Express Global

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 23 December 2013

California planning to run on battery power due to unreliable wind & solar energy

Posted on 08:25 by Unknown
Costly renewable energy policies are already set to raise California power costs by $5 billion or 33 percent due to expensive and unreliable wind and solar energy. However, that may be only half of the additional cost, since the "California Public Utilities Commission has called on utilities and private companies to install about $5 billion worth of batteries and other forms of energy storage to help the state power grid cope with the erratic power supplied by wind and solar energy." 




Thus, in total, new renewable sources and the battery capacity necessary to provide reliable electricity may cost $10 billion by 2020, representing about a 66% increase in electricity rates.





Obama: My Plan Makes Electricity Rates Skyrocket





Could Big Batteries Be Big Business In California?

by RICHARD HARRIS NPR
December 23, 2013 3:24 AM

Morning Edition 5 min 18 sec Playlist Download

Strong gusts in Palm Springs, Calif., generate plenty of energy, thanks to turbine farms. But being able to store all that energy is just as important.


The California Public Utilities Commission has called on utilities and private companies to install about $5 billion worth of batteries and other forms of energy storage to help the state power grid cope with the erratic power supplied by wind and solar energy.

The need to store energy has become urgent because the state is planning to get a third of its electricity from renewable sources by the end of the decade. And the shift in strategy could open up some big opportunities for small startups, including one called Stem.

Stem is housed in an abandoned showroom in Millbrae, Calif., just across the highway from San Francisco International Airport. And the company's not just aiming to help the state's power grid.


Storage batteries made by Stem, a Bay Area startup, look like glitzy gym lockers.

"We make a product that reduces electricity bills for businesses," says Tad Glauthier, Stem's vice president for customer development.

In fact, Stem's first priority is to focus on individual businesses. To explain how this works, Glauthier walks over to a couple of large computer monitors hanging on the wall.

"The monitor on the right is showing the electric load from the carwash across the street," he says.

The graph is all over the place. There are lulls when the carwash is waiting for business — punctuated with big spikes when blowers, vacuums and other large pieces of equipment switch on.

"If you look at just the range within the last 15 minutes, that's an incredible amount of volatility," Glauthier says. "The utility has to serve them that electricity."

It turns out the car wash has to pay extra on its electric bill for those periods of high demand. All companies in California get billed for their peak use, as well as their total electricity consumption.

So if the carwash can shave off those power peaks, they can also shave this extra charge from their electric bill.

Here's how Stem does it: When demand spikes, batteries kick in so the company doesn't have to draw so much from the grid.

The battery packs they install in businesses look like glitzy gym lockers, and are controlled by a small computer, connected to the Internet. The computer's job is to decide when a company should be pulling energy from its batteries, rather than from the grid. When the company's energy demand is low, it can recharge the battery.

"With the Stem system, they're not using less power," Glauthier explains. "They're just using power in a more level way."

And by doing that, the company is reducing the part of its bill that's based on peak power usage.

So is Stem simply building a system that allows companies to "game" their electric bills? Glauthier says, no. "You absolutely help the [power grid] system," he says.

But Glauthier may be getting a little ahead of himself here.

"Right now, it does only help the customer," says Haresh Kamath, a battery expert at the Electric Power Research Institute in nearby Palo Alto.

Kamath says batteries will eventually help the state power grid deal with the ups and downs of electricity supplies from wind and solar. But it will take a lot of battery power to make a difference.

That's exactly why the California Public Utilities Commission has called for billions of dollars of energy storage to be installed between now and 2020.

"If you get a small energy storage system in every body's home, or every business, that could have a substantial impact on the grid as a whole," Kamath says. "Of course right now it's difficult to do that because it's a relatively expensive product."

Everybody's hoping that creating this huge demand for batteries will also help drive down the cost.

Batteries can help with short-term power fluctuations — like those created when a cloud passes over a bank of solar panels, for example, or when the air goes still at a particular wind farm. And they can help keep the power grid stable, as operators work to match supply and demand second by second.

Stem is planning to scale up its operations so it can play a role in stabilizing the grid. The grid operator actually pays for that service, so it could be another revenue stream for Stem.

Glauthier says the company has installed just 10 systems so far, but they have 150 more orders in the works. And once they reach a critical mass, they will be able to control all the batteries they install from one central location.

"It's taken us four and a half years to get here, and I think there's another three to four years to go before we're really blowing the doors off," Glauthier says.

And they do have competition, including Tesla Motors, which has teamed up with a solar energy company to get into this business as well.

The race is not simply to refine battery technology, but to invent business models that will make energy storage practical.



Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Executive Summary of the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report
    Executive Summary from the NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II Report, released 9/16/13: Executive Summary  This report is produced by the ...
  • New paper finds South Pacific rainfall was up to 2.4 times more variable before the 20th century
    A new paper published in Geology reconstructs climate of the South Pacific over the past 446 years and "shows rainfall varied much mor...
  • New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site
    New Material Posted on the NIPCC Web site Species Range Shifts in a Warming World (19 Nov 2013) It is considerably more complex - and conser...
  • WSJ: Fracking has done more for the poor than all of Obama's ministrations combined
    More on Fracking and the Poor The U.S. oil and gas boom added $1,200 to disposable income in 2012. Last week we reported on a study showing ...
  • Where, Oh Where, Has that Global Warming Gone?
    Terrifying Flat Global Temperature Crisis Threatens To Disrupt U.N. Climate Conference Agenda By Larry Bell, Forbes, 9/10/13 Bummer! Now, ju...
  • New paper finds chaotic response to natural climate drivers ENSO and solar activity
    A paper under open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs climate and levels of 9 lakes in East Africa and finds the climate of East A...
  • New paper finds IPCC climate models don't realistically simulate convection
    More problems for the models: A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds climate models do not realistically simulate co...
  • Special Report: The Age of Plenty debunks alarmist claims of food shortages
    Paging Paul Ehrlich :  IEEE Spectrum , the journal of the world's largest professional association for the advancement of technology, ha...
  • Yale Climate Forum stumped by simple question on sea levels
    In response to the article The Inevitability of Sea-Level Rise posted at the Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media, I asked the foll...
  • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Sweden
    A paper in open review for Climate of the Past reconstructs temperatures in northern Sweden for the past 800 years and finds another non-ho...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (20)
    • ►  January (20)
  • ▼  2013 (480)
    • ▼  December (77)
      • New computer model claims global warming decreases...
      • Obama makes his 'social cost of carbon' trick final
      • Global warming causes lessmore snow
      • Global warming newsline 12/31/13 edition
      • 72 billion Hiroshima bombs of 'missing heat' went ...
      • New paper finds all of Greenland and West Antarcti...
      • Analysis finds electric cars depreciate much faste...
      • US 2013 oil boom is biggest ever, data shows
      • New paper finds globe was warmer, sea levels rose ...
      • New paper finds Arctic sea ice extent has increase...
      • UK taxpayers spent $49 million this year for wind ...
      • New paper finds Antarctica had much less sea ice d...
      • California planning to run on battery power due to...
      • How climate models dismiss the role of the Sun in ...
      • Review finds plants will avoid extinction from cli...
      • Public Bored And Disinterested By Climate Change F...
      • New paper finds another mechanism by which the Sun...
      • For global warming believers, 2013 was the year fr...
      • An amazing fraud by an architect of US climate pol...
      • Observations show IPCC exaggerates anthropogenic g...
      • New paper finds another reason to end the ethanol ...
      • Bravo! New study says mainstream media is avoiding...
      • Paper strongly supports the solar/cosmic ray theor...
      • Paper finds solar activity explains climate change...
      • Climate change caused African lakes to dry up 90 m...
      • Analysis finds NOAA satellite data is incompatible...
      • New paper shows climate models have exaggerated oc...
      • Cook's 'Skeptical Science' new global warming scar...
      • New paper finds the Gulf Stream has not slowed dow...
      • New paper suggests land-use changes played a big r...
      • Antarctic ice sheet is melting from below, unrelat...
      • More NASA GISS temperature tampering, this time in...
      • Biochemistry professor explains why man-made CO2 r...
      • Climate scientists 'can only reliably model cloud ...
      • AGU lecture says climate scientists need to get mo...
      • New report predicts US energy use per capita will ...
      • New paper finds corals are thriving in 'naturally ...
      • New paper finds Arctic sea ice is controlled by na...
      • New paper says learning about climate change is li...
      • Climate alarmists' search for proof going cold
      • New paper describes another solar amplification me...
      • Handy guide to the logical fallacies used by globa...
      • Satellite will launch in 2015 to measure Earth's r...
      • Fire And Ice; Volcanoes, Not CO2, Melt West Antarctic
      • US Navy predicts summer ice-free Arctic in 3 years
      • LA Times: 2013 US wildfire acreage was far below a...
      • Global warming scaremongering is having devastatin...
      • 20th century data supports Svensmark's cosmic ray ...
      • Analysis finds IPCC exaggerates effect of CO2 on c...
      • Latest proposed California taxpayer boondoggle: Gi...
      • Analysis finds both water vapor & increased CO2 ac...
      • New report shows wind power doesn't reduce CO2 emi...
      • Review paper finds 20th century warming in Asia wa...
      • Audubon Society says it's outrageous that the gove...
      • The dirty secrets of clean cars: Cars powered by f...
      • New paper predicts tropical cyclones will decrease...
      • New paper finds Antarctic climate is within natura...
      • New paper finds another non-hockey-stick in Turkey
      • How climate models dismiss the role of the Sun in ...
      • New papers find solar proton events could cause ei...
      • Global cooling is causing fungus infections to spr...
      • New paper finds warming & CO2 increase wheat produ...
      • Global-warming ‘proof’ is evaporating
      • New paper finds no change in maximum temperatures ...
      • Boston Globe Op-Ed: Invoking "consensus" to shut o...
      • Climate Change Isn't Our Top Public Health Threat
      • New paper predicts another Little Ice Age within t...
      • Review finds rising CO2 concentrations and tempera...
      • Review paper finds clouds act as a negative feedba...
      • Fossil fuels now beat wind and solar on environmen...
      • New paper finds a negative feedback mechanism of w...
      • New paper finds severe drought is more common duri...
      • World Agricultural Output Continues to Rise, Despi...
      • New paper finds rivers and lakes are large net sou...
      • New paper predicts Dalton-like minimum in solar ac...
      • EU plans to waste $7 trillion on climate policies ...
      • Global warming caused 1,000 US record cold tempera...
    • ►  November (64)
    • ►  October (65)
    • ►  September (130)
    • ►  August (108)
    • ►  July (36)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile