Friday, without naming the participating investors. It brings Form Energy’s total funds raised to around $120 million, a hefty sum for a novel technology that’s still a few years away from its first commercial deployment.

Lithium-ion batteries dominate nearly all the grid storage that is being installed today, but that technology’s cost-effectiveness wanes in applications geared to store energy for many hours or days. Entrepreneurs have pursued a motley crew of alternatives to turn wind and solar power into baseload power plants: things like flow batteries of various chemistries, gravity-based systems that mimic pumped hydro storage and compressed air in caverns or tanks. But the long-duration storage sector has produced more bankruptcies and delays than surefire successes.

Form Energy burst onto the scene in 2018 with a founding team of veteran energy storage leaders, including co-founder Mateo Jaramillo, the former director of Tesla’s stationary storage business. It launched with a $9 million Series A backed by Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Prelude Ventures, Macquarie Capital, Saudi Aramco, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology offshoot The Engine.

The company scoured the known energy-storing materials for ingredients that could deliver days or weeks of storage at radically lower cost than lithium-ion. Initially, the founders told Greentech Media that their path to commercialization could take a decade — a decidedly sober approach compared to the rosy projections other startups in the space had touted.

But Form’s activities quickly began to pick up speed. It raised a $40 million Series B in 2019, bringing in strategic investors such as Italian oil and gas giant Eni. That funding came after Form developed a “fully functioning cell that was hitting the technical marks,” Jaramillo told GTM at the time. The Series B funding was earmarked for scaling up the cell by 10 to 100 times and turning it into a fully engineered product, he noted.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsForm Energy Raises Another $70M for Long-Duration Storage

IEA: Wind and Solar Capacity Will Overtake Both Gas and Coal Globally By 2024

on November 17, 2020
  • Wind and solar capacity will exceed coal and gas in less than five years, according to a new report by the International Energy Agency.
  • The increase will mean wind and solar will overtake gas capacity in 2023 and coal in 2024.
  • The report also showed how renewables had proved to be resilient during the COVID-19 pandemic, unlike other commodities.

Wind and solar capacity will double over the next five years globally and exceed that of both gas and coal, according to a new International Energy Agency (IEA) report.

The Paris-based intergovernmental agency anticipates a 1,123 gigawatt (GW) increase in wind and solar that would mean these power sources overtake gas capacity in 2023 and coal in 2024.

The IEA’s Renewables 2020 report concludes that while other fuels have struggled due to Covid-19 this year, the market for renewables has proved

“more resilient than previously thought”.

The continued growth of wind and solar means renewables, including hydro and bioenergy, would displace coal as the largest source of the world’s power by 2025, says the IEA’s report.

Last year, Carbon Brief analysis of the IEA’s data found that it only expected renewables to overtake coal output over the next five years under its more optimistic “accelerated case” scenario.

However, this year – even in its less ambitious “main case” scenario – wind, solar, hydro and biomass are projected to take the lead within the next five years.

Capacity milestones

Renewables are set to dominate the construction of new power infrastructure in the coming years as costs continue to fall.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsIEA: Wind and Solar Capacity Will Overtake Both Gas and Coal Globally By 2024

EDF Ensures US Winemaker Mitigates PG&E’s Power Shutoffs

on November 17, 2020
smart-energy-international

US winemaker Domaine Carneros has selected EDF Renewables to ensure its long-term financial and sustainability goals are achieved.

The wine maker has tasked the independent power producer to design, build, and operate a resilient solar photovoltaics (PV) and battery energy storage microgrid solution.

The system will comprise a 250KW solar PV and a 280KW/540KWh behind the meter battery energy storage system to island the entire facility during a power outage.

The solar PV system will be a combination of a carport and ground-mount installations.

The microgrid will help reduce diesel fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, as well as extend fuel reserves up to an entire week.

The system is projected to offset 624 metric tons of carbon each year.

Wildfires, rolling blackouts, and PG&E’s Public Safety Power Shutoffs, have made power unreliable throughout California, putting products and business operations at risk. Domaine Carneros is one of the first in the region to implement a microgrid solution that demonstrates a sophisticated approach of leveraging all available onsite assets to improve resilience and sustainability while also reducing costs during grid connected and power outage operations.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsEDF Ensures US Winemaker Mitigates PG&E’s Power Shutoffs

Wind & Solar Are Cheaper Than Everything, Lazard Reports

on November 16, 2020
Cleantechnica

We recently saw the International Energy Agency (IEA) report that solar power offers the cheapest electricity in history. That was a global report. A US-focused report from Lazard recently reported something similar. The highly regarded energy analysts showed that wind and solar offer the cheapest electricity in the country, even significantly undercutting natural gas combined cycle power plants now. But that’s only half of it.

Solar & Wind Energy Are Cheaper — Much Cheaper

Historically, when we write about such reports, we — and the analysts we’re referencing — are comparing estimated electricity costs from new power plants. However, for at least a few of these reports, Lazard has been including average electricity cost from already built power plants — just the operational costs (the brown diamonds in the chart below). The latest report shows that new wind and solar power plants can even provide electricity more cheaply than existing, in-operation natural gas, coal, and nuclear power plants! This is where things get interesting.

We’re at a kind of crossover point right now, but if solar and wind continue to come down in cost while the others stay the same or get more expensive, there will be serious pressure to retire fossil and nuclear power plants early and scale up wind and solar power production even faster. Why pay more for electricity from old, dirty power plants when you can get it more cheaply from new, clean, green electricity?

(Side notes: the light blue diamond is for offshore wind, the green diamond captures the price with 20% green hydrogen used in the natural gas combined cycle power plant, and the dark blue diamond captures the price with 20% “blue hydrogen” used in the natural gas combined cycle power plant.)

Here’s another chart looking at electricity costs from new wind and solar power plants versus marginal costs from existing fossil and nuclear power plants:

Not too bad.

Much more is available in the Lazard report examining levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) — aka the average cost of electricity production from a power plant across an estimated plant lifetime, or 20 years — including shorter comparisons in several other nations. The short story, though, is that solar and wind are much cheaper basically everywhere.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsWind & Solar Are Cheaper Than Everything, Lazard Reports

What Does a Joe Biden Presidency Mean for Microgrids?

on November 16, 2020

Microgrids, already growing in demand because of wildfires, hurricanes, the pandemic and energy equity issues, are likely to soon experience another boost — the climate policies of President-elect Joe Biden.

Biden’s “Plan for a Clean Energy Revolution and Environmental Justice” makes several pledges that could influence the microgrid market:

  • A “historic investment” of $1.7 trillion in clean energy, climate research and innovation over the next decade
  • Incentives for rapid deployment of clean energy innovations across the economy, especially in communities impacted by climate change
  • Spending by federal facilities on clean energy resilience
  • The linking of environmental justice to energy planning

“With his shift in priorities to a lower carbon energy future and away from propping up various aspects of the fossil fuel industry, the election of Joe Biden as president can only help microgrids – especially those incorporating renewable energy. Rather than focused on dated arguments pitting the economy against the environment, Biden buys into the value proposition that new clean energy technologies are the wave of the future,” said Peter Asmus, research director for Guidehouse Research.

Congressional Democrats already have signaled their support for microgrids in the “Moving Forward Act,” legislation introduced in June that specifically named microgrids as part of its $1.7 trillion infrastructure proposal. The legislation would offer financial and technical assistance, grant programs, and feasibility studies for microgrids, as well as various incentives for distributed energy resources.

In addition, Reps. Nanette Diaz Barragán from California and Yvette Clarke from New York recently introduced the Energy Resilient Communities Act, which would specifically provide $1.5 billion in grants for clean energy microgrids. 

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsWhat Does a Joe Biden Presidency Mean for Microgrids?

Key Players Shed Light on Why the Microgrid Market is Growing

on November 16, 2020

Natural disasters, the pandemic, new business models and state policies drive the microgrid market forward, while regulatory hurdles hold it back, say industry players who will be speaking November 17-19 at Microgrid 2020 Global.

The natural disasters spurring microgrid growth include hurricanes and wildfires. In some cases, the wildfires have prompted utilities such as Pacific Gas & Electric in California and Pacific Power in Oregon to implement public safety power shutoffs (PSPS) to reduce the risks of fires from electrical equipment.

“This year has certainly brought its challenges, with COVID, a very active hurricane season, and fires in the west,” said Allan Schurr, chief commercial officer, Enchanted Rock. “As a result, we’re seeing companies focused on crisis-proofing operations before the next event.”

