Enfinity Acquires 400 MW Solar Portfolio from Capital Dynamics

Carlos Domenech

Enfinity Global Inc. (EG) has completed the acquisition of a 400 MW operational utility-scale solar portfolio. In September 2022, Enfinity Global signed a definitive agreement with Capital Dynamics to acquire a diversified contracted portfolio, consisting of 28 operational solar PV power plants located in California, North Carolina and Idaho, generating recurrent EBITDA of approximately $45 million per year with investment grade counterparties.

“We are thankful for the opportunity to work with Capital Dynamics with the support of our investment partners,” comments Carlos Domenech, CEO of Enfinity Global. “The U.S. alone invested over $100 billion in renewable energy in 2021. To succeed in the energy transition, sound investments need to be aligned to capital in scale.”

The portfolio reached COD within the last five years and holds long-term power purchase agreements with investment grade utility off-takers. It produces 1,175 GWh of clean electricity per year.

“We are grateful for the trust shown by our financing partners, Nomura and AB CarVal,” says Ricardo Díaz, CEO of the Americas of Enfinity Global. “We will continue to expand our presence in the U.S. market by executing our 1.6 GW proprietary pipeline of projects and pursuing further investment opportunities both in M&A transactions and agreements with renewable energy developers.”

Funds managed by AB CarVal, an established global alternative investment manager, and Nomura, a global financial institution, acted as co-financing partners to Enfinity Global.

Enfinity Global was advised on this transaction by an advisory team from CCA Capital LLC and a legal team at McDermott Will & Emery LLP. Other lenders who provided funding at closing included Bayerische Landesbank, New York Branch, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Fifth Third Bank, National Association, Zions Bancorporation N.A.

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bp Begins Installations for 134 MW Ohio Solar Project with Meta PPA

Workers at Arche Solar construction site in Fulton County, Ohio. (Credit: bp America)

bp’s 134 MW DC (107 MW AC) Arche Solar project in Fulton County, Ohio is beginning construction. bp has secured a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Meta for the project.

“This agreement shows how companies can create jobs, invest in the U.S. economy, and at the same time support net zero ambitions and help the world reduce carbon emissions,” says Dave Lawler, bp America’s chairman and president. “It’s another example of bp partnering to accelerate change and becoming an integrated energy company – one that can help corporations, countries and cities decarbonize.”

bp’s 50:50 joint-venture partner, Lightsource bp, developed the project on behalf of bp and is managing construction.

“We appreciate bp’s partnership in helping keep our commitment to supporting our global operations with 100 percent renewable energy,” comments Urvi Parekh, head of renewable energy at Meta. “In addition to adding new energy to the grid, we are proud that this project will bring additional jobs and investment to Ohio.”

McCarthy Building Companies’ Renewable Energy & Storage team was selected as the main contractor for the project, which will include installation of ultra-low carbon solar panels and smart solar trackers from U.S.-based manufacturers First Solar and Nextracker, respectively.

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Nidec starts building 40MW battery storage system for Neoen in Sweden

The battery storage project will be Neoen’s second in the Nordics, after its 30MW system in Finland, pictured, which was also provided by Nidec. Image: Neoen.

France-headquartered independent power producer (IPP) Neoen has given system integrator Nidec ASI the green light to start work on a 40MW battery storage unit in Sweden, Neoen’s first in the country.

Nidec ASI will now start work on the Storen Power Reserve, a one-hour system in the municipality of Ragunda that will provide frequency containment reserve (FCR) ancillary services to transmission system operator Svenska Kraftnät.

The battery system will come into commercial operation in the first half of 2024, the companies said. Neoen will own and operate the asset.

It is Neoen’s first battery storage project in Sweden and its third renewable energy project there, after the Storbrännkullen wind and Hultsfred solar projects which are under construction and set to start construction in the second half of this year, respectively.

It is the company’s second battery project in the Nordics after it enlisted Nidec ASI to build it a 30MW/30MWh unit in Finland in 2020.

