“Virtual” Power Plants Have Big Role to Play

“Virtual” Power Plants Have Big Role to Play

As the thinking about the power grid of the future continues to evolve, there is no topic hotter than how best to use assets owned by customers and spread over the entire network in the thousands.  Coordinating, controlling, and making these resources reliable enough to use them to meet an increasing share of power needs are now the focus of many startups and established players alike.  The industry talks about these as Distributed Energy Resource Managements Systems (DERMS), Virtual Power Plants (VPPs) and Microgrids (MG).  Technology is rapidly blurring the distinctions among these terms.  Whatever it is called, the idea is blending solar panels, batteries, controllable thermostats, refrigerators and backup generators into a system not designed for this purpose without a big problem, while saving everyone money.  It could involve centralized control or, even better, using AI-based learning to create a self-managing, self-healing system.  Lots of room for innovation.  It’s a big challenge, with a big upside for those who can rise to meet it. 

At our February 24 MeetUp, we had presentations from SMUD and solar pioneer SunRun on how they are addressing this challenge locally.  A recording of the event is available HERE.

Jillian Rich, a strategic business planner at SMUD, explained that SMUD is already wading into this challenge with a load flexibility portfolio, creating new VPPs, and announcing new incentives for battery storage.  SMUD calls this program “My Energy Optimizer” and they will roll it out in stages.  The first involves placing controllable thermostats in customer homes using Uplight, a Boulder, CO, company with 400 employees that helps 80 utilities nationwide to implement these types of programs.  Participating customer will receive incentives to allow the utility to increase the temperature in their homes for a few minutes and not more than 50 times per year to shed load on command.  In the second stage which was just announced, SMUD will provide cash incentives for customers to help support the grid.  There will be three levels of participation.  “Starter” participants will receive $500 to use their stored energy to replace grid-delivered power at times of high prices.  “Partner” participants will get $1,500 to get all the “Starter” benefits, plus let SMUD use their batteries to reduce the power draw of the home when the grid is stressed.  “Partner-Plus” participants will get $2,500 and all the “Starter” benefits plus will allow SMUD to make them part of a VPP aggregate to share their battery with other customers, achieving a larger localized help to SMUD.  In the third stage expected by 2024, SMUD will be looking for ways to involve EV chargers to provide 2-way power flow and use car batteries as part of the stored energy resource for the grid.

Success for SMUD will come if it can count on about these customer resources to provide about 5% (estimating off her graph) of the capacity needed to balance the system by 2030.

 Carl Lenox, SunRun Senior Director for Electrification and Advanced Products, noted that his company sees a huge growth opportunity in this area.  Founded in 2007, SunRun is active in 22 states plus DC, with 360,000 residential customers.  It has been aggregating customer resources since at least 2019 when it conducted a case study paid for by DOE of about 10,000 customers in New England that they managed and created a capacity resource available to the regional ISO.  New England was one of the first regions to try to use an aggregator-intermediary to create resources to support the grid, starting in the 1990s.  Those early efforts exposed how difficult it was to use these “behind-the-meter” resources to provide capacity the grid could rely upon.  Much has been learned since, and now the results are better.

Carl also noted that SunRun wants to have a premier spot in V2G technology, starting with its recently announced arrangement with Ford to provide this technology to couple the F-150 Lightning e-truck to the home.  Ford has gotten 150,000 pre-orders in just three weeks.  The vehicle first could provide backup to the home with a 130 kWh capacity battery pack that could transfer as much as 9.6 kW at a time, enough to run and entire home.  SunRun will start with Vehicle to Home (V2H) technology, initially for backup and then as a way to manage use to reduce a homeowner’s power bill.  This will give them a foothold to move to full V2G with more experience.

With billions of dollars pouring into companies offering new technology in this area, it is one ripe for clever innovators to apply their creativity. 

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStart’s Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, 

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, Momentum,

College of Engineering & Computer Science at Sacramento State

CleanStart Perspectives with Christoph Lienemann of PEM Motion

CleanStart Perspectives with Christoph Lienemann of PEM Motion

Join us as we chat with Christoph Lienemann of PEM Motion about future mobility battery projects.
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Christoph Lienemann is responsible for the North American operations of PEM Motion, a consulting and engineering company focused on future mobility solutions and their industrialization. He manages their teams in Canada, Mexico, and the USA. PEM Motion helped establish the California Mobility Center, a Sacramento-based public-private innovation hub and industry-sized tech shop enabling the future of mobility.

CleanStart Perspectives are short online conversations to connect the greater Sacramento clean tech entrepreneurship community and share insights, experiences, and outlooks. Join us as we welcome our featured guests to share their perspective on what entrepreneurs and innovators can do to thrive and grow.

Register and we’ll send you the Zoom login information prior to the meeting time.

CleanStart Perspectives are recorded through Zoom.

CleanStart Perspectives with Ken Hayes of the Cleantech Open

CleanStart Perspectives with Ken Hayes of the Cleantech Open

Join us as we chat with Ken Hayes about the 2022 Cleantech Open application process and the accelerator program.
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Cleantech Open is the world’s largest cleantech accelerator, providing entrepreneurs and corporate innovators the resources they need to launch and grow successful cleantech businesses. We’ll be joined by Ken Hayes, the Executive Director for National and Global activities for the Cleantech Open, who will discuss the 2022 application process and the accelerator program.

CleanStart Perspectives are short online conversations to connect the greater Sacramento clean tech entrepreneurship community and share insights, experiences, and outlooks. Join us as we welcome our featured guests to share their perspective on what entrepreneurs and innovators can do to thrive and grow.