Schurr was among several Microgrid 2020 Global speakers that Microgrid Knowledge interviewed in advance of the upcoming event, which has drawn thousands of registrants worldwide.

Echoing Schurr’s idea, Gary Leatherman, vice president, power advisory and smart and distributed energy for Worley, said, “To keep the lights on during PSPS, entities looked to develop solutions; this increased the demand for microgrids.”

Added Paul Roege, vice president for strategic initiatives, Typhoon HIL, “It seems clear that the greatest impact on microgrid projects has been broad impacts of disruptive events — particularly natural disasters, with some contributions by human actors.”

Increased demand also is coming from areas ravaged by hurricanes.

Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, even though it occurred in 2017, continues to spark significant interest in that area, said Harold Ruckpaul, director, strategic alliances, Eaton.

In the face of storms and wildfires, energy security is critical, said Kati Sidwall, simulation specialist for RTDS. “Our standards for power system protection and control must change. Increasing the deployment of microgrids that can operate securely and effectively is part of the solution, as is examining the performance of existing protection and control schemes under a wide variety of contingency scenarios,” she said.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsKey Players Shed Light on Why the Microgrid Market is Growing

California Awards $3.5 Million for Microgrid at Frito-Lay Food Processing Plant

on November 13, 2020

The California Energy Commission has awarded Frito-Lay a $3.5 million grant to build a solar-powered microgrid at a food processing facility in a project the agency is touting as a model for the industry.

The microgrid will be installed at a snack food processing facility in Rancho-Cucamonga, California, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to allow the plant to keep running during power outages.

SunPower will provide the project’s solar equipment and microgrid controller while Tesla will supply the project’s energy storage component, according to the CEC, which approved the grant Nov. 10.

The solar panels are expected to produce about 3,500 MWh a year, reducing greenhouse gas emissions by about 850 metric tons annually. The battery system will be able to supply the plant’s critical load for up to six hours before needing to be recharged.

CEC sees microgrid as industry model
“By implementing a microgrid at a food processor, this project will demonstrate the benefits of renewable energy production and electricity reliability to other industrial customers, as well as the benefits of microgrid technology more broadly to utilities and other involved parties,” Kevin Uy, a CEC staff in the agency’s energy research and development division, said in a memo supporting the grant.

Microgrids can help food production facilities deal with planned and unplanned power outages, which can lead to significant financial and product losses, Uy said during the meeting when the commission unanimously approved the grant.

Also, solar microgrids provide a renewable alternative to backup diesel generators, according to Uy.

The battery storage component provides customers with cost savings and resiliency while supporting the grid through strategic charging and discharging, Uy said.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsCalifornia Awards $3.5 Million for Microgrid at Frito-Lay Food Processing Plant

Automated Bidding is The Next Step in The Evolution of Energy Storage

on November 13, 2020
Utility-Dive

While 2020 has obviously been challenging on many fronts, one of the surprising upsides we have seen in the power industry is that the vision of a very high renewable energy penetration grid is not only technically feasible, but it might arrive faster than anyone anticipated. I wrote in Utility Dive this past August, detailing the experience of electricity markets in Europe during the pandemic, which was characterized by large shares of renewable energy on the grid and the shutdown of much of the continent’s baseload generation capacity.

A key component of this transition is the deployment of flexible generation – primarily grid-scale batteries – that allow for the optimization of these renewable resources. At Wärtsilä, our focus has been not only the deployment of these flexible storage assets but most importantly their optimization through asset-level and portfolio control.

This strategy has led to many interesting conversations with our customers, allowing us to collaboratively find new ways to increase the value of energy storage assets. One of the most exciting, and the key to the growth of energy storage as a market category, is the ability to leverage artificial intelligence for automated bidding of stored renewable power into competitive electricity markets.

This has the potential to be a game-changer for energy storage, mitigating the risk from merchant revenue streams atop the already clear benefits provided by grid-scale batteries.

The market is taking notice. In my conversations with IPPs, I am increasingly hearing that operators are rethinking their trading strategies to incorporate storage and take advantage of these potentially lucrative arbitrage opportunities. These customers typically fall into two categories.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsAutomated Bidding is The Next Step in The Evolution of Energy Storage