Battery energy storage projects in Sweden have started to ramp up in the past year as the country’s pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) reaches the upper limit of its capacity to balance the grid.

Last month, developers OX2 and Ingrid Capacity started work on two battery storage projects totalling 60MW of power while the latter said in September that it was also building a 70MW unit, the largest in the country – all three for 2024 delivery dates.

Sandwiched in between those two announcements by Ingrid was news of what was claimed by project developer Alight to be the largest solar-plus-storage unit in the country, combining a 2MW battery system and an existing 12MW solar PV array. The company said in October that the new energy storage system would come online in two months’ time.

Nidec ASI is the Italy-based industrial solutions division of Japanese conglomerate Nidec Corporation and was ranked as one of the largest battery storage system integrators in the world in IHS Markit’s 2021 report.

It has recently signed big deals with lithium-ion battery gigafactory startup FREYR to build 12GWh of battery energy storage systems a year by 2030, and deploy 5.4GWh of battery systems by an unnamed company in Italy.

Neoen has been even busier in the last few weeks and months with several large project announcements in Australia.

Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the eighth annual Energy Storage Summit EU in London, 22-23 February 2023. This year it is moving to a larger venue, bringing together Europe’s leading investors, policymakers, developers, utilities, energy buyers and service providers in one place. Visit the official site for more info.

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Germany: RWE 117MW hydro-coupled battery storage to begin commercial operations imminently

Infographic on the twin BESS projects and how they will work in partnership with the run-of-river hydroelectric plants. Image: RWE.

International energy company RWE is about to take two battery storage projects virtually coupled with existing run-of-river hydroelectric plants into commercial operation in Germany.

The company announced the completion of the two lithium-ion battery storage projects in Lingen (Lower Saxony) and Werne (North Rhine-Westphalia), which total 117MW of power and 128MWh of energy storage, yesterday (9 January).

The facilities are going through a trial run and will begin commercial operation in the next few days, it added. Earlier statements provided to Energy-Storage.news by the company said the Werne facility would enter commercial operations in November 2022.

The Lingen site is the smaller of the two at 45MW while Werne is likely to be Germany’s largest operational battery storage system at 72MW, ahead of Germany utility LEAG’s 66MW Big Battery Lausitz and Netherlands-based utility Enecon’s BESS Jardelund at 48MW.

Chinese battery major CATL provided the battery cells which RWE integrated into its own proprietary battery enclosures. RWE will also manage the facilities through its energy management system (EMS). The units will mainly provide grid ancillary services, for which prices have increased dramatically in the past 18 months.

The two systems will be virtually coupled with RWE’s existing run-of-river hydroelectric facilities along the Moselle River. The company said that by doing this and selectively regulating the plants’ flow rate it can increase the total capacity of power available for grid stabilisation by 15%. Tests have been successfully carried out on this software and regular application of the coupling programme is scheduled to begin in spring.

RWE said it invested €50 million (US$54 million) into the two battery storage projects. This is significantly lower than the rough benchmark figure for lithium-ion battery systems of US$1 million per MW of power that Energy-Storage.news has observed in other projects.

Energy-Storage.news has asked the company to comment on the figure and will update this article when a response is received.

Roger Miesen, CEO of RWE Generation, said: “With the increasing expansion of renewable energies, Germany needs innovative storage solutions on an industrial scale that can step in when the wind and sun are not supplying. In terms of size and technology, we are setting benchmarks in this country with our mega-battery. The completed battery storage facilities and our hydroelectric power plants on the Moselle will work hand in hand in the future to help stabilise the electricity grid.”

Is is the latest in a flurry of battery storage projects that RWE has brought online or announced in the last few months.

Just last week, Energy-Storage.news reported on the commissioning of its 4.8MW/9.6MWh co-located project while in November it announced it would build two similar projects – all three at its lignite mines in North Rhine-Westphalia.

The same month, it announced its biggest battery projects yet – two systems totalling 220MW, also in the western state, which will be coupled with existing generation plants similarly to the Werne and Lingen units.

Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the eighth annual Energy Storage Summit EU in London, 22-23 February 2023. This year it is moving to a larger venue, bringing together Europe’s leading investors, policymakers, developers, utilities, energy buyers and service providers all in one place. Visit the official site for more info.

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Land secured in Mozambique for 300MW solar-plus-storage project

Mozambique’s first utility-scale PV plant (pictured), was brought online in 2019 by European developer Scatec. Image: Scatec.

African power development company Ncondezi Energy has secured a land agreement for its 300MW solar PV project in Tete, Mozambique.

The solar assets will be paired with a battery energy storage system (BESS), although its potential sizing and capacity have not yet been discussed by the developer publicly.

The agreement was finalised with the country’s government, allowing for exclusive use of the land for solar PV operations. The 950 hectare area would be sufficient to support 500MW capacity, Ncondezi said.

“This is a critical permitting requirement for the project, reflecting both strong local support and the expedited process we are executing since announcing the positive feasibility study last October,” said Ncondezi CEO Hanno Pengilly.

“An update on our preferred transmission solution to connect to the Mozambican grid is expected in the next two months. The solar project is strategically positioned from a transmission perspective, having access to existing grid networks with available capacity and multiple evacuation paths in Mozambique and the wider southern African region.

Ncondezi Energy began a feasibility study on the project in July, appointing solar PV technical consultancy WSP Group Africa, as reported by Energy-Storage.news at the time.

Later in 2022, the Africa Development Bank (AfDB) approved US$2.5 million grant funding for a floating solar PV project and up to 10 proposed battery storage sites in Mozambique, through the AfDB-administered Sustainable Energy Fund for Africa (SEFA).

To read the full version of this story, visit PV Tech.

Additional reporting for Energy-Storage.news by Andy Colthorpe.

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New York’s transmission network planning should incorporate energy storage, study finds

KCE’s non-wires project for utility Orange & Rockland (pictured after completion in 2021), saw a 3MW battery system put in at considerably less cost than the utility would’ve paid for wire-based upgrades alone. Image: Key Capture Energy.

Energy storage could be a powerful asset in facilitating the transmission network upgrades required for New York’s transition to a low carbon electricity system, according to a new study.

It is widely recognised that along with the buildout of significant new renewable energy generation and energy storage capacity, the US state’s transmission network needs to be extended and modernised.

However, the new study, published by industry group NY-BEST, found that incorporating energy storage into the planned transmission network overhaul could aid those efforts from economic and technical standpoints.   

The US state is on an ambitious policy path towards a carbon-free electricity sector by 2045. The recently published NY Climate Action Council Scoping Plan set out how to reach that goal, and an updated Energy Storage Roadmap (aka Roadmap 2.0) published just before the end of the year.    

While the Roadmap, to be vetted and commented on by regulators before introduction, aims to enable New York to reach its target of 6GW energy storage in the state by 2030, the white paper study focuses specifically on the value of storage as a transmission asset (SATA).

Authors at utility infrastructure consultancy Quanta Technology were commissioned by NY-BEST to put the white paper together, taking an approach of examining other SATA efforts elsewhere in the world, and then directly applying three SATA use cases to the New York example.

SATA’s multiple benefits for the network quantified

The Grid Booster projects being carrying out by transmission network operators in Germany, and a transmission upgrade plan in the MISO grid region of the US were among the examples used for comparison.

While regular readers of this site may be familiar with how Grid Boosters will increase utilisation of Germany’s networks, they may not know that in MISO, a 2.5MW/5MWh battery storage system was found to be able to offer the same network benefit as a transmission line rebuild – at US$8.1 million versus US$11.3 million.

Under the three use cases hypothetically applied to New York, significant savings were found in the estimated capital cost of SATA against traditional wire-based solutions, offering further cost savings to the local area they were built in and spreading the benefit of easing network congestion in the wider New York Control Area – the area of the electric power system controlled by the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO).

For example, in Use Case #1 Quanta posited a 200MW/200MWh SATA battery system as an alternative to transmission wire solutions in terms of reducing congestion and cost-effectively improving the capability to transfer energy across the state.

