Wisconsin regulators approve another Invenergy solar-plus-storage plant

An Invenergy battery project in West Virginia. Image: Invenergy.

Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission (PSC) has approved the construction of Invenergy’s 300MW utility-scale solar farm, which is to be paired with a 165MW battery energy storage system (BESS), in Dane County.

The Koshkonong Solar Energy Center project will be built by solar developer Invenergy with construction starting this fall and the project is expected to be completed by the end of 2024.

This is not the first solar plus storage project Invenergy is working on in Wisconsin, with a 200MW solar PV and 110MW BESS in Kenosha County that was approved in December 2020 and another one in Walworth and Rock Counties with 250MW of solar energy and 75MW of BESS waiting for approval.

This story first appeared on PV Tech.

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Fluence buys another software group; triples digital portfolio to 15GW since February

The Punta Sierra wind farm, owned by Pacific Hydro Chile, one of Nispera’s most recent customers. Image: Nispera/Pacific Hydro Chile.

Global system integrator Fluence has acquired AI-enabled, renewable energy software-as-a-service provider Nispera, tripling its digital portfolio of assets contracted or managed since February to 15GW.

Fluence announced the agreement to acquire Zurich-based Nispera AG yesterday (Monday, 11 April). Nispera is a provider of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning-enabled (ML) software-as-a-service (SaaS) focused on the renewable energy sector.

The transaction includes a cash buyout of existing private investors of US$30 million as well as Fluence stock to the management team that vests over three years.

Nispera’s technology solution allows customers to monitor, analyse, forecast, and optimise the performance and returns of renewable energy assets. The flagship offering is an AI-driven utility-scale asset performance management platform that currently has 8GW of assets under management across 450 wind and solar projects globally.

Recent buyers of its software and services include Pacific Hydro Chile, a subsidiary of SPIC, one of Chile’s five major electricity utilities, and German family office investment firm Wirtgen Invest.

The acquisition of Nispera brings Fluence’s combined digital portfolio of assets contracted or under management to 15GW, up from 4.7GW at the start of February when it tied up with another renewable energy asset trading and software service provider Pexapark. Since then it also bagged a deal to optimise 1.1GW of assets owned by AES Corporation, one of its parent companies.

Fluence president and CEO Manuel Perez Dubuc said: “With this acquisition, we are primed to expand our portfolio of digital products and services for customers around the world. Furthermore, it represents a powerful cross-selling opportunity to offer energy storage products to owners of existing renewable energy assets and portfolios. As a result, we expect this transaction will enhance Fluence’s recurring revenue capture, adding visibility to future cash flow in the years to come.”

The acquisition of Nispera and other similar companies in the past can be seen as part of Fluence’s strategy to create a wider ecosystem of software and services, the Fluence IQ digital ecosystem, around the core business of bricks-and-mortar battery energy storage systems (BESS) deployments. The ecosystem provides access to proprietary and third-party digital applications for renewable energy asset management.

Doing this is essential for system integrators to stay head, Fluence Growth & Market Development Director (EMEA) Julian Jansen told Energy-storage.news in a recent interview. He said that parts of the existing value chain of energy storage will becoming increasingly commoditised, making software an increasingly important differentiator. This was echoed by Jason Abiecunas, VP Business Development at US-focused system integrator FlexGen in another recent interview.

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Arizona utilities seek 450MW of ‘firm capacity’ dispatchable electricity resources

TEP’s Wilmot Energy Center, which came online in 2021 and includes 100MW of solar PV paired with 30MW of battery storage. Image: Tucson Electric Power.

Two utility companies in Arizona, US, are seeking ‘firm capacity’ resources in their newest procurement rounds, which energy storage systems would be eligible to provide.

Tucson Electric Power (TEP) and UniSource Energy will look to procure 450MW of firm capacity between them when the pair launch separate ‘All-source Request for Proposals’ (ASRFP) later this month.

The solicitations are in support of the 2020 Integrated Resource Plans (IRPs) the companies issued that need to be filed with state utility regulators. 

TEP’s IRP commits the company to lowering CO2 emission by 80% and supplying 70+% of its retail energy from renewable resources by 2035. It is currently at about the 30% renewable energy mark, after making 449MW of wind and solar resource additions during 2021. 

Serving just under 440,000 electric customers, peak energy consumption in its service area are going up dramatically with record levels recorded in both of the last two years. The company wants to meet this peak demand with higher shares of low carbon sources.  

