All in: Utility PG&E signs energy storage deals totaling 165 MW
  The   most recent contracts, which still need to be approved by California   regulators, are part of a state-mandated goal of adding 580 MW of   storage by 2020.
  December 6, 2017   Frank Andorka
      Energy Storage      Markets      Policy      California 
     Imperial Irrigation District
  Even   if it’s part of an effort to meet a state-mandated goal, the 165 MW in   energy-storage commitments Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E)   has made is an impressive one-swoop number.
  On Monday, the   California utility submitted six energy storage contracts to the   California Public Utilities Commission for approval as part of its   efforts to meet the state-mandated goal of adding 580 MW of storage by   2020. If these contracts are approved, PG&E will have already   reached 42% of its energy-storage goal.
  The utility said it believes around 33% of its retail electric deliveries will be from renewable sources by the end of the year.
  While   the flashiest name on the list of companies that were awarded  contracts  was Tesla, more than half of the projects – 51% – went to  Enel Green  Power or a subsidiary. EDF Renewable Energy won the only  contract – 10  MW – for behind-the-retail-meter storage. The other five  contracts were  on the utility side of the meter.
  Martin  Wyspianski , PG&E  senior director for energy portfolio procurement  and policy, said he was  pleased with the progress PG&E has made  toward meeting California’s  renewable energy and storage goals.
  “As  our clean energy  portfolio grows, so does the importance of storage  technology,”   Wyspianski said. “These contracts and the storage  capacity they  represent will help us better integrate our growing  renewable generation  sources, and bring increased reliability to the  grid. They are an  important milestone in our progress toward a clean  energy future.”
  The  first of the six projects, all of which are  lithium-ion battery  systems, will come online in November 2020. All the  storage projects  must be operational by 2024 and range in capacity  from 1 MW to 50 MW  each.
   pv-magazine.com |