The estimated cost of such a system would come in at US$120 million, while the capital costs of a wire-based solution for the same net benefit would cost about US$700 million.

Meanwhile, depending on where it would be sited, local congestion savings could add up to around US$9.9 million annually and NYCA-wide cost savings about US$13.1 million each year.

It matters because as the authors pointed out, the state’s Climate Protection and Community Leadership Act commits New York to decarbonisation and energy system modelling goals, but SATA is excluded from grid planning discussions by present rules and tariffs, the authors said.

Better line utilisation means less curtailment of renewables

It also matters greatly for New York because the state is home to both densely packed urban areas in and around New York City which experience consistently high demand for energy, but also the swathes of Upstate and more rural regions where the space to deploy new renewable energy assets – as well as the offshore regions where 9,000MW of offshore wind are targeted for deployment.

In an interview last year, CEO Jeff Bishop and New York project development lead Taylor Quarles from energy storage system developer Key Capture Energy told Energy-Storage.news about a proposed batteries-plus-wires project their company has been working to develop.

Key Capture Energy not only delivered New York State’s first grid-scale battery storage project in 2019, but also one of the state’s early examples of a SATA, non-wires alternative (NWA) battery energy storage system (BESS), albeit a relatively small one, for utility Orange and Rockland.

The proposed project, with Iberdrola subsidiary Avangrid, would be called Excelsior Connect and would feature a 150MW/600MWh as a central piece in a new “clean energy underground highway,” alongside a 108-mile underground HVDC line, taking a couple of thousand megawatts of renewable energy downstate towards the city, the KCE representatives explained in the August 2021 interview with Energy-Storage.news.

Such a project could reduce renewable energy curtailment, giving investors in clean energy technologies some added certainty, while reducing the cost of transmission. The battery system could also perform additional network services when not being fully utilised for transmission, such as ancillary services to maintain stable grid frequency.

As CEO Bishop also noted, many of New York’s legacy fossil fuel power plants were built in and near poorer and disadvantaged communities. Projects of this type could be a good way to address concerns of environmental justice and inequality that have been a stated aim of New York policymakers with the Climate Protection legislation.

NY-BEST’s white paper with Quanta Technologies can be read in full here.

Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the 5th Energy Storage Summit USA, 28-29 March 2023 in Austin, Texas. Featuring a packed programme of panels, presentations and fireside chats from industry leaders focusing on accelerating the market for energy storage across the country. For more information, go to the website.

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UK developer Exagen submits application for 500MW/1,000MWh battery storage project

Image: Exagen.

Exagen has submitted plans for a 500MW/1GWh battery storage project to Blaby District Council, in the Midlands region of England, UK.

Situated in Leicestershire, the Normanton Energy Reserve will be created across 19 acres, have a capacity of 500MW/1GWh and be capable of providing enough power for 80% of the homes in the county.

£350 million (US$425.6 million) will be used to create the project which will directly connect to the transmission network. In doing so it will play a vital role in managing natural fluctuations in intermittent renewable energy and support the scaling of several renewable generation technologies such as wind farms and solar.

The project is expected to be energised and connected to the grid in 2028, Exagen has stated. The developer will look to partner with local businesses on the project, inviting local contractors to get involved.

To read the full version of this story, visit Solar Power Portal.

Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the 8th annual Energy Storage Summit EU in London, 22-23 February 2023. This year it is moving to a larger venue, bringing together Europe’s leading investors, policymakers, developers, utilities, energy buyers and service providers all in one place. Visit the official site for more info.

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Shell acquires 1GWh BESS project at former coal power plant site in New South Wales

The now decommissioned and demolished Wallerawang coal plant near Lithgow, pictured in 2007. Image: Wikimedia user Amitch.

Shell Energy Australia will build, own and operate a planned 500MW/1,000MWh battery storage asset in New South Wales for which development approvals have already been granted.