Meanwhile UniSource is targeting 50% renewables in its retail supply by 2035, as well as lowering the company’s reliance on purchasing energy from the wholesale market and instead owning and contracting generation resources from which it supplies its customers.  

UniSource has about 100,000 electricity customers in two Arizona counties, as well as more than 165,000 natural gas customers in the north and south of the US southwest state. 

Both companies are owned by Canadian investor-owned gas and electric utility holding company Fortis and announced the procurements last week. Their ASRFPs will launch on 19 April, seeking a combination of new solar PV and wind generation, energy storage systems and other eligible technologies like energy efficiency.  

The due date for proposals is 1 July 2022 for both.

UniSource will seek up to 170MW of renewable energy from solar PV and wind and/or energy efficiency resources that could include demand response programmes. 

It also wants up to 150MW of firm capacity, resources which can be called on at any time that could provide up to four hours of continuous energy every day of summer, when electricity demand peaks in Arizona. 

UniSource said energy storage systems could provide this service, enabling the utility to dispatch the power as required. It could also include demand response programmes.

In a very similarly worded press release, TEP said it seeks up to 250MW of renewable energy and energy efficiency, as well as up to 300MW of firm capacity resources. 

TEP has a site of its own which is ready for construction of an energy storage system (ESS) project upon it and the utility said any engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors interested in delivering a project there must pay a visit to the site, hosted by TEP on 28 April. 

As TEP inaugurated a grid-scale solar-plus-storage system in its service area in May 2021, the Wilmot Energy Center (pictured above), the company said it anticipated that about 1,400MW of energy storage will be on its networks by 2035.

Both utilities said the resources procured must be able to enter service from 1 May 2024 and no later than 1 May 2025.

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Project briefing: World’s largest lithium-vanadium hybrid

Rendering of Energy Superhub Oxford: Lithium-ion (foreground), Vanadium (background). Image: Pivot Power / Energy Superhub Oxford.

A special energy storage entry in the popular PV Tech Power regular ‘Project Briefing’ series: Energy-Storage.news writer Cameron Murray takes a close look at Energy Superhub Oxford in the UK, which features the world’s biggest lithium-vanadium hybrid battery storage plant.

This is an extract of an article which appeared in Vol.30 of PV Tech Power, Solar Media’s quarterly technical journal for the downstream solar industry. Every edition includes ‘Storage & Smart Power,’ a dedicated section contributed by the team at Energy-Storage.news.

Project name: Energy Superhub Oxford

Location: Oxford, UKCapacity: 55 MWh (50 MW/50MWh Lithium-ion, 2MW/5MWh Vanadium flow battery)

Energisation date: July 2021 (Lithium-ion), December 2021 (Vanadium flow)

Developer/asset owner: Pivot Power, part of EDF Renewables

Technology providers: Wärtsilä, Invinity Energy SystemsOptimiser and trader: Habitat Energy

Known globally for its university, Oxford is now making a name for itself as a testing ground for the largest hybrid battery energy storage system (BESS) of its kind anywhere in the world.

Energy Superhub Oxford (ESO), set to fully launch in the next few months, is the result of three years’ work by a consortium of private sector organisations, the local council (local authority) and the University of Oxford, plus government body Innovate UK which funded a quarter of its £41 million (US$55.8 million) cost.

The engine room of the ESO is the largest lithium-vanadium hybrid BESS in the world, which combines the high-power of lithium-ion battery storage with heavy-cycling, non-degrading vanadium redox flow. Also part of the project are the UK’s largest public electric vehicle (EV) charging park and 60 residential ground source heat pump retrofits. Vanadium batteries are at a much earlier stage of commercialisation than lithium, making the ESO fundamentally a demonstrator project with multiple, complementary aims.

Ask the council and it is likely to talk about reducing CO2 emissions by boosting EV take-up, demonstrating the smart heat pumps’ potential for energy and cost-saving, and helping the grid’s efforts to decarbonise.

Project developer Pivot Power’s COO/ CTO Mikey Clark — perhaps unsurprisingly given his engineering background — was keener to talk about the underlying unique hybrid battery technology’s potential to capitalise on developments in the UK grid services market.

“We really want to test how a flow battery could be co-optimised into lithium-ion-type systems,” he tells PV Tech Power about the reasoning behind the project.

The BESS is already live and set to be fully operational and trading in the electricity markets in the coming weeks – the lithium-ion system is already – while the EV park will open to the public in Q2 2022. But even before any of that, the project has already delivered numerous firsts and superlatives.

