Department of Energy Announces Funding to Support Long-Duration Energy Storage

on May 7, 2018

DOEThe U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced up to $30 million in funding for projects as part of a new Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) program: Duration Addition to electricitY Storage (DAYS). DAYS project teams will build innovative technologies to enable long-duration energy storage on the power grid, providing reliable electricity for 10 to approximately 100 hours.

Energy storage will play an increasingly critical role in the resilient grid of the future. Storage systems provide important services, including improving grid stability, providing backup power, and allowing for greater integration of renewable resources. Today’s dominant storage options have limitations that inhibit their use as long-duration solutions, particularly their high cost.

“Building the grid of tomorrow will require new tools and technologies to ensure Americans have access to affordable and secure energy,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry. “At DOE, we are peering over the energy horizon and identifying the key technologies we need to support the power system of the future. These new storage options will offer us the opportunity to make the grid more resilient while enabling greater integration of our domestic energy resources.”

DAYS teams will develop energy storage systems that are deployable in almost any location and discharge electricity at a per-cycle cost target much lower than what is possible in systems available today.

The funding opportunity is open to a range of storage technology choices, including thermal, mechanical, electrochemical, chemical, and others. Driving the challenge are an aggressive set of cost targets, siting, power output, and duty cycle requirements.

A summary of the DAYS program can be found HERE. Additional information, including the full FOA, is available on ARPA-E’s online application portal, ARPA-E eXCHANGE.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsDepartment of Energy Announces Funding to Support Long-Duration Energy Storage

MISO Reliability Group Examines Order 841 Impacts

on May 7, 2018

RTO-InsiderCARMEL, Ind. — FERC’s extensive energy storage order has handed MISO’sReliability Subcommittee a new set of to-dos, including devising a storage capacity accreditation process and deciding whether storage will be subject to a must-offer requirement.

The subcommittee will also vet a proposal that will determine whether energy storage owners or MISO will manage the state of charge for resources. The group will additionally consider broader issues around storage, including:

  • What information MISO needs about batteries to manage real-time operations;
  • The risks of allowing market participation of energy storage at times when it’s not dispatched; and
  • Whether MISO should employ reliability improvements to mitigate risks of storage use.

Finally, the group could lay out rules to clarify that energy used for charging is not considered “station power,” which MISO defines as the power a generating facility uses for operating electrical equipment. MISO’s current definition of station power does not include energy used for pumping at a pumped storage facility.

The items were handed down from MISO’s Steering Committee based on recommendations made from the Energy Storage Task Force after discussions on Order 841 and storage’s potential in the RTO.

At a May 3 RSC meeting, MISO Market Design Manager Kevin Vannoy said the RTO will bring storage participation straw proposals to a June 6 joint meeting of the RSC, Resource Adequacy Subcommittee and Market Subcommittee. He said MISO will vet storage proposals throughout summer to prepare for a December compliance filing.

Vannoy said MISO still hopes FERC will allow it to set a limit on the number of storage resources that can participate in its markets. FERC’s order set a 100-kW minimum size requirement for participation, causing RTO staff to worry that small resources will flood markets with finite capabilities.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsMISO Reliability Group Examines Order 841 Impacts

GE Appoints Leader Of Energy Storage

on May 6, 2018

solar-industryGE Power has tapped former AES and RES Americas executive Robert Morgan to lead its new energy storage unit.

One of Morgan’s principal roles as GE’s CEO of energy storage will be to grow and expand the recently launched Reservoir – a comprehensive energy storage platform that delivers customized storage solutions to help customers manage the changing power landscape, according to GE Power.

“Energy storage is a key opportunity for our customers as they look for solutions with the best cost, lowest-carbon footprint, and greater reliability and resiliency,” says Russell Stokes, president and CEO of GE Power. “Rob brings the right skillset to lead GE Power’s energy storage unit as the industry shifts toward a more decentralized, decarbonized and digitized electricity infrastructure.”

According to Morgan’s LinkedIn profile, he served in various roles at AES from 1996 to 2003. He also founded Agile Energy LLC and served as the chief strategy officer and executive vice president of business development at RES Americas in 2013-2016.

