DTE Energy MIGreenPower Program Hits 50k Residential Subscribers

Image: Gerry Anderson Video #32 shot on location at DeMille Solar Farm, Lapeer, Mich.

DTE Energy’s MIGreenPower program, a voluntary renewable energy program, has surpassed 50,000 residential subscribers.

With approximately 500 new residential customers joining each week and demand from some of the state’s largest corporations and non-profit organizations, the program is driving the addition of thousands of megawatts of new clean energy to the grid.

“Our customers are demanding a Grid of the Future, a modern new grid delivering clean and reliable energy, and we’re delivering it,” says Jerry Norcia, president and CEO of DTE Energy.

MIGreenPower enables customers to reduce their carbon footprint by attributing more of their electricity use to local wind and solar projects beyond the 15% DTE already provides. On an annual basis, MIGreenPower customers have enrolled 1.9 million MWh of clean energy in the program.

DTE’s MIGreenPower clean energy projects are being developed in addition to the projects DTE has added to meet the state’s Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard (RPS). In 2021, DTE achieved the state’s 15% RPS – and then increased its renewable energy capacity by 40% as a direct result of the growth of the MIGreenPower program.

To meet continued customer demand, DTE plans to add several new MIGreenPower solar projects ranging from a 20 MWarray in Washtenaw County to projects exceeding 100 MW in rural communities in Michigan. The company is issuing a Request for Proposal for 500 MW of new MIGreenPower wind and/or solar projects to come online in 2023. The company also has other new solar projects in various stages of development that are scheduled to come online by 2025.

In its February 2022 Report on the Implementation and Cost-Effectiveness of the P.A. 295 Renewable Energy Standard, the Michigan Public Service Commission credits voluntary renewable energy programs like MIGreenPower with becoming “a major driver of new renewable energy growth in Michigan.” The report also cites an increase in the number of customers taking advantage of their utilities’ voluntary programs to purchase more clean energy.

MIGreenPower provides DTE’s electric customers with an easy and affordable way to reduce their home’s electricity-based carbon footprint for far less than it costs to install a private generation system. Private rooftop solar systems, for example, can cost upwards of $30,000. With MIGreenPower, residential and small business customers can subscribe for as little as $1 per month, customize their participation level and unsubscribe at any time without penalties.

“We want to thank all our MIGreenPower customers for their participation in this program and for helping to create a cleaner, greener Michigan,” states Trevor Lauer, president and COO of DTE’s electric company. “At DTE, we are committed to getting as clean as we can as fast as we can. Adding large-scale clean energy projects allows us to bring more clean energy to the grid to more people. It’s also less expensive, and more equitable and impactful in terms of carbon emissions avoidance.”

DTE’s 50-plus wind parks and solar farms generate enough clean energy to power nearly 700,000 Michigan homes. By 2025, the company will generate enough clean energy to power more than one million homes.

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Indonesia government launching 5MW pilot BESS

Indonesia aims to convert 250MW of diesel-generated power to renewable energy this year and will need battery storage to do this successfully. Image: PLN.

Indonesia’s state-owned utility and battery producer have launched a 5MW battery energy storage system (BESS) pilot project as it seeks to move away from diesel-generated power.

The country’s state-owned utility PLN has signed a memorandum of understanding with another state-owned body, the Indonesia Battery Corporation (IBC), to build the BESS this year, PLN said.

“Because the development of renewable energy plants is currently dominated by solar power plants and wind power plants, which are intermittent, they require batteries to provide consistent electricity supply,” said PLN’s Director of Corporate Planning Evy Haryadi.

Although PLN hasn’t specified where the BESS will be or its specific functions, it appears likely to be located at the site of both fossil-fuel and renewable power generating plants.

PLN plans to convert 250MW of power currently sourced from diesel fired power plants to renewable energy this year, it said.

“In line with the plan, the role of BESS is very important so that the electricity supply to the community can still be on for 24 hours,” added Evy.

PLN’s ‘de-dieselisation’ program will involved 5,200 units of new renewable energy generation with a total power of 2GW by 2024 and is a potential application for battery storage, according to a recent presentation by a local energy and environment policy think-tank.

PLN’s announcement doesn’t go into these specifics but says that BESS technology will in future be applied to all power plants belonging to the PLN group, and that this will be carried out by the joint operation (KSO) set up by the companies to deliver the pilot BESS.

Indonesia Battery Corporation (IBC) was set up last year as a partnership between four state-owned companies: oil and gas group Pertamina, mining groups Aneka Tambang and Inalum, and PLN.

In addition to the MOU, PLN is also working with two Korean companies to research the technology’s potential to help the two countries renewable energy transition, as well as to reduce costs through things like peak shaving. The latter is a very common use case for BESS projects to reduce the demand for power from the grid at peak times, reducing reliance on fossil fuels and lowering electricity costs.

PLN also said it is collaborating with a subsidiary of conglomerate Sinar Mas Group to expand the country’s electric vehicle charging (EV) infrastructure.

The PLN subsidiaries involved in the BESS project are the main electricity provider PT Indonesia Power, plant operator PT Pembangkitan Jawa Bali and support unit Electricity Maintenance Center.

Largest BESS launched by, and for, Indonesia?

Plenty of much larger solar-plus-storage projects in Indonesian territory have surfaced in the past year but these have been primarily developed by Singapore-based entities and intend to mainly serve that market.

Sister site pv-tech.org covered an announcement by Singaporean renewable energy group Sunseap in October that it had signed an MOU to develop 7GWp of solar paired with a huge 12GWh of storage in an Indonesia archipelago. However, the project aims to transmit the energy to Singapore via a subsea cable.

The same month, energy and development group Sembcorp Industries (also Singapore-based) announced an MOU with PLN to develop a solar and storage project in the Batam-Bintan-Karimun island region. It also plans to transmit energy back to the city-state via a subsea cable, although the announcement said local energy needs would also be serviced.

The presentation cited earlier said a 100MW solar-plus-storage project in South Sumatra is also planned by Indonesia Power, a PLN subsidiary – it is not clear if this is the same project as PLN’s recent announcement but it’s unlikely.

Hitachi ABB Power Grids is also building a solar microgrid with 2MWh of storage deeper within Indonesia’s territory at a coal mine, as reported by Energy-storage.news in early 2021.

The country is further behind its neighbours like The Philippines on implementing battery storage projects. There, the global system integrator Fluence recently turned on a 20MW/20MWh grid-connected BESS as part of a 1,000MW portfolio in development and construction for power company SMC Global Power.

Indonesia’s current pipeline of energy storage projects is mostly pumped hydro, totalling 4,063MW according to IHS Markit.

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LFP to dominate 3TWh global lithium-ion battery market by 2030

Image: Wood Mackenzie Power & Renewables.

Lithium iron phosphate (LFP) will be the dominant battery chemistry over nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) by 2028, in a global market of demand exceeding 3,000GWh by 2030.

That’s according to new analysis into the lithium-ion battery manufacturing industry published by Wood Mackenzie Power & Renewables.

The top two manufacturers planning to add the most production capacity during this decade were China’s CATL and South Korea’s LG.

CATL alone intends to have 800GWh of annual production capacity online by 2030.

The top 15 producers in 2021 alone got 200GWh of new production lines running and by the end of last year cumulative manufacturing capacity reached 600GWh.

China’s manufacturers across the board have announced plans to build more than 3,000GWh of capacity to date. The Asia-Pacific region will therefore continue to lead the market, which globally has announced 5,500GWh of manufacturing capacity to come online by 2030 at 300 facilities, but Europe and the US will have begun to eat into its share by then. 

While 90% of the world’s battery manufacturing was in the Asia-Pacific region, and most of that in China, by 2030 that share will have fallen to 69%. Europe will have a 20% share at that stage, Wood Mackenzie forecast. 

That forecasting is broadly in line with recent figures from another analysis group, Clean Energy Associates, which said China — as opposed to Wood Mac’s reporting of Asia-Pacific region percentage — had a share of about 75% of global battery cell production capacity in 2020, set to fall to 66% by 2030.

Another group, Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, calculated that Europe is on track for 27 gigafactories by 18 different producers by 2030, accounting for 789.2GWh of capacity by then, a 14% share of the global total market.

‘Skyrocketing demand’

Like Wood Mackenzie, Clean Energy Associates (CEA) noted the competitive dynamic heating up between LFP and NMC batteries. Safety advantages, long lifecycle and lower costs have led to EV makers starting to accept the trade-off of lower energy density in adopting LFP batteries, both firms have noted.

LFP has already been accepted by the stationary battery energy storage system (BESS) sector, where energy density tends to be a less decisive factor.

CEA said LFP outsold NMC among batteries sold by Chinese manufacturers, with its market share growing through the year: of 100GWh of lithium batteries used for EVs and ESS, 44% were NMC and the majority of the remainder LFP. 

Wood Mackenzie said similarly that LFP’s advantages are making it an attractive option in both power and energy applications, over the more mature market technology of NMC. 

