DocumentCode
3196842
Title
Value propositions for utility-scale energy storage
Author
Manz, Devon ; Keller, Jeffrey ; Miller, Nicholas
Author_Institution
GE Energy, Schenectady, NY, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
20-23 March 2011
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
10
Abstract
A fundamental truth of the electrical grid has been, in general, that electricity must be generated at the precise moment it is demanded. It is the ultimate "just-in-time" system, required by the laws of physics to carry no inventory. This characterization is again under challenge, as development of grid scale energy storage devices, both electrochemical and mechanical, is accelerating and being represented as a critical piece of the grid infrastructure of the future. Much of the impetus behind this activity follows closely with the early days of meaningfully high penetrations of renewable generation into our power systems, at both the transmission and distribution-level; each of which presents somewhat different challenges in terms of integrating wind and solar energy. Storage, it is argued, offers the stabilization and buffering capacity that will be necessary to reconcile the variability of growing amounts of renewable generation and the challenges these might cause with relatively predictable and stable loads. Our purpose in this paper is to introduce a few frameworks for consideration of both the necessity of grid scale energy storage for the reliable operation of the grid of the future as well as the economic propositions that these assets will face in developed electricity markets and under established utility practices. Simply put, there are three basic and obvious questions that must be addressed for any asset deployment: (1) what is the problem the asset will solve?; (2) what is the mechanism by which an investor would be able to recover the costs of the asset?; and (3) what other means are there of solving the same problem? This paper will consider each of these questions for a variety of applications of utility-scale energy storage.
Keywords
energy storage; power grids; solar power; wind power; buffering capacity; electrical grid; grid scale energy storage devices; just-in-time system; solar energy; utility-scale energy storage; value propositions; wind energy; batteries; distribution; energy storage; grid operation; power systems; solar power; transmission; wind power;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Systems Conference and Exposition (PSCE), 2011 IEEE/PES
Conference_Location
Phoenix, AZ
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-789-4
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-61284-787-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PSCE.2011.5772524
Filename
5772524
Link To Document