Fossil fuel major Shell’s energy solutions and renewable energy arm said this morning that it has acquired development rights for the Wallerawang 9 battery energy storage system (BESS) project near Lithgow, New South Wales (NSW).

The seller, Greenspot, is an Australian real estate investor focused on sustainable and impact investments. One area that includes is in ‘rehabilitating’ fossil fuel generation sites and repurposing them for new uses, with clean energy assets a prime example.

Greenspot has been developing the site at Wallerawang, which formerly housed eight coal power generation units until the power station’s closure by owner EnergyAustralia in 2014. The name of the BESS, Wallerwang 9, is an acknowledgement of the site’s importance as a centre of the region’s energy sector, according to Greenspot.

The real estate developer will lease 20 hectares of land for the BESS project to Shell Energy and the battery system will be connected to an existing 330kV substation adjacent to the site if a Final Investment Decision is made in its favour. Financial terms of Shell Energy and Greenspot’s partnership were not disclosed.  

Repurposing legacy thermal power plant sites not only has the potential to create societal benefit through enabling higher renewable energy utilisation and helping regenerate local economies. It can also reduce the costs of large-scale clean energy assets, through leveraging of existing infrastructure, including, but not limited to, grid interconnection points.

Greenspot was handed development approvals in August, as reported by Energy-Storage.news. The New South Wales state government waved it through as a State Significant Development Project, meaning its development was deemed worthy of accelerating due to it being in the public interest.

Region transitioning from coal-based industry

“As the economy decarbonises, and new energy technologies are adopted, it is critically important that strategies are implemented to attract a range of new businesses to areas like Lithgow which have traditionally relied heavily on coal-based industry,” Greenspot CEO Brett Hawkins said.

“Proximity to the high-voltage transmission network, access to major road, rail transport and significant existing and proposed water infrastructure, and proximity to high-integrity data networks, makes the Wallerawang site highly competitive to attract the investment needed to propel the local economy forward.”

Wallerawang 9 will not be the only gigawatt-hour scale BESS connected to the substation, if another project of equal size and capacity, French developer Neoen’s Great Western Battery, also goes ahead. Neoen is currently building three other large-scale BESS assets in Australia and recently won local authority approvals for Collie Battery, a project in Western Australia which could be up to 1GW/4GWh when completed.

Meanwhile, Shell Energy’s other battery project involvements in Australia include its partnership on the Wellington BESS in Central West NSW, which is another 500MW/1,000MWh project. That one is being developed adjacent to Central West Orana Renewable Energy Zone (REZ), a major mixed technology clean energy hub.

Shell Energy Australia has also secured operational rights to a 60MW/120MWh portion of Riverina, a 300MWh BESS portfolio being built in NSW by Edify Energy, a state government-owned developer and investor of renewables and energy storage.

Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the 1st Energy Storage Summit Asia, 11-12 July 2023 in Singapore. The event will help give clarity on this nascent, yet quickly growing market, bringing together a community of credible independent generators, policymakers, banks, funds, off-takers and technology providers. For more information, go to the website.

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Solar Landscape Connects First N.J. Community Solar Project to Grid

Extra Space Storage and Solar Landscape, a New Jersey community solar owner and operator, has connected the first of its community solar projects to the grid in Neptune, N.J.

It marks the second of 46 projects in the state approved by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) in Year 2 of the Community Solar Energy Pilot Program.

“I’m thrilled to see the swift rollout of the Community Solar Program continue, especially locally,” says New Jersey State Sen. Vin Gopal, D-Monmouth. “The activation of this project will extend solar access to Monmouth County residents who would otherwise be unable to benefit from clean energy, while also making crucial progress toward achieving New Jersey’s clean energy goals. Thank you to Solar Landscape, and everyone who worked to bring this project to fruition.”

The project is located on an Extra Space Storage facility, one of 10 New Jersey sites owned by the national self-storage company that is hosting community solar projects with Solar Landscape.

“We’re proud to serve the communities where we do business in more ways than one,” states McKall Morris, communications and sustainability manager for Extra Space Storage. “By meeting customers’ self-storage needs while also powering nearby homes, our facilities show how we can do right by our customers, our communities, and the environment.”

