Regulatory change and the smart grid | Intelligent Utility

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Phil Carson, columnist for Intelligent Utility Daily, interviews a David O’Brien from Bridge Energy Group on regulatory changes to support grid modernization.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

The knottiest issue is how to balance risk between ratepayers and shareholders when you look at smart grid investments. […] We’re not going to let ratepayers bear this risk.

It’s a conundrum for the industry as a whole. Traditional rate-making methodology is a cost-plus exercise in which the utility gets its investment back plus a rate of return set by regulators. It was established many decades ago and premised on investment in largely stable, known commodities (poles & wires as compared to digital switches and advanced IT).[…]

IU: Which stakeholders could or should drive these sorts of changes?

O’Brien: That is the question, the heart of the matter. […] I’ve given this some thought and the best I can come up is that industry—the smart grid industry—could probably do more, along with the investor-owned utilities, to find some way to be more constructively engaged with the regulatory community.

See on www.intelligentutility.com

Wind and solar power paired with storage could power grid 99.9 percent of the time

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Renewable energy could fully power a large electric grid 99.9 percent of the time by 2030 at costs comparable to today’s electricity expenses, according to new research.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

“A well-designed combination of wind power, solar power and storage in batteries and fuel cells would nearly always exceed electricity demands while keeping costs low, the scientists found.”

“The study sheds light on what an electric system might look like with heavy reliance on renewable energy sources. Wind speeds and sun exposure vary with weather and seasons, requiring ways to improve reliability. In this study, reliability was achieved by: expanding the geographic area of renewable generation, using diverse sources, employing storage systems, and for the last few percent of the time, burning fossil fuels as a backup.”

“The study used estimates of technology costs in 2030 without government subsidies, comparing them to costs of fossil fuel generation in wide use today. The cost of fossil fuels includes both the fuel cost itself and the documented external costs such as human health effects caused by power plant air pollution. The projected capital costs for wind and solar in 2030 are about half of today’s wind and solar costs, whereas maintenance costs are projected to be approximately the same.”

Study available at:  http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378775312014759

See on www.sciencedaily.com

Ontario electricity: Wind out-produces coal

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Wind turbines have out-produced coal plants in generating electricity in Ontario for the first time

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

The Ontario Power Authority has said that Ontario has close to 2,000 megawatts of wind power in operation with another 3,800 megawatts under development. …

That meant wind supplied 3 per cent of the province’s power last year, out-producing coal at 2.8 per cent. …

But wind’s increase presents some challenges to the province’s power system, which sometimes has too much power flowing onto the grid.

… when there’s a surplus, wind turbines continue producing power but the system operators throttle back production at Bruce Power’s nuclear plants – while still paying them for the lost production.

Meanwhile, Ontario Power Generation also spills water at some of its hydro-electric stations to make room for the wind power on the grid. In effect, he said, that replaces low-cost hydro power with higher-priced wind power.

Nuclear power is still the mainstay of Ontario’s power supply, making up almost 57 per cent of last year’s supply compared with 55 per cent the year before.

See on www.thestar.com

Distributed Energy Storage is the Game Changer, and Renewables Drive the Economic Case | AltEnergyMag Press Release

See on Scoop.itGreen Energy Technologies & Development

High amounts of intermittent energy generation such as wind and solar is being attached to the grid, driving high electricity price volatility, peak spreads and negative electricity prices in some markets.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

….Italy represents a good case in point, as Lane explains that the country has some of the highest electricity prices in the world, owing to its almost complete reliance on imported natural gas for power generation, the price of which is mostly indexed to oil and oil products. This combined with a good solar yield means that solar PV is close to grid parity […]

Lane states: "This has led to a dramatic drop in the electricity flowing from the transmission grid into the distribution grid, especially during daytime ‘solar hours’ […] This is starting to move Italy into negative pricing territory where the economics for storage are given a major boost."

This has in turn led Enel to instigate six separate storage projects in several MV/HV distribution centres based on electrochemical and lithium-ion battery technologies […]

 

Lane also believes that energy storage could be tailored to suit geographical locations, suggesting that, "in countries where solar yields are lower, such as Northern Europe, virtual storage systems using thermal storage plus heatpumps or micro-CHP could be more effective."  […]

See on www.altenergymag.com

ZBB Energy Ships Zinc Flow Battery to U.S. Navy Microgrid Project | Green Energy News

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ZBB Energy Corporation has provided a 1000kWh / 500kW-rated energy storage system for use in a microgrid application at the San Nicolas Island Naval Facility, located in the Catalina Island group, just west of Los Angeles, California.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

During the next two years, ZBB’s EnerSystem will be tested and certified to maintain power quality and perform load management for off-peak power produced from the wind turbine and diesel electric power delivery system at the Navy facility on San Nicolas Island. […]

The ZBB EnerSystem will be used continuously in an ongoing operational mode to minimize diesel gen set runtime in favor of power generated from wind turbines and future photovoltaic (PV) arrays on the island. The base’s overall system will focus on the power control for microgrid stability, quality, and load leveling needs on the base. […]

ZBB Energy Corporation designs, develops, and manufactures advanced energy storage, power electronic systems, and engineered custom and semi-custom products targeted at the growing global need for distributed renewable energy, energy efficiency, power quality, and grid modernization. (12/17/12)

 

See on www.green-energy-news.com

Google Keeps Its Renewable Energy Investments Going

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With a new wind investment, the company has enabled two gigawatts of clean power to come online.

