What value is reliance to ESS
19
Feb

What value is resilience to energy storage systems?

New findings from the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and Clean Energy Group (CEG) that when the value of resilience is taken into account — preventing power outages — several more integrated solar-plus-storage projects are economically viable.

The findings, presented in a new paper, use detailed modeling of several different building types. The models assign value to how solar-plus-storage can prevent the losses that occur during a power outage.

Putting a concrete value on predicted power outage losses is a complex task for building owners and developers. While some types of organization, such as a bank or data centre, may have dollar costs associated with such losses, most other sectors are not able to perform proper cost-benefit analysis on investments relating to resilience. This factor is compounded when looking at buildings which see increased use in an emergency — which frequently occur concurrently with power outages — such as hospitals and shelters. Disasters and outages cause billions of damages in losses, yet placing a dollar value on their prevention is still a challenge.

The new paper from CEG and NREL, Valuing Resilience on Solar and Storage System Design, considers three types of building: hotel, office and school. Customer survey data from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory was used to provide resilience values in terms lost dollars-per-hour of power outage.

The resilience value findings in the paper were especially significant for energy storage, doubling net lifetime savings for the building owner in the case of the hotel and school. The paper’s findings are particularly relevant in the wake of 2017’s natural disasters — Hurricane Maria in the Caribbean, California’s wildfires, Hurricane Harvey in the Southern US — where the resulting power outages could not be mitigated with just back-up diesel generation.

Seth Mullendore, coauthor of the paper, claims placing real values on solar-plus-storage will better spur uptake before the next disaster: “By placing a value on resilience now, more solar-plus-storage could be deployed before the next big storm hits. This is important for businesses, but even more essential to the safety of our most vulnerable populations, like the sick and the elderly, where access to power could literally mean the difference between life and death.”

Read the original article

If you want to know more about this and other topics directly from end users of energy storage technologies join us at one of these annual events: The Energy Storage World Forum (Grid Scale Applications), or The Residential Energy Storage Forum, or one of our Training Courses.

LATEST ARTICLES

Product Development: Embracing product safety and compliance

PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT: EMBRACING PRODUCT SAFETY AND COMPLIANCE Recent safety incidents on storage plants have raised concerns about the fire safety of battery storage systems. Such events are extremely rare compared to the cumulated global deployments of energy storage systems, which have reached more than 27 GWh by end of 2020 (Wood Mackenzie 2021). However, for…

Read More

Annual Installed Capacity Significantly Increases

While the global market was under the haze of the epidemic and many countries were still in lockdown, the energy storage market showed extremely strong resilience and began to recover and grow since Q3 and Q4 of 2020. According to the BloombergNEF report, the global energy storage market in 2020 has developed faster than expected,…

Read More

Future energy predictions: Growth of flexibility and grid forming

  It is well known that COVID-19 has caused low energy demand and the growth of renewable energy across Europe. Now, Andrew Tang, Vice President for Energy Storage at Wärtsilä, predicts this will result in swift action to build better grid resiliency. The share of renewable power across Europe has skyrocketed over the last six…

Read More