Maldives reopens 40MWh battery storage tender for island solar

The Maldives is home to more than half a million people, who live across its hundreds of islands, most of them relying on expensive and polluting imported diesel for their electricity. Image: wikimedia user Nevit Dilman.

The Republic of Maldives has reopened a tender process, seeking to procure 40MWh of battery energy storage systems (BESS) in an energy transition project supported by World Bank funding.

The South Asian island nation’s Ministry of Environment, Climate Change and Technology announced the reopening this morning. Eligible bidders have been given until 1pm local time on 27 October 2022 to submit their completed bids but must register with the Maldives Ministry of Finance between 4 August and 20 October first.

Financing support has been approved from the World Bank through its Accelerating Renewable Energy Integration and Sustainable Energy (ARISE) Project for the country and the Maldives government will apply part of that funding towards the cost of making payments to BESS providers under contract.

Tendering will be done in two lots. The first will be for 23MW/23MWh of BESS at seven different regions of the country, the second for 13.5MW/17MWh of BESS at eight locations on the Laamu Atoll islands and four other sites.

Bidding is open for both lots simultaneously and participants may bid in both if they choose.

Contracts will cover design, supply, installation and commissioning of BESS and energy management systems (EMS) which will enable them to optimise operation of solar PV-plus-diesel generator power plants around the islands.

In line with World Bank regulations for procurements, the Maldives Ministry of Finance will conduct the tender through a international competitive procurement process based on Requests for Bids.

As reported by Energy-Storage.news just over a year ago as the government first launched the tender, the ARISE programme is supporting the deployment of 30MW of solar PV across the islands, and the batteries will be key to enabling the renewable energy being used effectively.

Some key details appear to have changed since the June 2021 launch of the original tender, which was issued in two lots of 24MW/24MWh and 16MW/16MWh, but again adding up to a total 40MWh of battery storage. Tender documents from 2021 also appear to cover a wider scope of services, referring to contracts for supply, install, commission, operate and transfer of BESS.

Energy-Storage.news has reached out to the World Bank and the Maldives Ministry of Finance to ask why the tender is being reopened and what accounts for the differences between last year’s issued bid documents and this year’s.

Read the Ministry of Finance’s Request for Bids documentation and see further details of the tender, here.

Continue reading

Activate Buys 115 MW Renewable Energy Portfolio from Ares

Maria Klutey

Activate Renewables, an acquirer of real estate and royalty interests in wind, solar and energy storage, has closed on the purchase of a portfolio of renewable ground leases from a fund managed by the Infrastructure Opportunities strategy of Ares Management.

The portfolio consists of wind and solar property leases together supporting more than 115 MW of power. The portfolio has assets located across three states with long-term power purchase agreements with off-takers. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“We were excited to have the opportunity to work with Ares on the sale of these assets,” says Maria Klutey, president of Activate Renewables. “This transaction represented an ideal project for Activate, where we could deploy our low-cost, permanent capital to acquire an attractive portfolio.”

Activate Renewables works with renewable energy developers across the U.S. to help them enhance returns and improve capital efficiency by acquiring their land, lease or purchase options.

To date, Activate and its affiliates have acquired or signed agreements to fund acquisitions totaling nearly 7,000 solar acres and 57 wind turbines directly supporting more than 2.6 GW of existing or planned renewable power generation across 20 states.

Continue reading

BESS system integrator FlexGen launches C&I product

A FlexGen battery energy storage system. Image: FlexGen.

US battery energy storage system integrator FlexGen has launched a new product for distributed and behind-the-meter applications.

The North Carolina-headquartered company has launched FlexPod, a suite of containerised, modular and scalable storage solutions designed to meet a broad range of product requirements. Each Flexpod includes batteries, power conversion electronics, thermal management and fire suppression and is enabled with the company’s energy management software (EMS), HybridOS.

“Commercial and Industrial (C&I) businesses need scaleable, flexible energy solutions now more than ever. This is a sector that is bearing the brunt of energy inflation and the high costs of fossil fuels right now. With FlexPod, we are enabling all energy consumers to realise the benefits of advanced energy storage,” said Kelcy Pegler, FlexGen CEO.

