The debate over energy storage replacing gas-fired peakers has raged for years, but a new approach that shifts the terms of the argument could lead to an acceleration of storage deployments.
Rather than looking at peak demand as a single mountainous peak, some analysts now advocate a layered approach that allows energy storage to better match peak needs. The idea is beginning to gain traction with some states and utilities.
“You don’t have to have batteries that run to infinity.”
Ray Hohenstein
Market applications director, Fluence
Some developers of solar-plus-storage projects say they can already compete head-to-head with gas-fired peakers. “I can beat a gas peaker anywhere in the country today with a solar-plus-storage power plant,” Tom Buttgenbach, president and CEO of developer 8minutenergy Renewables, recently told S&P Global.
Others disagree. Storage is not disruptive for generation, but will be disruptive for transmission and distribution, Kris Zadlo, executive vice president and chief development officer at Invenergy, told the audience at a Bloomberg New Energy Finance conference last spring. Invenergy develops generation, energy storage and transmission projects.
But there is another path that avoids the pitfalls of positions on either end of the all-or-none approach. “Do the analysis of the need itself,” Ray Hohenstein, market applications director at Fluence, told Utility Dive. If the need is only two hours in duration, it may be best served by a two-hour battery. “You don’t have to have batteries that run to infinity.”
Storage vs. fossil fuel peakers
Energy storage has several benefits over traditional fossil fuel peaking plants, Hohenstein said. It is instantaneous, it has no emissions and requires no fuel, and has limited infrastructure needs. It can also help the grid absorb higher levels of renewable generation by soaking up excess output, such as solar power at noon. But the one thing energy storage cannot do, he said, is provide limitless energy.
So, instead of looking at replacing an individual peaker, Hohenstein advocated a “duration portfolio” approach that uses energy storage to shave peak load.
Click Here to Read Full Article
Recent Comments