Register and we’ll send you the Zoom login information prior to the meeting time.

CleanStart Perspectives are recorded through Zoom.

Evolution of the Grid and Renewables Policy in California

Evolution of the Grid and Renewables Policy in California

Nick Pappas, founder of NP Energy and our Perspectives presenter on January 27, is something like a midwife.  He found that his best skill was in helping clients ease the transition to a renewable energy system by explaining the pains involved, how to deal with them, how to avoid some of them, and keeping the benefits of the end point in mind.  In doing so, he is very good at highlighting upcoming opportunities and at warning of where risks need to be avoided.  It is not a good idea to ignore his insights.

He is passionate about smoothing this transition and demonstrating how it can be successfully adopted elsewhere.  As he says, he wants to make good, workable climate policy “California’s #1 Export” and building the blueprint for others to follow so that there is maximum contribution to avoiding serious climate change.  California’s big deregulation move in the 1990s was not done well and led to the extreme price swings and rolling blackouts of the early 2000s.  California became the big negative example.  Nick wants to see there is not a repeat of that.

We covered a lot of ground in our 30 minutes with him.  Here are some of the highlights we got out of his talk (with apologies to Nick for embellishing some of this points).

  • Reliability of the grid is a complex challenge, and our understanding of grid reliability and planning is evolving over time. How do we successfully orchestrate the transition to clean energy?
  • There is a “storage revolution” coming.  For the first time in the coming summer and the next, there will be enough big storage projects on line (over 2000 MW of grid-level storage in 2022 and 5000 MW in 2023) to test how Cal ISO will be able to integrate storage into the dispatch and how the pricing of the energy from it will work out.  We will probably be surprised.
  • At the same time, there will be a lot of retirements of conventional generation in the next three years, especially of the 2.2 GW at the Diablo Canyon nuclear units.  Managing a retirement of that scale could pose a lot of operational issues, and we need to get ahead of that problem before it becomes a blot on the transition.  
  • Overbuilding solar and wind resources can make a serious dent in electric sector emissions, but overbuilding alone will not be sufficientto fully decarbonize the grid. We need creativity and innovation on our pathway to 2045.
  • There is much more opportunity in “flexing” loads to match demand to supply than is being exploited.  It may be much cheaper to do that than to attempt to solve renewable integration solely throughthe 15,000+ MW of storage now contemplated in the latest CPUC view of what investments in power sources are needed in the next 10 years. Demand flexibility will supplement that storage and provide more operational flexibility.   However, human behavior remains a major barrier to load flex capability that is being tried now.  In the future, consumers may not be able to override the flex signals from the utility as they do now.  In any case, it may deserve a more intensive effort to utilize than it is getting now. How will the “flex” be done in a way consumers won’t care and is better than calls for voluntary shut offs?  
  • The growth in the number of EV chargers and electric heat pumps (as a part of replacing gas appliances with electric alternatives) could provide the best option for creating a critical mass of flexible load, unless we miss that opportunity.  How do we make the addition of the flex feature easy and worthwhile?
  • The additions of more renewable sources and more storage can help drive down the cost of these resources through innovation and economies of scale. We should expect prices to continue to fall, especially, for storage, though supply chain, resources, and development have significant potential to increase costs and cause delays.
  • The storage being added will resolve the daily mismatch between demand and supply, but the seasonal gap—the need to move excess generation from Spring to Fall—is much harder to address.  Building big, high capital cost battery storage to be used at a very low capacity factor may not be an acceptable solution.  Innovative ways to use chemical storage, such as hydrogen, to decarbonize the existing combustion fleet may help address these rare peak events.
  • Decarbonizing electricity is important, but we should not forget the opportunity cost of much lower-hanging fruit in the transportation, building, and industrial sectors where there may be better bang for the buck, more CO2 reductions per dollar, than continuing to work only on the electricity sector.  It is a bit harder to see how incentives or limitations could be applied in these other sectors, but it is worthwhile to figure it out and to innovate approaches that work in a competitive economy.
  • The value of rooftop solar to the building owner is likely to decline.  Even if the CPUC’s proposed decision on net metering is further moderated this time, it will not be the end of this debate, but the trend will be for compensation to be more closely aligned with value. Ensuring these systems provide value – particularly how storage is dispatched on the grid – may mitigate this risk.

It was a lively session and you can watch the entire recording of it below.  Nick had so much to say we are going to invite him back to continue this discussion. 

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStart’s Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, 

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, Momentum,

College of Engineering & Computer Science at Sacramento State

CleanStart Perspectives: Decarbonizing California’s Grid: The Next Chapter

CleanStart Perspectives: Decarbonizing California’s Grid: The Next Chapter

The clean energy transition is well underway, but still far from complete. What’s the journey ahead?

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Join us as we talk with Nick Pappas of NP Energy about decarbonizing California’s grid. Nick will discuss the journey ahead, including Community Choice Aggregators (CCA’s) and how they are evolving.

Nick is an energy industry leader with 10+ years of experience developing and shaping California energy policy while helping energy industry stakeholders navigate complex policy and market challenges.

CleanStart Perspectives are short online conversations to connect the greater Sacramento clean tech entrepreneurship community and share insights, experiences, and outlooks. Join us as we welcome our featured guests to share their perspective on what entrepreneurs and innovators can do to thrive and grow.

Register and we’ll send you the Zoom login information prior to the meeting time.

CleanStart Perspectives are recorded through Zoom.