Eric Gebhardt, vice president and strategic technology officer of GE Power, adds, “The global energy landscape is experiencing a dramatic shift with increasing renewables integration and the growth of distributed power. In his most recent roles as a founder of energy start-up Agile Energy and executive at RES Americas, Rob has been at the center of this market disruption and has demonstrated how to successfully build market-leading businesses. We’re confident he will do the same for GE Power’s energy storage portfolio.”

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsGE Appoints Leader Of Energy Storage

Tesla Teases a potential Giant New Record-Breaking 1 GWh Energy Storage Project to be Announced Soon

on May 6, 2018

ElectrekTesla has recently deployed several very large energy storage projects, but a new one could apparently dwarf them all.

There was an important detail that came out of Tesla’s Q1 conference call but was mostly overlooked: Elon Musk teased a potential giant 1 GWh energy storage project, which would make it the biggest in the world by a wide margin, to be announced soon.

We published plenty of articles about the things that came out of the conference call, but I forgot about that particular comment until Galileo Russel reminded me of it during our podcast this week.

When Russel asked Musk about the impact of bringing online the giant 129 MWh Powerpack project in South Australia, the CEO answered:

“I think it had quite a profound effect. South Australia took a chance on doing the world’s biggest battery,and it’s worked out really well. If you read the articles, it worked out far beyond their expectations because the battery is able to respond at the millisecond level – far faster than any hydrocarbon plant. So, its grid stabilization was much greater actually than even a gas turbine plant, which normally respond quite fast.

Musk is referring to the grid services that the battery pack has been performing for the South Australian grid.

As we previously reported, the giant battery system made around $1 million in just a few days back in January though frequency response and it is already eating away at ‘gas cartel’s’ profits, according to a recent report.

Like Musk mentioned, it is proving to be much more efficient than the hydrocarbon peaker plants that the grid operators generally use to stabilize the grid.

But the question was about how it is impacting demand, so Musk continued:

The utilities that we’ve worked eith thus far have really loved the battery pack and I feel confident that we’ll be able to announce a deal at the gigawatt-hour scale within a matter of months. So, it’s 1,000-megawatt-hours…”

That comment is extremely important, but it sort of fell through the cracks.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsTesla Teases a potential Giant New Record-Breaking 1 GWh Energy Storage Project to be Announced Soon

Sonnen’s Energy Storage Leadership Around The World

on May 6, 2018

CleantechnicaSonnen is one of our favorite cleantech leaders. It is great at innovation, leadership, and vision. Last month, I published a January interview with sonnen CEO and co-founder Christoph Ostermann. The good folks at The Beam went and created a transcript of it. If you can’t be bothered to watch a video but would like to read it, here you go!

Zach: So, we talked with you last year after you won the prize, I remember mentioning I was not surprised at all — I’m not surprised to see your ongoing progress, because Sonnen seems to be at the head of the game. What are some of the most recent big projects you guys have been excited about in the past year?

Christoph Ostermann: Oh, well, we had a very good year in 2017. Finally, the Australian market developed very, very nicely for us, mainly due to the reason of a retail power priceincrease on the first of July, by 25 or 30 percent or something like that.

You’re talking about for residential storage, right?

Absolutely. This has really kicked off the market and we are developing nicely over there, and then another highlight of 2017 is that the US business did very well. Unfortunately…

California and Hawaii?

California and Hawaii not as much as we thought. It was rather on the East Coast and also in the Caribbean Islands — for example, Puerto Rico due to the hurricanes….

We saw you were on the ground there, you made it to Puerto Rico, we have some coverage of your great work there. (See thisthis, and this.)

It’s really unbelievable … if you have not seen it, you would not believe it. It’s unbelievable how the island is destroyed.

And the depressing thing now … there are still so many people without electricity, with roofs not on their homes. It’s a systemic problem. But what was your role? How did you get in to help them? I mean this is sort of a question that has been a little bit still unclear with you and Tesla. You have great — obviously, some of the best solutions to offer — but how did you get in?

How did we get in? I mean, first of all, we saw there is a huge need we have a partner in Puerto Rico we are working with since three years. It’s a company called Pura Energia. They told us about the problems they have on the island and then we sent a team over there.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsSonnen’s Energy Storage Leadership Around The World

SolarEdge Launches Virtual Power Plant Platform to Create New Value for Distributed Storage

on May 4, 2018

Energy-Storage-NewsVirtual power plants (VPPs) can greatly increase the value of home energy storage systems for a range of stakeholders including grid operators, utilities and their customers, according to SolarEdge, which has just launched a VPP software platform.

The Israeli company, known for products ranging from power optimisers and inverters to monitoring and energy management solutions, has over the past couple of years introduced more energy storage compatible inverter products and management solutions to markets including Europe and the US.

“The one word that is most important here is aggregation,” Lior Handelsman, VP for marketing and product strategy and also one of the company’s founders, told Energy-Storage.News of the platform, which Handelsman said “starts in the cloud”.

Essentially, VPPs take numerous battery energy storage systems, typically sited behind-the-meter in customer’s houses, and aggregate together their capabilities. It means they can be more easily controlled by the network operator and can be used to provide grid services.

“To take one example: [Let’s say] you are a network operator, tasked with stabilising the grid and keeping the grid stable. There are so many different distributed generation resources on the grid making your task more and more complex,” Handelsman said.

Network operators could be constrained by money, space or time from building out new infrastructure such as substations in neighbourhoods where there is high peak demand in summer. Instead those same operators could take advantage of growing numbers of distributed energy resources (DERs) on their grid that include solar PV systems, EVs and EV chargers and of course battery energy storage systems.

“If you have a peak in a specific suburb, all you need to do is tell the storage systems in that suburbs to feed energy just for a few minutes into the grid to support that peak. Or if you have a peak you ask all the EV chargers in that area to stop charging or throttle down their charging for a few minutes. These are the bigger examples, but that can be made more and more complex as the challenge becomes more and more complex,” Handelsman said.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsSolarEdge Launches Virtual Power Plant Platform to Create New Value for Distributed Storage

1.1 MW Solar-Plus-Storage System Coming To Iowa University

on May 4, 2018

solar-industryIowa-based Ideal Energy is designing and building a 1.1 MW project at the Maharishi University of Management (MUM) in Fairfield, Iowa, using the NEXTracker NX Flow integrated solar-plus-storage system.

The project, built on five acres of university land, will produce enough energy to cover nearly one-third of the school’s annual electricity usage. In addition to those savings, the 1 MWh battery storage system will reduce the demand charge portion of MUM’s utility bill by around one-third, says Ideal Energy.

The NX Flow energy storage system integrates battery, solar tracker, inverter and software technologies to improve return on investment for owners of solar plants. At the core of the system is an advanced vanadium flow battery, which is DC-coupled with the photovoltaic array. With NX Flow, the battery charges directly off the array, enabling the battery to store “clipped” energy up to its capacity limit. Energy that has been lost to clipping can be used to generate additional kilowatt-hours of revenue, explains NEXTracker.

Ideal Energy will also be installing NEXTracker’s smart solar tracker, NX Horizon, for decentralized active tracking. Each row of solar panels has its own motor and sensors and integrates with smart control software to independently find the best angle for maximum electricity production.

“NX Flow’s solar-plus-storage solution for Maharishi University of Management will make it a benchmark for advanced energy in Iowa,” comments Alex Au, chief technology officer of NEXTracker. “NEXTracker looks forward to pairing more storage solutions with the leading solar plant installation expertise of Ideal Energy and partnering with utilities for win-win solutions. Together, we can help drive the fast growth trajectory of the Midwestern market for advanced renewable energy solutions. We’re also pleased to help lessen the demand charges and utility bills faced by customers in Iowa.”

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Fractal Energy Storage Consultants1.1 MW Solar-Plus-Storage System Coming To Iowa University

Voltstorage Latest to Try Out Residential Flow Battery Format

on May 4, 2018

Energy-Storage-NewsVoltstorage, a German company founded in Munich in 2016, is launching a vanadium-redox-flow (VRF) energy storage system aimed at the residential market.

