How Batteries Could Revolutionize Renewable Energy
from Time
All over California,
there's evidence of the state's goal to lead the country in renewable energy.
Enormous farms of shiny solar panels have popped up across southern California,
and gigantic wind turbines dot the landscape outside nearly all the major cities.
There are less flashy—and less visible—investments in
renewables going on, too. Tucked away in warehouses, trailers and industrial
parks are lithium ion batteries that, if all goes well, will play a
critical role in helping California hit its ambitious target: to have 50% of
all electricity come from renewables by 2050.
Some green energy sources come with a
built-in challenge: the wind and the sun can't be turned on and off at will.
When it's windy and sunny, an abundance of energy may be harnessed—but any
excesses go to waste. That's where batteries, the most common type of energy
storage, come in. Batteries solve that problem by allowing utility companies to
collect excess electricity and store it for times when the sun may not be
shining or the wind not blowing.
“Networks care about reliability,” says
Logan Goldie-Scot, an energy-storage analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
“Energy storage is being viewed by network operators as a potential tool in
their toolbox, and that hasn’t been the case up until now."
In 2013, California launched an aggressive
effort to ramp up large-scale energy storage with an initial goal of building
1,325 megawatts of storage by 2020, the equivalent capacity of two average
sized coal-fired power plants. Today, the state is already home to 36% of the
country's battery storage capacity with projects continuing to open on a
regular basis, according to a Climate Group report. Oregon and
Massachusetts have since announced their own storage targets. Meanwhile, dozens
of cities have made commitments to get 100% of their electricity from
renewables.
California's effort will serve as test case
for policymakers and utilities across the country hoping to deploy more
renewables. If it works as planned, others will likely follow suit.
"Everybody looks to California to see what works and what doesn’t work—and
how to tweak it," says Marlene Motyka, global renewable energy leader at
Deloitte. "States are looking at it in terms of renewable technologies and
how to get more value out of their systems."
Batteries will also change the power sector
as homeowners and businesses install their own products. Batteries at homes,
offices and other commercial buildings allow customers to save electricity
collected by their solar panels and use it at times when electricity prices are
highest. One in four businesses with more than 250 employees has already
deployed batteries to help with their electricity management, according to a
Deloitte study. Regulatory changes that encourage battery owners to sell back
stored electricity when it's in high demand could increase interest in
batteries, analysts say.
Batteries installed in electric vehicles,
for instance, will also affect the electric grid as automakers continue to expand their offerings. Experts
say the impact will both stress and help utilities manage their electricity
supply. The stress comes as vehicles create a new demand for energy, but at the
same time, batteries in those vehicles act as a storage unit of their own that
may offer new flexibility. The largest battery in a Tesla, as one example, can
store enough electricity to power the average American home for more than three
days. Utilities have begun exploring programs to encourage electric vehicle
owners to charge their cars when there is extra power on the grid.
Perhaps the biggest open question for
energy storage remains how much—and where—the market will grow in the coming
years—whether lithium ion batteries will keep their place as the top way of
storing electricity. Hydrogen storage, molten salt and other forms of batteries all offer
alternatives that have received significant investment in recent years.
But much like photovoltaic solar panels in
recent years, the cost of lithium ion batteries has already come down so much
that the market's continued growth seems almost inevitable.
"A few years ago, batteries were seen
as talked about in terms of innovative technology," says Motyka. "Now, it’s here and
starting to be used in full force."
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