Supply chain issues which have beset the battery market are not likely to ease during 2022, the group noted, particularly with EV demand rising in reaction to the rising price of oil and the ongoing raw materials commodity crunch. Nonetheless, many more new plant announcements are expected this year, Wood Mackenzie analysts said. 

Nearly 80% of lithium-ion battery demand is coming from the EV market, Wood Mackenzie consultant Jiayue Zheng said, adding that zero-emissions transport policies rolled out in response to rising fuel costs is “causing demand for lithium-ion batteries to skyrocket”.

The market already encountered shortages last year, Zheng said, driven by a combination of rising demand and raw material prices.  

For stationary energy storage, predicted by Clean Energy Associates to account for about 13% of the total lithium battery market’s demand by 2030, it will be a case of figuring out strategies to vie for battery supply with EVs or diversify their technologies to get around the problem. 

One example could be sodium-ion. CATL, one of the first to produce LFP batteries at scale and a major supplier to the BESS industry, has backed sodium-ion technology as a possible alternative and committed to commercialising it.   

Yesterday, Sweden-based sodium-ion battery tech company Altris said that investors in a EU9.6 million (US$10.6 million) Series A funding round had included European battery manufacturing startup Northvolt. Major India-based clean energy group Reliance New Energy has also invested in sodium-ion, buying Faradion, a UK sodium-ion battery company. 

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Tesla Megapacks picked for Edify’s 300MWh Australia battery portfolio

50MWh BESS at the 60MW Gannawarra solar farm, using Tesla Powerpacks. Image: Edify Energy.

Tesla has been contracted to provide 150MW/300MWh of its Megapack battery energy storage system (BESS) solution for projects in development by Edify Energy in Australia. 

Edify Energy said the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) deal signed with Tesla Motors Australia covers three standalone lithium-ion BESS installations which will be connected to an electric substation at Darlington Point, in the Murrumbidgee Shire, New South Wales (NSW). 

The three colocated projects in the portfolio are the 60MW/120MWh Riverina Energy Storage System 1, 65MW/130MWh Riverina Energy Storage System 2 and the 25MW/50MWh Darlington Point Energy Storage System. 

Last May, oil and gas major Shell’s consumer utilities subsidiary Shell Energy signed a long-term services agreement for operational rights to Riverina Energy Storage System 1. As reported by Energy-Storage.news at the time, it will be used to service Shell’s long-term retail contract with the NSW government.

The relationship between Edify and Tesla in Australia goes back to their work together on a battery storage retrofit at Gannawarra solar fam in Victoria, completed in 2018 and among the country’s first large-scale battery projects. 

The 25MW/50MWh system at Gannawarra was based on Megapack’s predecessor, the Tesla Powerpack — which is still available as a commercial and industrial (C&I) or small utility application product, but has been replaced for larger projects with the Megapack since its launch in 2019. Each Megapack has a maximum capacity of 3MWh. 

Tesla has supplied some of Australia’s biggest BESS projects so far including the Hornsdale Power Reserve (150MW/193.5MWh) and the just-completed Victorian Big Battery (300MW/450MWh), both of which were by developer Neoen. Megapacks will also be used at Genex Power’s 100MWh Bouldercombe project in Queensland which has reached financial close in the past few weeks.

The 300MWh of battery storage at Darlington Point will play into the National Electricity Market (NEM), which covers most of Australia’s east coast regions. The NEM already offers revenue opportunities for batteries on a merchant basis for ancillary services and arbitrage, and is evolving rapidly to accommodate greener and more efficient grid assets like batteries and inverter-based renewables. 

“The advantages of large-scale batteries in our growing world of renewables are well documented and supported,” Edify CEO John Cole said.

“Energy storage is rapidly becoming a valued capacity solution for the National Electricity Market, given its fast and precise response and technical capability. The pace of advancement in this growing technology class is exciting and with it a breaking of the barriers to acceptance from market and network participants.” 

Smart inverters at the Darlington Point Substation projects will mean the battery systems will also be able to support the local grid with stability services traditionally played by the rotating mass of thermal generation plants, providing synchronous inertia.

“Without a doubt, as the understanding of advanced inverters grows, we will see more smart technologies replacing rotating machines and accelerating Australia’s transition to a clean energy future,” Cole said.

A recent Guest Blog for this site from Blair Reynolds, a product manager for inverter manufacturer SMA explained the growing role inverter-based technologies can play in mimicking synchronous rotating machines to help stabilise the grid in a low-carbon future.

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DOE Funding Series of Projects for American Indian, Alaska Native Communities

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is providing nearly $9 million in funding to 13 American Indian and Alaska Native communities for 14 renewable and advanced energy projects, including solar power installations.

Among the projects:

Coeur d’Alene Tribe, Plummer, Idaho: 35.2 kW of solar PV on the roof of the tribe’s Coeur Center, a new youth recreation center located in Worley, Idaho. The solar PV system is expected to reduce energy use of the Center by nearly 41,750 kWh per year, resulting in a life time savings of $136,259.

Karuk Tribe, Happy Camp, Calif.: A 947 kW ground-mounted solar PV system for the tribal casino and administrative trailers, and a 18.4 kW roof-mounted system on the newly constructed wellness center. The project will also install 310 kW of solar PV and 580 kWh of battery storage on 39 elders’ homes to power critical loads during grid outages.

La Jolla Band of Luiseno Indians, Pauma Valley, Calif.: 104.72 kW of solar PV systems and 132 kWh of battery storage to supply electrical power to the La Jolla Trading Post, the only store and gas station on the La Jolla Indian Reservation.

Puvurnaq Power Co., Kongiganak, Alaska: This tribally owned village utility will purchase, install and integrate a 200 kW solar PV array to an existing wind diesel battery power system in the Village of Kongiganak.

The full list of projects is available here.

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US Department of Energy, PNNL to help 14 underserved communities with energy storage needs

Flagstaff (Arizona) where a company providing off-grid solar solutions to native American communities, one of the 14 recipients, is based. Image: Don Graham.

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has selected 14 underserved community applicants to receive technical support from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) around energy needs, up to five of which will then receive engineering support to deploy energy storage solutions.

The DOE Office of Electricity’s Energy Storage Program has selected 14 urban, rural and tribal communities from over 60 applicants to receive the assistance from PNNL as part the lab’s Energy Storage for Social Equity (ES4SE) Initiative.

ES4SE was set up to support disadvantaged communities affected by unreliable and expensive energy systems with direct access to non-financial technical assistance potential support for new local energy storage project projects.

The first phase will see the communities receive support to assess their energy needs, evaluate solutions and find potential partners to deliver on those solutions. The DOE says that technical assistance may include energy, economic, and spatial analysis.

The second phase will then see up to five communities from the 14 chosen to start installing and commissioning an energy storage project.

PNNL will provide engineering support including equipment sizing, identifying utility connections, identifying safety concerns, installation support, measurement, and validation to ensure the project performs as needed.

This initiative can be seen as one small part of a much larger move by the US government to decarbonise its energy sector in an equitable way. Last year’s trillion-dollar Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal included sections about increasing investments into clean energy in underserved communities.

And discussions around the domestication of the lithium-ion battery cell production supply chain have frequently touched upon doing so an an equitable way, by building factories in de-industrialised communities and ensuring more communities are not de-industrialised and ‘left behind’ in the process.

The 14 winning participants, from across the US, are:

Native Renewable, Flagstaff, AZCher-Ae Heights Indian Community and Western Energy Development, Trinidad, CAAyika Solutions Incorporated, Atlanta, GAHoʻāhu Energy Cooperative Molokai, Kaunakakai, HITogether New Orleans, New Orleans, LAHonor the Earth, Callaway, MNCoast Electric Power Association, Kiln, MSJoule Community Power and Open Door Mission, Rochester, NYWarm Springs Community Action Team, Warm Springs, ORRogue Climate, Coos Bay, ORCoyote Steals Fire Energy Group, Pendleton, ORMakah Tribe, Neah Bay, WAKlickitat Valley Health, Goldendale, WAOneida Nation, Oneida, WI

PNNL is one of three national labs in the US providing research and validation services for energy storage technologies and projects.

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Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, developer Alcemi team up on 4GW UK battery storage pipeline

CIP has worked on a range of clean energy projects and technologies, although its early focus was largely on wind energy. Image: SSE Renewables.

Developer Alcemi and investment group Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) have partnered for the development, construction and operation of a 4GW portfolio of UK energy storage assets.

The projects are currently in late-stage development and are to be between 300MW and 500MW each, with a storage duration of up to four hours. This makes them some of the largest energy storage projects in Europe, the two companies said.

They are being developed at strategic locations that will support the transmission system by limiting the impact of network constraints, with this to help reduce the overall cost of energy for consumers as well as lower the carbon intensity of the UK power sector, by ensuring better utilisation of renewable energy and therefore limiting the need for fossil fuel power generation during periods of peak demand. 