It would be just the second such device launched worldwide to date by a manufacturer, after Australian company Redflow began producing 10kWh VRF systems for households in March 2016, only to discontinue the product just over a year later. Another major European manufacturer had been discussing launching similar systems a couple of years ago, but this appears to have not been followed through with.

With the Intersolar Europe conference and trade exhibition coming up in mid-June in Voltstorage’s home city, the company has launched Voltstorage SMART, which can store 6.8kWh of electricity and has a maximum output of 2.0kW. Two or more units can be connected in series to create larger capacities, with the battery system apparently compatible with “any household electrical connection and any photovoltaic unit”, according to the company.

Voltstorage claims the units can be updated via the internet to optimise battery management, can handle upwards of 10,000 full cycles in their lifetime and require little or no maintenance. Available as an all-in-one package including inverter, supply and installation and data monitoring via an app, the SMART devices are guaranteed for 10 years.

Back in May 2017, when Redflow discontinued its residential units, Energy-Storage.News spoke with industry analyst Julian Jansen about the prospects for commercialisation of flow energy storage devices for household use. Jansen said that it was “highly unlikely that flow batteries will succeed as a viable competing option to Lithium-ion based systems in the residential market outside of very specific niche applications”.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsVoltstorage Latest to Try Out Residential Flow Battery Format

USDOE to Fund Development of New Energy Storage Technologies

on May 3, 2018

Power-TechnologyThe US Department of Energy (USDOE) will be providing up to $30m in funding for the projects that are part of the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) programme called Duration Addition to Electricity Storage (DAYS).

The project teams under the DAYS will be engaged in the development of new technologies that will enable long-term energy storage on the power grid.

US Secretary of Energy Rick Perry said: “Building the grid of tomorrow will require new tools and technologies to ensure Americans have access to affordable and secure energy.

“At DOE, we are peering over the energy horizon and identifying the key technologies we need to support the power system of the future.

“These new storage options will offer us the opportunity to make the grid more resilient while enabling greater integration of our domestic energy resources.”

The DAYS teams have to design and develop cost-effective energy storage systems that can be deployed at any given location.

USDOE explained that the funding opportunity is not confined to any one particular technology.

The participating teams also have the option to develop energy storage systems using thermal, mechanical, or electrochemical power technologies.

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsUSDOE to Fund Development of New Energy Storage Technologies

Tesla Plans To Triple Energy Storage Business This Year

on May 3, 2018

CleantechnicaMost of the world was focusing on the Model 3 portion of the Tesla Q1 earnings letter last night. But buried down toward the bottom of that communication, the company reiterated its goal of tripling its energy storage business in 2018. “2018 should be a very important year for our energy storage business,” the letter read. “We continue to aim for a three-fold increase in MWh deployed for our energy storage products this year.

“In Q1, energy storage deployments grew 161% from Q4 2017 to 373 MWh, which includes the 129 MWh South Australia project that was installed last year with final commercial transfer occurring in Q1. Electric utilities and power producers around the globe are increasingly appreciating the value proposition of our Powerpack storage systems based not only on economic benefits but also on the operational benefits of faster response time and greater reliability of the electric grid.”

That giant battery in South Australia surprised people with its insanely fast response the first time it was called upon after it was commissioned — an astonishing 140 milliseconds. That’s how long it took for it to start providing power to the grid when a nearby coal generating plant went offline unexpectedly.

Editor’s note: Admittedly, this is being marked/communicated as a big surprised, but this is how batteries work, and Younicos communicated this point to us well several years ago in Berlin, especially via these two graphs:

Such perfomance is making other utility companies sit up and take notice. Tesla is in talks to provide a similar grid-scale battery to Queensland, Australia. It is also working with Consolidated Edison in New York, Xcel Energy in Colorado, and PG&E in California.

Elon said on the conference call last night, “Tesla may have a gigawatt-scale deal announced in a matter of months.”

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Fractal Energy Storage ConsultantsTesla Plans To Triple Energy Storage Business This Year