As well as being the largest lithium-vanadium hybrid installed anywhere in the world, it has the largest vanadium flow battery system in the UK, and largest BESS optimised by an AI-enabled optimisation & trading engine (OTE) in the country to date, provided by optimisation specialist Habitat Energy.

The unique hybrid battery launch is noteworthy amidst a total reshaping of the market for providing services to National Grid, the UK’s electricity grid operator. Increased volatility due to growing renew- able intermittent generation, a saturation of the ancillary services market and new services for power producers and BESSs to bid for, means a myriad of potential ways its effectiveness can be demonstrated.

More locally, Oxford City Council is hoping Energy Superhub Oxford can reduce the city’s annual CO2 emissions by 10,000 tonnes in year one and 25,000 tonnes by 2032 — equivalent to 3-4% of the city’s total scope 1 emissions in 2019 — primarily through energy trading, providing a model for other cities looking to decarbonise their economies.

Timeline

Q2 2019: Planning and preparation begins on BESS, EV network and heat networkQ1 2020: EV procurement by council bodies beginsQ3 2020: Construction begins on heat pump networkQ4 2020: Construction begins on BESSQ2 2021: Construction begins on EV network; operation & evaluation starts on heat networkQ2 2021: Lithium-ion energised and begins trading in market; operation and evaluation begins on BESSQ3 2021: Construction complete on vanadium flow batteryQ4 2021: Vanadium flow battery energisedQ1 2022: Vanadium flow battery starts trading in marketQ2 2022: All heat pumps built; EV charging park to open to general publicQ2 2023: ESO fully operational after ramp-up period with evaluation of all three parts complete

Image: Pivot Power / Energy Superhub Oxford.

Launching the project and division of hybrid battery responsibilities

ESO’s story begins before the COVID-19 pandemic struck. It launched in April 2019 when planning and preparation processes kicked off. Construction on the BESS and heat pumps started a little over a year later while the EV station broke ground in the first quarter of last year.

The lithium and vanadium flow batteries were energised in July and December of 2021, respectively.

“The lithium-ion battery is trading in the market. The flow battery is live but not yet trading in the market, but we expect it to be there in the next few weeks,” Clark says.

The lithium battery is a 49.9MW one-hour system while the vanadium flow packs 2MW/5MWh and the system sits beside and connects to the Cowley National Grid substation on the southeast outskirts of the city. Project manager Tim Rose said in a webinar that the two battery systems will provide grid services separately for the first three to six months of them both being in the market.

A total £41m has been invested into delivering ESO of which £11.3m was a grant provided by Innovate UK to part-fund the activities of all consortium partners. Of the battery costs, 15% was for the vanadium flow with the remainder on the lithium system, site construction and grid connection, though Pivot wouldn’t be more specific.

Wärtsilä delivered the lithium system and will also control the entire BESS through its GEMS software and energy management system (EMS) platform. It will process operational data at its expertise centre in Trieste, Italy, and is working on three other similar UK projects with Pivot Power.

The vanadium flow system was supplied by Invinity Energy Systems while Habitat Energy is playing the role of trader and optimiser, providing instructions to the GEMS about what services the BESS should do based on market demands, while also maximising the lifetime of the asset, all through its AI machine learning-enabled OTE platform.

Habitat Energy’s head of UK business development Ralph Johnson says machine learning (ML) has a lot to offer energy storage assets like ESO’s which require the constant analysis of hundreds of different data points to get the most accurate forecasting of prices and market value.

“We have developed all our forecasting ML algorithms from the ground up. They take all that data and use it to forecast prices really effectively across different spaces. So day-ahead markets, intraday markets, the Balancing Mechanism, system price markets etc. And we then utilise those forecastswith our algorithmic dispatch platform or to inform our trading team,” he tells PV Tech Power.

He adds that its platform has mainly focused on 1/1.5-hour systems, so he sees a real learning opportunity for Habitat with this project too. But recent shocks to the system in the UK market have highlighted the need to combine algorithms and the human element, adds Jon Doughty, Habitat’s UK managing director.

Habitat and Invinity are both keen to emphasise their roles well before and well after the project’s launch, respectively.

Habitat provided revenue forecasts and commercial implications of certain designs and worked with Wärtsilä early on to ensure the BESS could enter markets as soon as possible. Invinity will continue to track systems remotely and assess individual subcomponents combined with site visits, says Ed Porter, business development director.

