SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) has successfully completed a
technology demonstration project to explore the performance of battery
storage systems participating in California’s electricity markets.
The project, funded by California’s Electric Program Investment Charge
(EPIC) program, began in 2014 and utilized PG&E’s 2 megawatt (MW)
Vaca-Dixon and 4 MW Yerba Buena battery storage systems to provide
energy and ancillary services in California Independent System Operator
(CAISO) markets. The Vaca-Dixon system is the first battery storage
resource in California to participate in the market. The Yerba Buena
system is the first battery storage resource to both participate in the
market and serve a reliability function supporting PG&E’s distribution
system in the event of a disturbance or outage.
PG&E shared results of the project in a comprehensive
report, which includes detailed overviews of the market
participation process and the unique challenges to operating battery
resources in the electricity markets.
“We see great potential for energy storage systems to benefit
Californians. Through this demonstration PG&E has addressed multiple
barriers and gained incredible operational experience with battery
storage. We’ve identified and resolved challenging implementation
issues, established a new interconnection process, and developed an
automated dispatch system that will serve as a platform for continued
market participation,” said Kevin Dasso, vice president, Electric Asset
Management, PG&E.
Key project accomplishments include:
-
Developing and deploying a scalable technology platform to automate
the response of current and future PG&E battery storage resources to
CAISO.
-
Quantifying financial performance of battery systems in California
energy markets.
-
Identifying opportunities and challenges associated with operating
dual-use energy storage systems.
The project also included tasks to put in place processes and technology
to enable the efficient operation of battery storage resources in the
markets.
“When we started this project, there were no batteries participating in
the CAISO markets, so the only information available about battery
market performance came from economic models. So much goes into
deploying a completely new type of technology in the CAISO market, and
PG&E developed new workflows and procedures, and a new IT technology
platform to make it all work. We’ve successfully tested how batteries
actually perform in the markets, substantially helping to inform the
conversation about energy storage in California. Now that we have put
these elements in place, it will be much easier to bring future battery
systems online,” said Manho Yeung, senior director, Transmission Asset
Management, PG&E.
In 2017, PG&E will utilize the Yerba Buena battery, located in the San
Jose foothills, for another EPIC technology demonstration involving the
coordination of 3rd-party distributed energy resources (DERs)
-- such as residential and commercial solar -- using smart inverters and
battery storage controlled through a distributed energy resource
management system (DERMS).
The full report can be downloaded from PG&E’s EPIC Program website: https://www.pge.com/pge_global/common/pdfs/about-pge/environment/what-we-are-doing/electric-program-investment-charge/PGE-EPIC-Project-1.01.pdf
About PG&E
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E
Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is one of the largest combined natural gas
and electric energy companies in the United States. Based in San
Francisco, with more than 20,000 employees, the company delivers some of
the nation’s cleanest energy to nearly 16 million people in Northern and
Central California. For more information, visit www.pge.com/
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Source: Pacific Gas and Electric Company