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

“… I’ll add a couple more numbers: until 1999, the U.S. had less than 2 gigawatts of wind and solar total. That’s the good number. The bad number is that American generating capacity stands at roughly 1,054 gigawatts, so two GW is a rounding error at the national level. (The boring lesson? Transforming an energy system is hard, and it takes a lot of money, time, and effort.)”

Wind power is only a part of the total answer to power the grid. Sometimes the wind does not blow or is not near populations and as such is not considered a capable primary energy source. Often wind power (and solar) must be coupled with a properly sized storage system and/or supplementary sources (emergency fuel-fired generator or with other co-generation projects, as examples). – DT

See on www.theatlantic.com

Soaring Solar Power Giving Politicians Headaches

“…As a cautionary tale, it’s worth gazing across the north sea. Germany had been subsidising its solar power recklessly. Due to the state guaranteeing the revenues for 20 years, no home owner could put a foot wrong by putting a solar panel on his roof. Green Entrepreneurs like Frank Asbeck, founder of market leader Solarworld, became millionaires – and the costs were rising constantly.

Who had to pay for all that? Mr. Average had to. Each and every kilowatt hour of solar electricity had to be subsidized by the customers, through individual energy bills. So prices rose. Soon, Angela Merkel was facing a severe backlash – by the energy intensive industry which was faced with severely mounting production costs, by the lesser partner in her coalition and by consumer groups. Germany’s political leader gave in soon: last summer, subsidies were cut drastically. …”

florianbamberg's avatarEnergy in Germany

Despite cuts in subsidies, solar power has been soaring in Germany throughout 2012. According to the industry association BSW-Solar, the energy produced has risen by 45 percent, to 28 billions of kilowatt hours.

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Maritimes Exploring How to Capture and Use Wind Power

Because wind can only create electricity when it is blowing, power utilities need backup generators in order to keep the lights on.

Wind energy supplies about nine per cent of the power load in Nova Scotia.

“Wind turbines are producing energy but when the wind stops, we’re balancing and offsetting that wind power with the coal plant, which creates greenhouse gases,” Jennex said.

Smart Grid Policy Trends to Watch in 2013 | The Energy Collective

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So what will be the most influential Smart Grid trends in 2013? There’s always the potential for technology breakthroughs – particularly in fixed and mobile energy storage.  However, we’re well overdue for gamechanging policies…

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

Here are four policy trends that will gain momentum in 2013:

  1. Industry attention will focus on transactive energy, which conceptualizes the impacts of widely distributed energy resources on utility business models, technologies/services, markets, and consumers. […]
  2. … regulators will consider how to influence utilities to act as distribution grid load controllers to accommodate new sources of kilowatts or negawatts without detriments to grid reliability and resiliency.  […]
  3. The energy/water nexus will become a more dominant part of project and technology conversations.  […] Natural gas fracking technologies will come under greater scrutiny in terms of the impacts of drilling fluids and practices to the purity of ground and underground water supplies.
  4. In a rare show of bipartisanship, Congress will allow Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) for renewable energy, which are currently limited to oil and gas investments.  […]

See on theenergycollective.com

Most Read Report of 2012: 10 Reasons Why Sustainable/Energy Retrofits of Commercial Buildings Will Be the Next Big Thing

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According to the US Department of Energy, commercial buildings account for 35 percent of US (and 40 percent of global) electricity consumption. Existing commercial buildings on average spend 30 percent of their operating budgets on operating …

Duane Tilden‘s insight:

“Today, the majority of all commercial building owners and managers recognize that energy efficiency retrofits have the potential to yield substantial savings on operating costs, while reducing a building’s environmental footprint. …”

“While not intended to be an exclusive list, the drivers of this industry movement include the following:

1. New financial tools created by lenders, academics and entrepreneurs to facilitate underwriting the economic benefits of such retrofits will become mainstream, […]

2. Existing financing structures will become more acceptable, each serving certain segments of the marketplace: […]

3. Performance contracting will continue to be used as turn-key solutions for sustainable energy retrofit projects and assist in securing existing third-party financing.  […]

4. Green leases and green tenant demands are on the rise, causing landlords to support these market demands through increased energy efficiency.  […]

5. According to the Rocky Mountain Institute and Johnson Controls, the ESCO industry was sized in 2011 at $4.1 billion and is currently growing at a rate of 26 percent per year.  By 2020, Pike Research projects that the market for retrofits in commercial buildings will reach $152 billion worldwide.

6.  In order to meet legislative greenhouse gas (carbon reduction) mandates at the federal, state and local levels, large-scale retrofit projects, in which combined technologies are utilized to optimize buildings as a whole system, will have to be utilized on a national basis.  The Deep Energy Efficiency Pays (DEEP) program is one example […]

7. Advancements in building automation technologies and the convergence of information technology and building data are forcing the commercial marketplace towards DEEP retrofits on a global basis.  […]

8. In the United States, various federal agencies […] are creating and rolling out programs to incentivize building owners to engage in sustainable/energy retrofits.

9. One of the fastest-growing LEED rating systems over the past two years has been LEED for Existing Buildings Operating and Maintenance (LEED-EB: O&M).  […]

10.  Performance disclosures, highlighted by new legislation in California that mandates the disclosure of building performance to all new tenants and buyers, will drive building owners to increase overall efficiency metrics of existing commercial buildings through retrofits. ”

See on www.environmentalleader.com