Invinity Energy’s Systems vanadium redox flow battery at Energy Superhub Oxford. Image: Invinity Energy Systems.

Unique potential in grid services and electricity trading market

All our interviewees agree that the hybrid battery system will give the ESO’s BESS versatility when going out into the merchant and ancillary services markets.

‘Merchant’ means operating in the electricity trading market without long-term contracted revenues from National Grid for things like frequency response.

“We didn’t want to rely on contracted revenues but instead want to go out to the market with a nearly 100% merchant model. That plays into getting the right tech into the stack in order to give us a lot of versatility,” Clark says. “The majority of the hub’s revenue will be from merchant as well as some ancillary services but, over time, a trend towards more and more merchant.”

He gave a specific example of how the hybrid BESS could tackle frequency response services in the ancillary market: “As most of the deviations from 50hz happen within a two-megawatt tolerance, a lot of those cycles can go through the Invinity battery, that doesn’t degrade like a lithium-ion one which can pick up anything big. This is one hypothesis that is really interesting to us and me as the CTO, given the number of cycles we could potentially take off,” he says.

Clark and the other consortium partners are reluctant to provide more specific examples at this point.

“To say exactly what markets and what benefit we can achieve from the asset is probably difficult at this stage,” says Johnson.

“Its ability to dispatch for longer durations, and to hold its state of charge with fewer concerns around asset degradation, gives us opportunities to potentially capture value across long periods of the day in the merchant space. So interestingly, periods where the market price shape is flatter (and less volatility exists) and you’re actually looking to capture more lower margin spreads over longer durations of time. That’s really an interesting opportunity where long-duration energy storage can add value,” he says.

“Combining that approach with the strategy we would employ to capture the value you can achieve in volatile conditions, where those spreads can be larger, across multiple power markets (day ahead, intra- day, Balancing Mechanism), but over much short time periods (30 mins to 1 hour) with the 50MW one-hour lithium ion battery is a really interesting challenge. Being able to access both sets of value with the same asset is a real positive for this project and something we’re really looking to investigate and explore.”

New pre-fault, higher-output ancillary services like dynamic regulation (DR) and dynamic moderation (DM) will be acces- sible for the vanadium flow battery thanks to its longer duration, Johnson and Porter both say.

It should be noted that Pivot’s more recent projects of similar power magnitude have two-hour lithium batteries. The business case has shifted towards two-hour systems since ESO was launched, Brent Iversen, Senior Business Development Manager at Wärtsilä Energy Business tells PV Tech Power.

“People in the UK market are still looking at between one and two-hour batteries and the business case debate is quite balanced, though I think the majority of developers are now starting to go for two-hour systems,” he adds.

Future

This project has come at an exciting time for the UK energy storage market. Data from Solar Media’s UK Battery Storage Project Database Report shows that the UK has a BESS pipeline totalling 25GW, of which 99% is lithium-ion systems and just under half already has planning permission approved. Today, 1.6GW is operational.

ESO is the first of up to 40 similar projects that Pivot Power is targeting across the UK which could total 2GW of energy storage, or 50MW each, all grid-connected. Clark says that all will have a similar power magnitude to ESO’s but it is the only one using a vanadium flow battery, for now, as “we are still waiting to see how the technology performs.”

The company is looking at a range of technologies and industries that can combine with its BESS projects. This could be renewable generation or even industries that could be directly powered by its batteries. The most obvious one is EV charging but BESS has the potential to help power light railways, for example.

Doing this would also have the effect of demonstrating more tangible positive results of BESS installations, with grid balancing and renewable load shifting far from the average person’s thought process.

The company’s target of 2GW is certainly ambitious and commendable, and if achieved it would account for 5-10% of the 20-40GW of energy storage the UK needs by 2050, according to National Grid’s modelling.

All involved will be hoping ESO delivers on all its promises, many of which it already has, and provides a model for other cities wanting to contribute to the decarbonisation of the UK’s energy sector.

This is an extract of an article from Volume 30 of PV Tech Power, our quarterly journal. You can buy individual issues digitally or in print, as well as subscribe to get every volume as soon as it comes out. PV Tech Power subscriptions are also included in some packages for our new PV Tech Premium service.

About the Author

Cameron Murray is a journalist for Energy-Storage.news and a contributing writer for PV Tech Power, here at Solar Media.

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‘Force majeure’: Delays impact Ameresco’s 2.1GWh California BESS project for utility SCE

An Ameresco solar PV project in San Joaquin County, California. Image: Ameresco.