Alcemi originated the projects, and is to continue to develop the projects with the support of CIP and Alcemi’s founding investor Susgen. Procurement activities are to be primarily led by CIP and initiated later this year ahead of construction of the first project, which is scheduled to start in 2023.

Further projects in the pipeline are expected to go into construction regularly, and then energise throughout the second half of this decade, the companies said.

“We expect these projects to enable a cost-efficient transition towards the low carbon, highly resilient power generation sector in the UK,” Christian Skakkebæk, senior partner at CIP, said.

Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners manages nine funds and has approximately €16 billion (£13.5 billion) of assets under management focused on investments in energy infrastructure, including offshore wind, onshore wind, solar PV, biomass and energy-from-waste, transmission and distribution, reserve capacity and storage, and other energy assets like Power-to-X. 

Other large battery storage projects in the UK include two 400MW/800MWh projects under development by Amp Energy, a 360MW Sembcorp Energy UK project and the 100MW/107MWh Capenhurst project from Zenobē.

Last week the scale and speed of deployment of batteries for the UK grid was highlighted on the site in a Guest Blog from Solar Media Market Research analyst Mollie McCorkindale. In 2021, 446MW of large-scale battery storage was installed in the country, narrowly beating 2018 to make it the year of most deployments on record, McCorkindale wrote.

This story first appeared on Solar Power Portal.

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Residential segement continues to drive German battery storage market, but grid-scale could see comeback

Estimated number of home storage system installations in Germany. Image: ISEA RWTH Aachen University

The residential segment accelerated its dominance of the German battery storage market in 2021 but new opportunities for grid-scale systems are opening up, according to a new report.

Home storage systems (HSS) accounted for 93% of the 1,357MWh of new energy capacity installed last year, according to ‘The development of battery storage systems in Germany – A market review (status 2022)‘.

The paper was co-authored by a group of RWTH Aachen University-based or spinout organisations, led by the Institute for Power Electronics and Electrical Drives (ISEA) and its findings largely continue the trends noted in its report from two years ago.

The authors define HSS as those under 30kWh, and Germany now has 430,000 total installations after 145,000 totalling 739MW/1,268MWh were installed last year. Its figures roughly match up with research by Energie Consulting commissioned by the Germany energy storage association (BVES), which pegged the 2020-year end figure at over 300,000.

In contrast, only 27MW/57MWh of 30kWh-1MWh industrial storage systems (ISS) were installed while 1MWh-plus large-scale storage (LSS) was even smaller at 36MW/32MWh of new installations. ISS and LSS can be both grid-connected or behind-the-meter commercial and industrial-sited (C&I).

Home installation numbers have been growing since 2013, as have ISS, although at a less rapid rate.

LSS on the other hand has dropped off sharply since a record year of 288MWh installations in 2018 when it nearly matched HSS’ 323MWh. New LSS installations have fallen since to just over a tenth of that high watermark in 2021, and the average installation size also fell by three quarters over the period, from 11.5MWh to just 2.9MWh.

The writers attribute this trend of fewer LSS installations to a saturation of the frequency containment reserve market (FCR) for which utility-scale storage systems were mainly built from 2016 to 2019. Other issues in the German market include double-charging for energy storage assets (for drawing and dispatching power from and to the grid).

Regulatory issues are in fact the number one burden for storage asset operators in Germany when asked, according to a survey by BVES, whose spokesperson told Energy-storage.news last year that “Germany does not consider energy storage as a key element” of its energy transition.

The result of these barriers inhibiting growth is that, by 2021, the residential/HSS sector accounts for 79% of 4,406MWh total installed battery storage capacity in Germany. LSS is 17% and ISS is the remaining 4%. The German battery storage market is, however, evolving to allow more participation for grid-scale storage paired with renewables, explained next.

The vast majority of installations in HSS and ISS last year were lithium-ion while LSS’s 11 installations were exclusively so, though after a fairly diverse deployment of technology in 2017-2019 LSS is the most diverse of the three cumulatively with nearly one-fifth of energy capacity provided by other technologies (mainly lead-acid, redox flow and thermal storage solutions).

New revenue sources in the German battery storage market

Because of FCR’s saturation (notwithstanding a temporary price spike in 2021), last year was the first year when most LSS installations were at large commercial & industrial sites rather than for the FCR market.

But larger BESS are starting to play in other grid services launched by the Federal Network Agency (FNA). One of those is ‘innovation auctions’ which are open to projects that combine two or more clean energy technologies, for example large solar and wind parks that can bid in combination with a BESS, usually above 1MWh.