Residents in Neptune City, Neptune Township, Asbury Park City, Avon-by-the-Sea, Belmar Boro, Bradley Beach Boro, Ocean Township, Tinton Falls and Wall Township can subscribe to use solar energy generated on the Extra Space Storage facility rooftop at a guaranteed discount. New Jerseyans in hundreds of other towns across the state can also sign up to receive lower-cost solar energy soon from one of Solar Landscape’s 45 other community solar projects.

“We look forward to welcoming even more residents to community solar, and it’s especially gratifying when those residents are in our neighborhood,” comments Shaun Keegan, CEO of Solar Landscape. “With the support of a commercial real estate leader like Extra Storage Space, we can provide cost-saving solar power to residents, many of whom thought they’d never be able to use solar energy. Just a year ago, we received approval on this project and now it’s providing a valuable benefit to the residents here; we look forward to energizing even more projects very soon.”

Extra Space Storage’s New Jersey community solar projects will generate 6.5 MW of renewable energy. In its first year, the portfolio is projected to generate 7,460,646 kwH of energy for residents.

The active Neptune community solar site, which will generate approximately 500 kilowatts of energy, was approved by the NJBPU just over a year ago and is now providing solar energy to nearby residents.

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DOE, NREL Open Second Cohort Applications for Cybersecurity Program

Image: Werner Slocum, NREL

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) released a call for applications for the second cohort of the Clean Energy Cybersecurity Accelerator (CECA) program. The program brings together federal experts, energy industry representatives and innovators in a unified effort to rapidly develop cybersecurity solutions for renewable energy resources and other grid operations, and to bring them to market faster.

CECA is a key component of DOE’s strategy to ensure America’s critical energy infrastructure remains reliable, resilient and secure as more renewable energy is incorporated into the generation mix to achieve President Biden’s ambitious vision of a 100% clean electricity sector by 2035 and net-zero economy by 2050.

“As physical and virtual threats to our critical energy infrastructure continue to evolve, DOE is using all the tools at our disposal to lock down cybersecurity vulnerabilities of today and tomorrow,” says U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “By supporting new, innovative technologies, the CECA program will help bring cutting-edge solutions to market more rapidly – ensuring our nation’s electric grid is secure and reliable as it transitions to 100 percent clean energy.”

For its second cohort, CECA seeks applicants with solutions that actively identify all industrial control system assets connected to a utility’s infrastructure, both physically and virtually, to understand the totality of assets that need to be monitored and protected within the environment. The solutions should support the identification of unauthorized, unmanaged, or compromised assets to be removed or remediated. During a period of three to 12 months, cohort participants will receive professional evaluations of their technologies and partnership opportunities while developing and evaluating cyber-risk solutions in a collaborative setting.

As part of the CECA program, DOE and NREL have partnered with Berkshire Hathaway Energy, Duke Energy and Xcel Energy in a joint effort to tackle the growing cyber threats to the U.S. energy sector, and other utilities are invited to join. The partnering utilities may use the cohort’s cybersecurity technologies once they are assessed and validated and will also gain insights from the technology developers on the latest cyber challenges, best practices, trends, and the ability to understand cyber technology solutions.

In December 2022, DOE and NREL announced the CECA program’s first cohort – three participants with cyber-defense technologies unproven in energy systems to authenticate distributed energy resources. The three participants have recently started a technical assessment of their technologies and will have the opportunity to showcase their solutions using NREL’s world-class laboratory facilities.

NREL will select up to five participants for the second CECA cohort. The application portal is open now through February 10, 2023, at 11:59 p.m. MT. Participants must be based in the United States and offer innovations that address the specified cybersecurity topic priority. Learn more about the application process.

DOE’s Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security, and Emergency Response (CESER) and Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) lead CECA and other initiatives that support integrating cybersecurity as the United States decarbonizes the electric grid. Learn more about the CECA program, CESER and EERE.

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