An August deadline for commissioning three large-scale battery storage systems for California utility Southern California Edison (SCE) might be missed due to delays, clean energy development company Ameresco has said.

Ameresco, known for energy efficiency, renewable energy, battery energy storage systems (BESS) and other clean energy technologies, was announced as the developer of 537.5MW/2,150MWh of battery storage across three sites for the investor-owned utility (IOU) late last year. 

When the deal was announced, Energy-Storage.news noted that the timelines for completion handed to Ameresco and then by the company to its contracted system integrator and BESS supplier FlexGen were aggressive: work on all three of the four-hour duration systems needs to be substantially completed by 1 August 2022. 

SCE wanted the systems in place as quickly as possible to help mitigate the expected strain on the California grid of summer peak demands for electricity, which are challenging the state’s energy reliability. 

The developer said yesterday (10 April) that the COVID-19 lockdowns in several regions in China have had an “adverse impact” on the supply of the BESS equipment. Compounded by new Chinese policies on safe transport of lithium-ion batteries, which could cause further delays, Ameresco may not be able to complete the project in time.

Ameresco said it had reason to believe the delays amount to force majeure events, the legal term often heard during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 as it wreaked havoc on project timelines across energy storage and many other industries.       

According to the terms of the turnkey engineering, procurement, construction and maintenance agreement (EPCM Agreement) Ameresco signed with SCE, the force majeure clause would allow for the deadline to be extended without damages being owed for breach of contract, due to the delays being beyond the reasonable control of the contractor. 

Ameresco reaffirms 2022 guidance

SCE has been informed and negotiations are ongoing. Ameresco said various project milestones have been achieved despite challenging market dynamics, such as procurement of power electronics and construction activities ahead of the BESS equipment’s arrival are underway. 

The company is also trying to expedite shipping and handling, including through discussion with California’s Port of Long Beach.

In announcing its Q4 and full-year 2021 financial results in February, Ameresco said the SCE contract — the largest deal in the clean energy company’s history — drove a 36% uplift in quarterly revenues from its project activities. Shortly after that announcement, the company secured a US$262 million increase in its credit facility from lenders including Bank Of America to support work on the project for SCE, as well as fuel the company’s expansion.

Ameresco said yesterday that based on what it has observed of the situation in China, it does not expect the latest blow to impact previously offered revenue guidance for 2022 of US$1.83 billion to US$1.87 billion and adjusted EBITDA of between US$200 million to US$210 million.  

The battery storage industry has been hit by severe supply chain challenges based largely on the rapidly rising cost of lithium, which in simple terms have been caused by rapidly rising demand, particularly from the EV sector. 

These have been magnified greatly by the pandemic, which is affecting shipping and supply chains more generally. However, while Ameresco executives did refer to supply chain shortages in a conference call with analysts to explain its full-year and Q4 2021 financial results, this latest development appears to be more directly related to the current lockdown situation in China, based on what the company said yesterday.    

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Origis Places Order With First Solar for 750 MW of Thin-Film PV Modules

Origis Energy, a solar and energy storage developer, has placed an order for 750 MW DC of thin-film photovoltaic (PV) solar modules from First Solar Inc. The deal, which was booked prior to the release of First Solar’s Q4 and Full Year 2021 earnings in February, utilizes First Solar’s agile contracting approach and Origis will benefit from any advances in technology through 2024, when the Cadmium Telluride (CadTel) thin-film modules will be delivered to its projects across the United States.

“This 750 MW solar agreement builds on a long-term alliance between the First Solar and Origis teams,” says Samir Verstyn, chief investment officer and operations officer at Origis Energy. “Front and center is always our commitment to meet customer clean energy goals. This mission has been put to the test by the unprecedented headwinds impacting the solar industry. Such an environment makes it even more important to work with market partners who have consistently delivered. We applaud First Solar’s build out of its domestic PV solar manufacturing capacity.”

First Solar is investing $680 million in expanding America’s domestic PV solar manufacturing capacity by 3.3 GW annually by building its third U.S. manufacturing facility, located in Lake Township, Ohio. The new facility is expected to be commissioned in the first half of 2023 and when fully operational will scale the company’s Northwest Ohio footprint to a total annual capacity of 6 GW.

“At First Solar, we value long-term relationships with partners like Origis because they are based on trust and a respect for mutually-held values and principles,” states Georges Antoun, First Solar’s chief commercial officer. “At a time of unprecedented supply and pricing volatility across the solar industry, our ability to deliver and stand behind our commitments is a crucial differentiator that serves to strengthen relationships like these.”

