UK could reach 12 GW storage capacity within five years, report finds
  Lessons  learned from solar failures could propel battery storage market to 12  GW by 2021, argues report by All-Party Parliamentary Group on Energy  Storage, which implores government to be “on the front foot” when it  comes to seizing ways to ensure energy security for the nation.
  December 7, 2017  Ian Clover
     Distributed Storage    Energy Storage    microgrid     minigrid    Utility Scale Storage    United Kingdom 
     The  U.K.'s storage sector has enjoyed a series of notable milestones in  2017, and could - under the right conditions - assume a global leading  position, says a new report. Image: Anesco
  By  2021, the U.K. may well be on the outside of the EU looking in  (although protracted Brexit talks currently show little sign of  clambering above the morass of red tape), but the nation could be a  world leader in energy storage deployment by then – provided the  government exhibits hitherto-unseen levels of forward planning, argues a  new report by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Energy  Storage.
  According to the report, the U.K. could have 12 GW of  subsidy-free battery storage deployed nationwide by 2021 if the  government can learn the lessons of the solar industry’s growth  trajectory by carefully supporting policies and measures designed to  deliver greater energy security to the country.
  The report stresses that the capacity for cost reduction of battery storage technologies should not be underestimated in  the way that solar PV was.  As solar costs tumbled, the government – which had introduced generous  FITs to encourage the uptake of PV – panicked and prematurely stripped  away much of the support for solar .
  The APPG report states that  storage and solar share many similar characteristics, chiefly that both  technologies enjoy massive and sustained cost reductions the more  capacity is deployed and embraced. Equally, the general public is  largely supportive of energy storage in the same way that  solar remains a much-loved energy source.
  These  synergies should act as guiding principles to government to ensure that  storage support is nuanced, realistic and free from the types of policy  inconsistency that so spooked solar, said the report.
  In 2011,  energy regulator Ofgem estimated that solar PV deployment in the U.K.  would reach 7 GW by 2030. In fact, the nation reached 12 GW by 2016.  Accurately forecasting renewable growth has proven a rather poisoned  chalice, but the APPG report simply implores government to become eager  students of history and avoid the same mistakes with storage – a  disruptive technology that holds immense promise in  expediting the U.K.’s green energy transition and shoring up its energy independence.
  “Significant  battery storage deployment is possible if the government keeps to the  targets and timelines it has already set for encouraging electricity  system flexibility,” urged APPG chair Peter Aldous MP. “12 GW of battery  storage would improve the U.K.’s energy security, would help us  maximize our energy self-sufficiency, and empower consumers across the  country as they are more able to manage their bills and take personal  action to reduce carbon emissions.
  “Such a significant amount of  battery storage deployment would also support the government’s ambitions  to develop the U.K. into a battery manufacturing powerhouse, evidenced  in the Faraday Challenge funding announcements last week. Battery  manufacturing would create new jobs and exportable expertise  post-Brexit.”
  Nina Skorupska, chief executive of the Renewable  Energy Association (REA), added that the lessons from solar and wind  need to be ingested by government ministers to help ensure similar  missteps are not taken with storage.
  “The technology and  deployment patterns for battery storage and solar PV are similar, and  this report is intended to drive big thinking and put the UK on the  front foot, rather than react after-the-fact,” Skorupska said.
  The  APPG report looks at a range of factors, including projections for  battery cost decline and proposed policy changes from the Department for  Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), the energy regulator  Ofgem, and National Grid, and lays out three scenarios for battery  storage deployment by the end of 2021. That 12 GW figure is the most  optimistic of the scenarios, with the authors of the report stressing  that the more realistic goal is a deployment of 8 GW of storage  capacity.
  Under the fledgling Faraday Challenge, the British government does at least appear to have put its money where its mouth is,  funding a series of promising battery research ventures at universities and institutes across the country in recent weeks.
  pv-magazine.com |