In the first three innovation auction rounds from September 2020 to August 2021, 62 BESS totalling 250MWh took part. However, the partaking BESS must only be charged from the directly connected renewable energy sources which prevents them from stacking revenues by also participating in the FCR, aFRR or merchant markets.

Massive BESS projects called ‘GridBoosters’ (‘NetzBooster’ in German) are also being launched by grid operators to temporarily relieve grid bottlenecks and save preventive redispatch.

Pilot projects from Dutch-German grid operator TenneT (100MWh) and Baden-Württemberg grid operator TransnetBW (250MWh) are expected to come online in 2023 and 2025, respectively.

Electric vehicle market in Germany doubles in size

The research also found that 340,000 battery electric vehicles (BEV, i.e. pure electric) and 341,000 plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) were registered in Germany last year, bringing the total across groups to 1.27 million to-date, roughly evenly split.

The total energy of their combined batteries should be total 40GWh, the report adds, with four-fifths from BEVs. It points to the potential this holds for things like vehicle-to-grid and vehicle-to-home charging solutions:

“The cumulative battery energy of 44 GWh is therefore larger than the 39 GWh of nationallyinstalled pumped hydro storage symbolizing the enormous flexibility potential of battery storage for the future energy system.”

Later adding: “…integrating vehicles to serve the grid would be highly desirable from an economic perspective.”

However, it points out that public charging infrastructure could not follow the growth and only grew ‘linearly’ with 11,700 new installations to 50,000 charging points. EVs per charging point grew from 10 in 2018 to 25 in 2021.

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How financing and revenue models are evolving in UK battery storage

Planning permission has been granted for Gateway, a battery project which could accomodate up to 900MWh of capacity at a site near London. Image: InterGen.

The UK has found itself in a leading position among the world’s markets for battery storage, with last week’s Guest Blog from Solar Media Market Research analyst Mollie McCorkindale offering insights and putting numbers on its progress.

In this article, experts from advisory groups Lane Clark & Peacock (LCP), Apricum – The Cleantech Advisory and law firm CMS offer their take on the development of financing and investment in UK battery storage.

The British Isles are to utility-scale batteries as the Galapagos Islands are to tortoises: the isolated island home to a curious, outsize, marginal, yet instructive population. However, the somewhat faster evolution of UK BESS merits more frequent study.

In reviewing 2021, LCP’s 2022 UK BESS Whitepaper uncovered a single over-arching theme: the start of the battery storage industry’s transition from solving power to solving energy.

The long-held promise of utility-scale batteries was always energy storage, yet that was never their principal application. They sold ancillary power reserves far more than they traded energy. However, that is starting to change. And it will change how batteries are financed.

The change from power (often discussed as ancillary services, and a “MW” focus) to energy (a.k.a. arbitrage and “MWh”) is subtle, but unmistakeable. The shift is observed in two dimensions: 

RevenuesDuration

Revenues

The de facto trading strategy for most of 2021 was to sit in Dynamic Containment (DC) and collect a steady revenue of £17 (US$22.40)/MW/h. An intraday price spread of £408/MWh would have been required to justify exiting DC arbitrage markets (assuming 1 cycle per day).

At the start of 2021, that seemed improbable. Yet it took just 6 days for this to happen, and ultimately 2021 saw 23 days where batteries could have (and did) outperform the DC cap through wholesale arbitrage. 

Figure 1: Monthly average intraday price spreads, 2016–21. Image: LCP.

The tailwinds underpinning these trading opportunities are growing stronger.

First, price spreads will increase as the system decarbonises, particularly on days where low prices are set by renewables and high prices set by gas.

Second, arbitrage opportunities become more frequent as wind dominates the shape of residual demand, driving further volatility.

Third, absolute price spreads also increase with rising gas prices due to the ranging efficiencies of gas plant in the merit order, and newspapers frequently remind us how susceptible gas prices are to severe spikes (which seem set to continue following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine). 

Duration

The lifting of the 50 MW planning restrictions, and the growing focus on transmission opportunities, mean planned project MW capacities should have surged. Indeed they have. But planned MWh is outgrowing planned MW. This manifested itself most strongly in the recent T-4 Capacity Market results, with a clear market shift to investing in longer duration batteries: fully 50% of cleared new build battery capacity was two hours or longer.

Figure 2: Duration of batteries in 2022 T-4 Capacity Market results. Image: LCP.