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Sungrow bags third Israel BESS order in 2022 with 253MWh for Doral

Sungrow’s Liquid Cooled Energy Storage System. Image: Sungrow.

Solar PV inverter manufacturer Sungrow has signed a 253MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) contract with Doral Renewable Energy Resources Group, its third in Israel this year.

Sungrow’s energy storage division will supply a 66MW/253MWh – slightly under four hours’ duration – BESS to Doral, an Israel-based renewable energy and environmental infrastructure developer.

The DC-coupled liquid cooled energy storage system – the first in the country according to Sungrow – will be used at Doral’s solar-plus-storage projects. The company is the largest energy storage system (ESS) developer in Israel and has a 1.44GWh pipeline being delivered as part of the government’s Solar Storage I & II tenders.

Yaki Noyman, CEO of Doral Energy said: “With Sungrow’s solution we finalised our procurement needs for PV + Storage Tender number 1 and made a first step working with Sungrow to allow our global storage effort to rely on key suppliers.”

Roni Brandes, Head of Storage, Projects and Procurement of Doral added: “Sungrow’s DC-coupled design as well as the liquid cooled technology present competitive solutions for the PV plus Storage Tenders, making Doral’s hybrid plants a landmark project throughout the region.”

Sungrow says “…the DC-coupled design is streamlined and doesn’t need an additional power conversion system (PCS) and a medium-voltage station, which is cost-saving for the project.”

It is the Heifei, China-headquartered company’s third project announcement in Israel so far this year. Last month, it revealed a 64MWh BESS order at one of the country’s largest power plants to help it lower emissions and improve efficiency. At the turn of the year, it announced a big 430MWh order from Doral’s competitor Enlight Renewable Energy.

Israel is targeting a renewable generation portion for its electricity of 30% by 2030. The 12GW of solar PV needed for that would require 2GW/8GWh of energy storage according to national electricity authority PUA.

It recently concluded two larger solar-plus-storage tenders that Doral referred to, the second in 2020, which totalled 777MW of PV and 3,072MWh of energy storage. Doral was the largest solar PV winner in the second auction, details of which were provided by a PUA representative and consultancy Clean Horizon in a recent Energy-storage.news webinar in late 2020.

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Flow battery player Invinity signs MOU with Korean conglomerate Hyosung

Hyosung Heavy Industries’ Takeshi Yokota, President and CEO and Sung Hoon Ahn, Executive President with Invinity’s Larry Zulch, CEO, and Johnson Chiang, Executive Chairman, Asia. Image: Invinity Energy Systems.

Vanadium flow battery supplier Invinity Energy Systems has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the power and industrial systems arm of Korean conglomerate Hyosung Corporation to commercialise its batteries in South Korea and elsewhere.

Invinity announced the non-binding MOU with Hyosung Heavy Industries on Friday, 8 April. It comes after Hyosung successfully completed a testing and validation programme of a 200kWh battery energy storage system (BESS) supplied by Invinity in 2020.

“We have been impressed with the capabilities and operation of Invinity’s vanadium flow batteries during our testing programme,” said Takeshi Yokota, President and CEO at Hyosung Heavy Industries.

This means that the Invinity’s BESS has been validated as a suitable addition to Hyosung’s portfolio of projects globally. The MOU could result in Hyosung being the exclusive solution provider for Invinity’s VS3 products in Korea with non-exclusive rights to sell Invinity’s products elsewhere.

Invinity said that Korea is an attractive market for energy storage due to its high per capita energy use, constrained grid infrastructure and significant government support for both renewable and energy storage projects. But there have been a number of high-profile lithium-ion battery figures in existing storage systems in the country which has led to increased scrutiny on safety.

Combined with a wider growing interest in long duration technology, this has, according to Invinity, “..created important opportunities for non-flammable and durable technologies such as vanadium flow batteries”.

THE MOU is targeting large-scale public procurement tenders and may also result Hyosung manufacturing parts of VS3 products.

Larry Zulch, CEO of Invinity said: “We are thrilled to be developing a close relationship with Hyosung that has the potential to span supply, support, and even manufacturing in South Korea and other markets around the world. This new relationship supports our corporate strategy of building exclusive relationships with strong partners in important markets where we do not currently have a presence.”