The benefits of its product include an advanced capability to manage power quality, ‘out of the box’ integration with solar, advanced microgrid functionality and integration with EV charging infrastructure, the company said. It already has an EV charging solution which combines its EMS platform with battery storage, launched in February this year.

Use cases for the FlexPod listed on FlexGen’s site include peak shaving, energy arbitrage, demand charge reduction, load shifting, grid services, backup power, an islanding capability, combining with solar and self consumption.

The company added that FlexPod’s full containerisation makes site integration and construction easier and that the product has the ability to be adapted over time to changing requirements.

The announcement comes a few weeks after it raised US$100 million in a Series C round led by Netherlands-headquartered commodities and energy trading group Vitol, as reported by Energy-Storage.news.

FlexGen is a US-only operator with projects across the country, but the bulk in Texas and California, including a massive 2.1GWh order for developer Ameresco which was recently delayed due to lockdowns in China impact the supply of BESS equipment.

Continue reading

Inflation Reduction Act could mean the end of ‘dumb’ solar-plus-storage hybrids

Standalone energy storage easing congestion via substations in utility Southern California Edison’s service area. Image: Convergent Energy + Power.

Tax incentives for energy storage included in the US’ Inflation Reduction Act could mean fewer solar-plus-storage hybrid plants are built, according to a specialist energy sector lawyer.

The key legislation would introduce measures targeted at lowering healthcare costs, encouraging domestic manufacturing and acting on climate crisis and energy security and cost issues.

In terms of the latter, that means US$369 billion investment and financing for everything from solar and battery manufacturing to the introduction of an investment tax credit (ITC) incentive for standalone energy storage.

As reported yesterday by Energy-Storage.news, the Inflation Reduction Act passed the Senate on Saturday and looks set for a speedy passage through the House and onto the desk of President Joe Biden for his signature as early as the end of this week.

Morten Lund, a partner at law firm Stoel Rives, has worked on energy and infrastructure projects across multiple technologies and now largely focuses on clean energy project development in California.

In an interview on the potential impacts of the legislation, to be published later this week, one standout point Lund was keen to emphasise was that incentivising standalone energy storage could disincentivise solar-plus-storage.

Typically known as hybrids, Lund said these combined power plants are “dumb” and make the deployment of energy storage where energy storage is most needed, “unnecessarily difficult”.  

“The tax credit for [standalone] storage will unlock immense value from the batteries because – and this is why hybrid systems are dumb – in order to qualify for the ITC as a solar project, the batteries have to be essentially completely charged from the solar project and not from the grid. That means that the battery is not a ‘real’ battery, it’s a one-way battery.”

The ITC typically lowers the upfront capital cost of equipment purchases for projects by about 30%. There’s some give-and-take there, with the Inflation Reduction Act including adders for use of local unionised workforce and domestic content, for example, but generally, the reduction of required equipment CapEx by about a third is a strong driver to enable projects to go ahead.

60% of planned battery storage paired with solar PV

Statistics that emerged in March from the US government’s Energy Information Administration (EIA), found that more than 60% of a total 10GW of battery storage projects set to be deployed over the next two years in US utility service areas, are paired with solar PV.

Multi-year research by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) found that this rate of attachment is even higher in Western US states, with nearly all grid-scale solar PV planned in California including batteries in their design.

In an article for our quarterly journal PV Tech Power, Berkeley Lab researcher Will Gorman wrote that alongside the ITC, significant project cost declines in recent years have been a driver for hybrids, while sharing land, interconnection points to the grid and other infrastructure, lower the costs further.

However, Gorman noted, there is something called the ‘coupling penalty’ with solar-plus-storage, or even wind-plus-storage. That’s the difference in value between siting a battery storage somewhere it’s really needed, like a congested load pocket on the grid, with siting it next to or coupled with a generation source like wind or solar, purely because tax incentives make that commercially more viable.