Such additional project cost can only be justified if the revenue opportunity from the sale of energy has increased. That is visible in both LCP’s forecasts for higher future Balancing Mechanism (BM) and intraday volatility, and the historic data for 2021, with extraordinary spikes in January 2021 and September through to December (Fig. 1).

LCP’s back-tested data shows the excess returns that longer duration installations now deliver due to the deeper wholesale opportunity: £60/kW pa for 2 hours eclipses £34/kW pa for 1 hour. There is excitement about the recent re-engagement of storage projects in the BM.

However, one aspect is frequently overlooked. Batteries are competitive with gas peakers in the BM due to peakers’ high feedstock costs: gas prices.

These reflect more cyclical than structural factors, meaning a future reversal is likely to some degree. Little analysis has yet been published on the link between gas prices and BESS revenues, but it cannot be questioned.  

However, even if gas prices moderate, batteries should remain more active in arbitrage this year for a second reason: ancillary saturation.

Some already forecast this to be a defining feature of 2022 (e.g. Enhanced Frequency Response expiry, Dynamic Containment Low Frequency reduction, smaller Dynamic Regulation and Dynamic Moderation markets replacing Firm Frequency Response).

As competition grows in these shallow markets, arbitrage opportunities will set the effective price of ancillary provision through its opportunity cost, sealing arbitrage as the key focal area for batteries.

Funding

The funding model for UK BESS is in flux.

BESS 1.0

Even as recently as 2020, BESS investment equity was scarce, forcing under-equitised project developers to seek debt funding at almost any cost.

Efforts to bang a square project finance peg into a round merchant hole, resulted in the bankable ‘floor-price off-take contract’ model, which did little to enhance returns. But it got projects built. 

BESS 2.0

As awareness and installations grew, making track record demonstrable (vs hypothetical), the availability of BESS equity and debt has increased. But not equally. UK BESS debt finance is currently dominated by just two lenders, whereas we now have an abundance of potential equity investors.

The result is that developers are no longer reliant on debt, and can eschew offtake contracts that impede project returns, provided their investors believe in the fundamental business case of merchant batteries. 

Simultaneously, the offtake market improved noticeably in 2021, offering higher floors and better ceiling terms as confidence and competition among offtakers grew. This helped debt LTVs shift rapidly from below 30% to over 50% without ramping borrower spreads (albeit supported by falling equipment capital costs, which will not recur in 2022).

And crucially for developers, the nexus between lenders and offtakers improved as warranties adapted to stacked revenue models. As a result, debt is increasingly competitive as a source of funding, despite bountiful equity. 

BESS 3.0?

There are several, often unclear and conflicting, implications in the shift from power to energy, which will reshape the financing of BESS projects.

The shift to arbitrage represents a shift to a more fundamentally merchant (but no less bankable) model.Longer durations open up longer term bankable revenues (such as the Capacity Market and NGESO pathfinders).Longer durations support greater asset finance capability, so may support yet higher LTVsThe fundamental link between BM spreads and gas prices could even create hedging opportunities that reduce funding risk.

Debt

Industry lenders have worked to create innovative and effective funding structures that are now increasingly attractive. A few future trends are likely. 

First, more lenders will enter the market. Not just at the portfolio level (Gresham House 20 Sept 2021), but at the asset level too. This is as much a necessity as a probability.

As project numbers, capacity and duration increase, and lending exposure accelerates, UK BESS is over-reliant on the pioneering work of the market leading lenders, whose appetite cannot be infinite. Other participants are already eyeing entry.

Second, the blended project/asset finance model may continue to grow in sophistication. The banking industry developed sophisticated products to accommodate the merchant risk inherent in project finance of volatile commodity industries and large-scale CCGTs.

So, the expertise to enhance BESS lending products already exists, albeit elsewhere, and has not yet been integrated in BESS financing structures to enhance them.

Third, as the industry achieves critical mass, mezzanine lenders should emerge to supplement senior lending, as we have observed in the USA.

Equity

Historically, we principally saw project equity seeking seniority in distributions, but equity provision is becoming more competitive, with growing appetite for corporate equity attracted by the exponential potential of a globally scalable industry.

To date, this has principally come from overseas investors, and while that appetite has not abated, there is finally greater interest from domestic equity capital too. 

A countervailing thought

The system tightness, manifest in the high price spikes observed in the balancing market and intraday pricing, has another influence, often overlooked in the current exuberance.

They are symptoms of system strain: market signals of the need for more flexible capacity in the market – including storage.

Until that need is met, and the system is less strained, batteries are a welcome solution for system operators: regulators are unlikely to impede their deployment. It is currently a cottage industry serving an acute system need. It would be a brave regulator who intervened at this stage, but that will not always be the case.

