UNM ME 217 Energy, Environment & Society. Renewable Energy and the Need for Energy Storage. November 8, 2011 Steve Willard, P.E

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1 UNM ME 217 Energy, Environment & Society Renewable Energy and the Need for Energy Storage November 8, 2011 Steve Willard, P.E

2 Renewable Energy and the Need for Energy Storage Where we get our energy from, constraints t and the mandates for the future Rules what Utilities have to do to keep the Energy Grid operating Impacts of Renewables Need for Storage Solutions - What s available - Whats being done

3 s The US Energy Grid Current Snapshot Transmission Network very interconnected Generation Assets-mostly relying on fossil based resources

4 What's Changing? Drive to Renewables

5 Mandates for Renewable Energy - Changing the Mix of Resources

6 New Mexico s Renewable Portfolio Standard 3,000 NM RPS % of retail load % % 2,500 2,000 NM RPS 1,500 Distributed Generation 1,000 Breakdown or Carve outs % of total RPS % - GWh

7 Current Net Electricity Generation by Energy Energy Source Net Electricity Generation (GWh) Percent of Total Net Generation Coal 2,000, Petroleum liquids a 31, Petroleum coke 14, Natural gas 877, Other gases b 11, Nuclear 806, Hydroelectric 248, Other renewables c 124, Hidden Costs of Energy: Unpriced Consequences of Energy Production and Use (2010), National Academies Press In a general sense this has to change to 20% by 2020

8 Rules of the Game Accommodating Renewables is not easy Resources have to match load always Transmission i Level High Voltage Federal (NERC) Jurisdiction Mistakes can cascade and cause big problems refer to the interconnected t Transmission i Networ Straying from this invokes serious penalties ($M enforced by Federal Regulators) Customer Loads are very sensitive (and growing more sensitive) and have to be served with quality power Distribution Level Lower Voltages NMPRC Jurisdiction

9 Key Rule Load must match output of generation resources 24/7/365/86400

10 Wind Variability Transmission Level Impacts Wind Farm Output Area Control Error (ACE). 10/16/2003 9:41:18 AM Hour(s) 10/17/2003 9:41:18 AM NERC CPS-2: The average ACE for at least 90% of a clock-ten-minute periods during a calendar month must be within a specific limit. PNM s current limit is 38 MW. ACE deviates by more than 40 MW as a result of rapid changes in wind power output, affecting CPS-2 for this sample month (average CPS-2 was still above 90%) 10

11 How the Match is Made Resources Used to Match Load Coal Resources have to be turned down

12 Solar PV Variability - Distribution Level Impacts Prosperity Energy Storage 11/5-6/2011 A i l 1MW PV A single 1MW PV resource (distributed generation) can push a feeder into high penetration

13 Potential Solution to Renewable Intermittency Match Load to Resource Shape the Load to Resource Load Modification - Invoke Real Time Pricing (Smart Grid) Load Reduction Shape the Resource to the Load Curtail Renewables Energy Storage

14 Storage Types Batteries Multiple types of chemistries - Lead Acid - Lithium Ion Thermal - Flow Batteries - Sodium Sulfur - Others Ice Chilled water/hot water Molten Salt (CSP application) Flywheels Supercapacitors/Ultracapacitors Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) Pumped Hydro

15 Storage Costs

16 Battery Storage Numerous Chemistries Emerging some being Substantiated Lithium Based ZN Air Liqud Metal Zn BR NaS Va Redox Advancements from Traditional Advanced Lead Acid

17 Compressed Air Energy Storage Large Transmission scale storage Requires appropriate geology to support

18 What s being done? PNM/UNM/EPRI Smart Grid Demo Feeder Modeling Communication/control system architecture PNM/UNM/DOE Prosperity Energy Storage One of 16 DOE Smart Grid Storage Demonstration Projects

19 PNM/DOE Smart Grid Demonstration Objectives Create a dispatchable, renewables-based peaking resource Combine PV and storage at a substation to achieve a minimum of 15% peak-load reduction on an associated distribution feeder Demonstrate that this combination can mitigate voltage-level level fluctuations as well as enable load shifting Quantify and refine the associated performance requirements, operating practices, and cost:benefit, particularly for regions well-suited for distributed generation Generate, collect, analyze and share resultant data Enable distributed solutions that reduce GHG emissions through the expanded use of renewables

20 Modeling Key to Field Success UNM Base Effort Utilizing Leading Edge Distribution System Models Allows understanding of control methodologies Allows quicker assessment of benefits Allows results to be transferable to the Utility Industry

21 Feeder to be Modeled Normally Open switch to Sewer Plant 14 Sewer Plant Substation Feeder 14 PNM installed PV + Battery Storage Normally closed switch to Studio 14 Normally closed switch To Studio Substation- Feeder 14 Switchgear Fraunhoffer Solar Test Facility Studio Substation Feeder 14 Phase 1 Residential Residential (Under Construction) Town Center Albuquerque Studios Site for MdS/NEDO commercial Energy Efficient building

22 Load shifting algorithms Several strategies for load shifting: Set time charge/ set time discharge Estimation of peak load ½ day ahead Estimation of PV energy production based on the weather report and other information Estimation based on TOD/pricing info 1-1½ day ahead

23 Modeling: Shifting algorithm

24 Prosperity Energy Storage Project Features

25 Schematic of the Prosperity System 835kVA, 750kW Grid Tied Inverter BESS Master Controll er BES System supplied by EPM/Ecoult Fixed Voltage 800 VDC (+/ 400VDC) 500kW Central Inverter 500kW DC Converter with Power Regulator 250kW DC Converter with Power Regulator Power Smoothing 500kW Containerized VRLA UltraBatteries (2 x CABS) Peak Shifting 990 kwhr Containerized Advanced Carbon VRLA Battery (6 x CABS) 500kWp Solar PV Array

26 Details Data Acquisition System Specification/Engineering Archtecture Diagram

27 Applying Storage Commissioning Data Shifting and Smoothing Batteries Commissioned and dispatching to grid - data from Saturday 10/15/11 Data set from 9/22-9/23

28 Next Steps - Implementing Test Plans Algorithm Development e e Shifting coded V1 in place will test various inputs and filters throughout test period Smoothing data structure assembled to align next day forecast with historical load/price history extensive data correlation of historical price/load history completed Result forecasted to be multi-variant /optimization based algorithm extensive effort start simple and grow in complexity Test Plans Aligned to seasonal load and PV output First of five test plans being initiated Smoothing Oct through Dec 2013 Peak Shaving winter and summer peaking period Firming summer 2012 Arbitrage Shoulder periods throughout test period All of the above summer 2013