Batteries can perform a number of different applications for the grid, up to about a dozen, such as frequency regulation, voltage support and VAR support. However, all of those things that can be done with a standalone battery energy storage system (BESS), can’t be done properly from a hybrid resources, because it can’t be charged from the grid, Morten Lund said.

“You’re limited in your ability to do anything other than time shift [solar or wind], because you can’t charge your battery from the grid,” Lund said.

“Once the batteries have its own ITC the shackles are off and the batteries can now provide full range of grid services, legally speaking. Let’s see what the [utility] contracts say, but it’s no longer hobbled by tax limitations. Not only will we see whatever natural form batteries the market wants, but there will literally be value created or at least unleashed by allowing the batteries to do their job properly.”

Do as grid engineers would do

Also important is what’s known as the locational value of energy storage. Another reason why the hybrids are dumb, according to the Stoel Rives partner, is that instead of siting batteries where the grid needs them, the batteries are placed where the solar project happens to be.

That may or may not be where the utility needs them most, Lund said. While batteries do provide some benefit in helping integrate renewable energy, “they would provide more value in some other location that the grid engineers would choose, because a battery is ultimately a grid device”.

“You’re kind of forcing the grid designer to put this device here, and not where it should go.”

Berkeley Lab’s research found that, depending on the location and other factors, there will be instances where hybrid solar-plus-storage projects make the most sense, and Lund agreed with that assertion.

“I’m sure there’ll still be some circumstances where hybrids will be or actually are the best design, they’ll still exist. But it just strikes me as bizarrely unlikely that they will be the dominant [configuration] if the engineers are allowed to just tell us what to do.”

It still depends also on what other stakeholders, like banks, utilities and regulators want to see from the industry, but Lund sees a standalone storage ITC’s introduction as a good step towards making the deployment of energy storage “less dumb, and less unnecessarily difficult,” the lawyer said.

Continue reading

Western Australia utility replicating success of 100% renewable energy town

The renewable microgrid at Onslow. Its integration with the local network enabled the continuing adoption of rooftop solar PV in the town. Image: Horizon Power.

The small town of Onslow, Western Australia, is now powered almost entirely by renewable energy, and the utility behind that project wants to roll out the same tech across the state.

State-owned utility company Horizon Power said today that it will deploy distributed energy management system (DERMS) technology that helps coordinate the use of different resources like rooftop solar PV, battery storage and electric vehicles (EVs).

In the demonstration project at Onslow, the entire town ran on renewable energy and battery storage for a period of about an hour-and-a-half last year, thanks to a microgrid system which allowed it to operate as a self-contained electricity grid.

While that means Onslow still relies on natural gas engines and diesel generators, that reliance is greatly reduced, and the energy minister for Western Australia, Bill Johnson called the demonstration a “landmark step towards building a cleaner, brighter, renewable energy future for our state”.

The project showed that distributed energy resources (DERs) could be safely integrated at grid level, and Johnson, along with Horizon Power and software and controls providers PXiSE and SwitchDin, talked up the potential for it to be replicated widely.

Horizon Power said today that the technology enabled four times as much rooftop solar to be installed and integrated into the grid at Onslow, a town where more than 40% of homes have PV.

The DERMS works using predictive analytics to enable maximised penetration of renewable energy on the grid – predicting weather patterns, electricity consumer behaviour and so on – while also ensuring stability and security of electricity supply to homes and businesses.

It enables not just DERs but also centralised resources like large-scale solar PV and batteries as well as thermal power stations to act in concert together to meet local energy needs.

Horizon will introduce the technology into remote and regional parts of the state. The company’s general manager for technology and digital transformation said that around 60% of Horizon Power’s energy systems are already dealing with limits on rooftop solar.

The DERMS will “increase solar access for our customers, lower their energy bills, and help reduce emissions,” Ray Achemedei said.

The rollout begins in the coastal resort town of Broome early next year and the utility will progressively deploy the tech across all of its power systems by the middle of 2024.