The announcement appears to have been received positively by the markets. Invinity’s share price on the London Stock Exchange closed 12.5% up on Friday, 8 April, compared to the previous day’s close.

Hyosung provides full BESS solutions to customers, including power conversion system (PCS) and energy management system (EMS). It is in the process of concluding a 48MW/192MWh BESS order from South African grid operator and utility ESKOM and expanded into Europe last year with a 50MW project in the UK.

Hyosung has not revealed the underlying technology of the four-hour BESS for South Africa. As Energy-storage.news wrote recently, lithium-ion is still largely price-competitive with flow batteries at up to eight hours of duration.

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State Grid of China, Singapore Power pull out of hybrid renewables and long-duration storage project in Australia

Concept art for how the Aurora project is envisaged. Image: 1414 Degrees.

An energy infrastructure group co-owned by State Grid Corporation of China and Singapore Power has decided not to invest in a hybrid power plant project in South Australia. 

Jemena Group, which operates in the Australian energy market, is 60% owned by State Grid and 40% Singapore Power. Jemena has decided to focus investment into its existing assets rather than the unregulated energy market, which the Aurora Energy Project would participate in.

The project would include a 140MW/280MWh battery energy storage system (BESS), 70MW of solar PV and a 150MW concentrated solar power (CSP) plant with long-duration molten silicon thermal energy storage. 

Aurora’s developer, 1414 Degrees, is an Australian tech company which has developed the molten silicon thermal energy storage tech to be used at the site and holds a patent for it, claiming it can be sized to provide tens to thousands of megawatt-hours of storage.

The company’s name come from the temperature (in centigrade) to which the silicon is heated to be able to store energy and output it at “maximum efficiency”. The first prototype was demonstrated in 2016 and the company floated an IPO in 2018.

1414 Degrees owns all rights to the development of Aurora through a subsidiary. The tech company is listed on the Australian Share Exchange (ASX) and made an announcement to the market on 5 April that Ovida Infrastructure, itself a subsidiary of Jemena, has halted investment. 

Nonetheless, 1414 Degrees said it remains focused on the project, near South Australia’s Port Augusta. Development Approval has been granted by authorities for the solar PV, BESS and CSP as well as connection to transmission network operator ElectraNet’s 275kV transmission line. 

The project will be built in phases, with the BESS and solar PV to come first. 1414 Degrees is now working to secure a connection agreement and begin development on an initial 140MW/140MWh of BESS and expects a final investment decision to be made before the end of this year. 

Ovida had signed an Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with 1414 Degrees last year, announced to the market in December. Following its change of heart through what 1414 Degrees had been told was a “change in its strategic priorities,” the MoU, which was exclusive, has been terminated and negotiations of final binding agreements called off. 

1414 Degrees said it would be receiving a termination payment worth AU$100,000 (US$74,336) and retains previously made payments from Ovida including an initial AU$300,000 payment. 

“We thank Ovida for the contribution they have made over the past few months with us to further progress the Aurora project. The joint work has only reinforced our belief that Aurora is a world class renewable energy site that is at an advanced stage following several years of investment and approvals,” 1414 Degrees CEO Matt Squire said.

Squire, a former oil and gas industry executive who was hired by the thermal storage company in July 2021, added that development will continue through 1414 Dgrees’ Silicon Aurora subsidiary.

If Aurora does go ahead, it will be connected to Australia’s National Electricity Market (NEM), where it can play for multiple merchant revenue sources, including frequency control ancillary services (FCAS), the NEM’s market for frequency regulation.

The first solar-plus-storage stage of its construction will provide renewable energy generation, plus high power frequency regulation services from its short-duration BESS, while the 1414 Degrees thermal energy storage added in stage 2 can provide long-duration, firmed energy which could aim for opportunities with higher electricity prices.

In the third stage, 1414 Degrees wants to fully develop the 1100 hectare parcel of land — for which it has a 40-year land lease from South Australia’s state government — into a hybrid renewables and storage facility, adding more capacity, including CSP.

In other words, the first stage of the project will target the lower hanging fruit of high revenues from the BESS, monetising the transmission grid connection it will share with the solar PV plant. Then it will target deeper market opportunities as they develop and 1414 Degrees says it wants its subsidiary to manage and own transmission connections so that it can earn revenues from the multiple assets to be deployed.  

Energy-Storage.news wrote about the project in 2019 as 1414 Degrees bought development rights from US developer SolarReserve for just AU$2 million.