As the storage industry swells and system strain abates, re-regulation of the storage industry becomes more likely, which the BESS industry will ultimately need to navigate, and perhaps welcome. 

Figure 3: System tightness is manifest in day-ahead pricing, 2018–2022. Image: LCP

Conclusions

Some of our expectations for the evolution of UK BESS will prove incorrect, but we have tried to highlight some key trends emerging in business model, revenues, configuration, and funding; there is also sufficient dynamism for the industry to adapt. 

2021 witnessed transformational progress, but the UK BESS industry is still highly immature: its capital providers, data sources, processes and advisors are emerging. Increased maturity will reduce its friction costs, execution times and potentially the cost of capital.

We are confident of further evolution in 2022.

About the Authors

Charles Lesser is partner and head of UK at Apricum – The Cleantech Advisory. Apricum has significant expertise in equity funding and project finance advisory, as well as its strategy teams’ expertise in the industry’s evolution and opportunities.

Rajiv Gogna is partner, energy technology & analytics, LCP. LCP provides the market with data-driven, fundamentals-first, grounded forecasts that are trusted by government, NGESO and key industry players.

Louise Dalton is partner, energy & climate change at CMS, which has been advising developers and investors in relation to the deployment of energy storage in the UK (including equity and debt funding and the full suite of revenue arrangements, construction and O&M documentation) since 2016.

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Australian utility AGL’s 2GWh battery project at coal power plant site gets approval

Rendering of how another AGL battery storage facility, at Torrens Island in South Australia, will look when completed. Construction began in November 2021 with Wärtsilä providing BESS technology. Image: AGL.

Australia’s biggest utility company looks set to be in ownership of the country’s biggest battery storage facility so far.

Integrated energy generation and retail company AGL has proposed the building of a 500MW/2,000MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) as part of a large-scale renewable energy hub in New South Wales (NSW).  

Hunter Energy Hub would be built at the site of Liddell power station, a coal power plant set for retirement by the end of April 2023, with the first units scheduled go offline next month. AGL wants to make it the company’s first example of a ‘rehabilitated’ thermal coal site.

On Saturday (19 March), AGL announced that the grid-scale battery project had been granted approval by the NSW state government Department of Planning and Environment (DPE). 

In megawatt-hour terms, it would be more than four times the size of the Victorian Big Battery, the 300MW/450MWh BESS which went online a few months ago and currently holds the crown for Australia’s largest project of its type, although several other large-scale projects in excess of 100MW are on their way.

As well as the BESS, the Hunter Energy Hub will include wind generation, solar, pumped hydro energy storage (PHES), a waste-to-energy plant and a green hydrogen pilot plant, the company’s chief operating officer Markus Brokhof said. 

“As Australia moves forward and we increase our reliance on renewable generation, batteries will be critical in providing the storage needed to maintain a consistent, reliable and affordable energy system,” Brokhof said. 

“I want to thank NSW DPE for acknowledging the important role that this battery will play in the Liddell energy hub and with approval now granted, the next step will be reaching a final investment decision before construction begins.”

Liddell power station was only acquired by AGL as recently as 2015 but ownership proved problematic immediately and cost the company AU$123 million (US$90.8 million) investment into improving reliability in its first couple of years. 

As early as 2017, AGL leadership said renewable energy with energy storage would be the economic successor to coal as a mainstay of Australia’s National Electricity Market (NEM) and published its first plan to retire Liddell. 

AGL’s ‘Climate statement and commitments’ plan published in 2019 announced that the generator-retailer intends to deploy 850MW of new battery capacity at its thermal power plant sites by the 2024 financial year, including the 500MW Hunter Energy Hub BESS. 

Construction has been underway on a 250MW BESS project at Torrens Island natural gas plant, South Australia, since late last year. Two further large-scale projects at sites in mining town — and latterly renewable energy hotspot — Broken Hill in NSW and at Loy Yang coal power plant site in Victoria are also making progress to their start of construction, AGL said.

The changing economics of the NEM are leading to coal becoming less and less competitive against renewables and energy storage, with other major Australian energy generator-retailer companies Origin Energy and EnergyAustralia outlining plans in the last few weeks to put BESS plants on retiring coal sites.  

While coal may be on the retreat, there was dismay in NSW’s Hunter Valley region however in February when federal government-backed plans to build a new 660MW gas and diesel peaker plant won support from the opposition, despite expert and energy storage industry voices advising that renewables and storage would be the better option economically as well as environmentally.

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