“This is the technology that will underpin the transition to 100% renewable towns,” Achemedei said, noting that the paradigm shift from centralised fossil fuel generation sending power in one direction only to decentralised and decarbonised energy which is bi-directional or multi-directional in flowing around the grid presents challenges that Horizon Power is tackling head on.

Other initiatives from the utility include a tender for distributed microgrids for rural areas launched in October 2021.

Then in November last year, Horizon began Energy Storage in Regional Towns, a AU$31 million programme to equip nine remote towns in Western Australia with shared community battery storage.

That programme is funded by the state government and is adding about 9MWh of battery energy storage system (BESS) capacity to local energy networks. Western Australia’s government put battery storage and solar PV at the heart of its post-pandemic economic recovery plans, announced in June 2021.

Continue reading

Fluence CEO Manuel Pérez Dubuc stepping down

Fluence executives, including outgoing CEO Dubuc, at the company’s Nasdaq listing in November 2021. Image: Fluence.

Fluence, the global battery energy storage system integrator, is changing CEO with Julian Nebreda replacing incumbent Manuel Pérez Dubuc next month.

Current board member since September 2021 Nebreda will succeed Dubuc as president and CEO of the company, effective 1 September, 2022. This will follow a transition period with Dubuc, who has been at the helm since May 2020, to ensure a smooth handover.

Nebreda comes from 15 years at AES Corporation, one of the two companies which Fluence was spun out of, along with Siemens, which together still hold a majority of the company’s shares.

His most recent position was executive VP and president of US & Global Business Lines, before which he headed up geographic segments of South America, Brazil and Europe (in descending chronological order).

A press release said that his latest role gave Nebreda responsibility for AES’ renewables’ growth in the US through its clean energy business, including ‘development and implementation of robust supply chain strategies’.

Herman Bulls, Fluence chairman, said: “I want to thank Manuel for his leadership through Fluence’s expansion into Fluence Digital’s AI-enabled technologies, Fluence’s addition of key strategic shareholders, and Fluence’s initial public offering last year. As we look ahead, Julian brings decades of experience in driving transformational change in the energy sector that will benefit Fluence and ultimately deliver value to our shareholders.”

Nebreda will have an annual base salary of US$600,000 per year with a target annual cash bonus opportunity of 100% of that, meaning total potential remuneration of US$1.2 million. He is also receiving a a one-time grant of $2,500,000 of stock which will vest over three years.

Dubuc’s base salary for 2021 was US$450,000 with a bonus opportunity of 75% of that, or US$375,000, meaning a total potential remuneration of US$825,000.

Dubuc also came from a tenure at AES Corporation, of which a big chunk was heading up divisions in South America, including eight months as president of its South America business unit and five years as president of the Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean business unit.

The company grew revenues 250% in its second quarter (January-March), it announced in May when it revealed that it had brought raw material indices-based (RMI) pricing to hedge against price fluctuations (something which has existed in the EV sector for many years).

Fluence topped research firm IHS Markit’s ranking of the largest system integrators globally for 2021. It is also one of the most internationally diversified operators, with projects delivered or announced in the last month alone in Ireland, Taiwan and Lithuania. Growth and market development director for EMEA Julian Jansen recently explained the benefits of being international in an interview with Energy-Storage.news.

But, as Energy-Storage.news reported yesterday, it is also aiming to improve delivery times in its home market of the US with a new assembly facility in Utah.

Continue reading

Senate Passes Solar-Friendly Inflation Reduction Act

The U.S. Senate has passed the Inflation Reduction Act – a piece of legislation that will, in part, foster growth for the clean energy industry.

“It will shore up the U.S.’ place as a clean energy producer and reduce our greenhouse emissions by 40 percent by 2030, while investing in the coal communities that powered our nation for generations,” states U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa. “Better yet, we’re going to create 9 million well-paying jobs in the next decade to get this done. I successfully fought to include a provision that will promote the creation of family-supporting clean manufacturing jobs here in the U.S. rather than in competitors like China, because we don’t have to choose between green energy and our workers.