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Latest Massachusetts Energy Report Highlights State’s High Clean Energy Wages

Gov. Charlie Baker

Massachusetts Clean Energy Center’s (MassCEC) 2021 Massachusetts Clean Energy Industry Report highlights that over 101,000 clean energy workers are employed in the Commonwealth as of December 2020, an increase of 68% since 2010. Additionally, in 2020, the clean energy industry contributed $13.7 billion to the Gross State Product (GSP), accounting for roughly 2.4% of the Commonwealth’s GSP.

The industry’s contribution to GSP has increased by 50% since 2012, outpacing the 31% growth in the overall Massachusetts GSP during the same time. The report also found that Massachusetts ranks number one in the country for median clean energy wages and found that 61% of clean energy establishments are small businesses with 10 employees or fewer. Energy efficiency, demand management, and clean heating and cooling make up the largest portion of Massachusetts clean energy jobs.

“With our continued investments and support, Massachusetts continues to be a national leader in driving the clean energy economy,” says Gov. Charlie Baker. “The Commonwealth is committed to being net zero as a state by 2050, and the strength of the clean energy industry in Massachusetts will ensure we meet these goals cost effectively while delivering economic benefits to all of Massachusetts.”

“Through our continued investments in education, innovation, and entrepreneurship, Massachusetts has built a vibrant clean energy industry,” comments Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito. “Our administration is committed to supporting this industry and ensuring that it continues to contribute jobs, business development and economic opportunities in cities and towns across the Commonwealth.”

Primarily due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the report also found the state’s clean energy sector experienced a decrease in clean energy jobs of approximately 12,800 jobs through December 2020 for the first time since 2010. Similar to the statewide labor market, the report identified that most clean energy jobs were lost between March and May of 2020, with employers beginning to hire more in the second half of 2020. Early estimates for 2021 reflect that the industry continues to rebound, expanding by an estimated 3.9%. While the report found modest gains of 8% in wind energy jobs in 2020, the offshore wind industry is poised to see unprecedented growth in the next few years. In 2022, the first large-scale offshore wind project in the United States, Vineyard Wind, will begin construction off the South Coast of Massachusetts, with additional projects to follow.

“The Baker-Polito Administration has a long-standing commitment to invest in the clean energy sector while implementing policies that will protect our planet and create the green workforce of the future,” states Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Kathleen Theoharides. “Led by first in the nation offshore wind projects, the Commonwealth is poised to generate gigawatts of clean affordable electricity and thousands of good paying jobs.”

“There is no question that 2020 was a difficult year that impacted many industries, including clean energy,” mentions MassCEC CEO Jennifer Daloisio. “However, the clean energy industry in Massachusetts is resilient, largely due to the investments the Baker-Polito Administration continues to make in order to effectively transition our state to a brighter future that spurs economic growth, promotes equity, and creates opportunities for all residents of the Commonwealth.”

As the Covid-19 pandemic posed ongoing challenges to individuals, communities and industries, Massachusetts set its sights on the future, enacting comprehensive climate legislation. An Act Creating a Next-Generation Roadmap for Massachusetts Climate Policy (the 2021 Climate Act) committed the state to achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and a 50% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions over 1990 levels by 2030.

“This is an encouraging first step for much-needed climate legislation in Massachusetts, and we’re glad to see the Senate include key provisions for solar deployment in the bill,” says David Gahl, senior director of state affairs for the Northeast for the Solar Energy Industries Association. “In addition to expanded exemptions to the state’s solar net metering cap, the bill requires the Department of Energy Resources to recommend the design of a successor to the current SMART program with compensation based on the immense value that solar brings to the electric grid.

Additionally, in October 2021, Gov. Baker filed legislation, An Act to Power Massachusetts’ Clean Energy Economy, which would direct $750 million in a new Clean Energy Investment Fund at MassCEC to scale its efforts in supporting clean energy innovation and job training, significantly expanding Massachusetts’s national leadership on clean energy and climate. Specifically, the legislation would fund grants, loans, equity investments, contracts and other forms of economic support for the advancement of clean energy technologies to commonwealth-based investors, entrepreneurs and institutions that are involved in the clean energy industry.

It supports the formation, growth, expansion and retention of Massachusetts’ leading clean energy businesses, institutions, and projects. In addition, the act supports public higher education institutions and vocational-technical education institutions as they create and enhance workforce development and technical training programs. It will support research and development, including the interrelationship between clean energy infrastructure and existing natural habitats, ecosystems and dependent species.

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