Casey helped passed a provision to incentivize clean energy deployment and manufacturing in “energy communities” – areas whose economies and jobs are or were dependent on the coal, oil or natural gas energy sectors. A tax credit will provide a bridge for energy workers and communities as the U.S. transitions to a clean energy economy as well as prioritize workforce development.

This bill invests in American-made energy and manufacturing. The IRA includes amendments that will require some clean energy projects to meet strict domestic content standards to receive tax credits. Further, all clean energy projects will receive a 10% bonus tax credit for meeting domestic content standards.

The IRA includes tax credits to accelerate U.S. manufacturing of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and critical minerals processing, as well as a $7,500 credit for purchasing a new electric or hydrogen vehicle that was made in North America. The bill will grow a skilled workforce that provides good-paying union jobs as the clean energy industry grows. The IRA provides $9 billion in consumer home energy rebate programs to electrify home appliances and for energy efficient retrofits, as well as 10 or more years of consumer tax credits to make homes energy efficient and make heat pumps, rooftop solar and electric HVAC more affordable.

“With the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act in the Senate, solar and storage companies are one step closer to having the business certainty they need to make the long-term investments that decarbonize the electric grid and create millions of new career opportunities in cities and towns across the country,” says Abigail Ross Hopper, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA).

Image: Jeremy Bezanger on Unsplash

Continue reading

EIA Reports a 19 Percent Increase in Solar Production in 2020

In 2020, energy production in the United States fell by record amounts compared with 2019, mostly as a result of decreased economic activity during the COVID-19 pandemic. Wyoming had the largest drop in total energy production among the states, decreasing by 1,264 trillion British thermal units, mostly due to decreased coal production, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). Seven states saw their largest annual energy production decline in at least 60 years, as reported in EIA’s State Energy Data System.

To calculate U.S. total energy production and to compare different types of energy reported in different physical units (such as barrels, cubic feet, tons, kWh, etc.), EIA converts sources of energy to common units of heat, called British thermal units (Btu). EIA uses a fossil fuel equivalence to calculate electricity consumption of noncombustible renewables for wind, hydropower, solar and geothermal.

U.S. renewable energy production increased by less than 1% in 2020, as solar production increased by 19% and wind by 13%, but biofuels fell by 10% and hydropower by 2%. Hydroelectricity generation in California fell by 45% in 2020, the largest decline of any state, mostly as a result of extensive drought.

U.S. coal production fell by a record 25% in 2020 to its lowest level since 1965. Coal production during 2020 fell by 37% in Indiana, by 33% in Kentucky, and by 21% in Wyoming, as several coal mines closed. In absolute terms, coal production in Wyoming, the nation’s largest coal producer, decreased by more than 1,000 trillion Btu, the most of any state. In 2020, coal production in Arizona stopped entirely with the closure of its last coal mine.

U.S. crude oil production fell by a record 8% in 2020. Production fell in 29 of the 32 states that produce crude oil, in part because of reduced demand for transportation fuels during the pandemic. One notable exception was in New Mexico, where crude oil production increased by 216 trillion Btu (an 11% increase from 2019). New Mexico became the nation’s second-largest crude oil-producing state in 2021.

U.S. marketed natural gas production decreased by less than 1% in 2020, as natural gas demand and prices declined during a slightly warmer year. Marketed natural gas production in Oklahoma decreased by over 300 trillion Btu as shale production in the state fell by nearly 20%. In Ohio, despite a 289 trillion Btu drop in 2020, marketed natural gas production in the state was 31 times larger than in 2010.

U.S. annual nuclear generation fell by 2% in 2020, mostly because of nuclear power plant closures in Massachusetts (Pilgrim) and Iowa (Duane Arnold).

Image: Andreas Gücklhorn on Unsplash

Continue reading

Energy Vault claims US$680 million revenue over 2022/23

A render of Energy Vault’s Energy Vault Resiliency Center. Image: Energy Vault.

Gravity-based energy storage company Energy Vault expects US$680 million in combined revenue over 2022 and 2023, it claimed in its recent quarterly results.

The company, which has developed a novel energy storage solution based on moving large block weights up and down to charge and discharge energy, clocked revenue of US$1 million in quarter two 2022. Its net loss was US$6.2 million while adjusted EBITDA was U$(14.2) million.

This was significantly less than Q1’s US$43 million, which was driven mainly by a licensing agreement with Atlas Renewable, related to its first project there on which construction began in May. It finished Q2 with US$299 million in cash and cash equivalents.

More noteworthy were claims that the company expects full year 2022 revenue of US$75-100 million and adjusted EBITDA of US$(10)-3 million, reflecting ramp-up of the China project – with mechanical completion expected in Q4 – and recently awarded projects for its Energy Vault Solutions (EVS) software platform.

Its EVS projects are comprised of battery energy storage system (BESS) deployments which will utilise its proprietary integration platform and energy management software.

Within the EVS projects segment, it will deploy a 68.8MW/275MWh BESS in California for Wellhead Electric for a Q4 2022 delivery date, and another 660MW of projects in Texas, California and another US state with unnamed independent power producer (IPP) and utilities for 2023 commissioning dates.

Then for 2022 and 2023 combined, Energy Vault said it expects aggregate revenue of approximately US$680 million as its core gravity-based solution segment ramps up.

Major projects here include the one in China already mentioned, as well as initial planning of multi-GWh deployments of the company’s solution for Ark Energy, part of zinc, lead and silver producer Korea Zinc (a partnership first announced in January). Another is a system that Energy Vault expects to start building for Enel Green Power in Texas in Q4 2022, a partnership first announced in mid-2021.

Energy Vault said that these three projects will be worth a combined annual revenue of US$350 million once fully operational when taking all installation, software deployment and operation & maintenance (O&M) revenues together.

The company is also working with DG Fuels on deploying its gravity-based solution to support the production of green hydrogen for aviation fuel, with the first site in Louisiana upsized to a potential 1.2GWh. And, as Energy-Storage.news reported recently, it recently signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Indian state-owned utility NTPC to commercialise its technology there.

The company added that capital expenditure needs will be relatively light going forward compared to historic operations as with most new projects, customers want to take ownership of the project.

Continue reading

Leeward Starts Construction on 196 MW Big Plain Solar Project in Ohio

Another Leeward project, Union Ridge Solar, located in Licking County, Ohio.

Leeward Renewable Energy (LRE) has commenced on-site construction on the 196 MW Big Plain Solar project located near London, Ohio. The renewable energy generated by the project will be supplied to Verizon Communications under a long-term power purchase agreement.

SOLV Energy, a solar and energy storage construction company, serves as the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor on the project, which will utilize First Solar advanced, ultra-low carbon thin-film photovoltaic solar modules. Big Plain Solar is expected to provide approximately 400 construction jobs, with at least 80% to Ohioans, furthering LRE’s commitment to hiring local labor.

As part of LRE’s pledge to being responsible stewards of the land it develops and manages, the company will implement numerous sustainable practices at Big Plain Solar, including maintaining a soil health monitoring program and curating a 70-acre pollinator habitat.

“At Verizon, we are committed to building a greener U.S. energy grid through proven sustainable and socially responsible strategies and programs,” says James Gowen, Verizon’s chief sustainability officer and senior vice president of global supply chain. “The groundbreaking at the Big Plain solar facility is another step on our way to achieving net zero emissions in our operations by 2035.”

“The start of construction at Big Plain Solar is an integral step in the advancement of LRE’s solar portfolio and an important milestone for Ohio and the local community,” comments John Wieland, chief development officer at LRE. “This project not only brings economic development benefits to Madison County, but also environmental benefits. Across the LRE portfolio, we are continuously looking for ways to implement innovative land management practices to improve the soil health and aesthetics of our projects, and we look forward to implementing these practices at Big Plain Solar. We thank Madison County and the rest of the community for their continued support and long-term partnership.”

LRE expects the project will reach commercial operation by June 2023.

Continue reading