Difference between revisions of "Energy Storage 101/Economics"

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Regardless of the situation, at a high level, energy storage can be utilized across the grid in the following ways:
Regardless of the situation, at a high level, energy storage can be utilized across the grid in the following ways:
* '''Capacity Resource:''' On the electric grid, capacity is synonymous with power, and to be a capacity resource is to provide power that is reliable and firm, so that it can be dispatched when needed. For example, energy storage can charge itself during times when there's excess capacity and essentially become a capacity resource for times when load is peaking in a particular location or region.
* '''Capacity Resource:''' On the electric grid, capacity is synonymous with power, and to be a capacity resource is to provide power that is reliable and firm, so that it can be dispatched when needed. For example, energy storage can charge itself during times when there's excess capacity and essentially become a capacity resource for times when load is peaking in a particular location or region.
* '''Flexibility Resource:''' Energy storage has the ability to increase (charge), or decrease (discharge), the total load on the grid at different times very quickly. This characteristic can be strategically leveraged to decrease ramp rate requirements and stresses on traditional assets during times when high generation ramp rates are required.
* '''Flexibility Resource:''' Energy storage has the ability to increase (charge), or decrease (discharge), the total load on the grid at different times very quickly. This characteristic can be strategically leveraged to decrease ramp rate requirements and stresses on traditional assets during times when high generation ramp rates are required. For example, in the early afternoon when grid load demand is low and renewable generation is at is peaking, traditional generators must quickly ramp down to prevent overgeneration on the system. During this time, energy storage can charge itself with excess renewable energy and discharge the energy later in the afternoon as renewables ramp down and load demand increases.
* '''Backup Resource:''' Energy reserve
* '''Backup Resource:''' Energy reserve
* '''Power Quality Resource:''' Voltage and VAR control
* '''Power Quality Resource:''' Voltage and VAR control

Revision as of 16:27, 22 November 2021


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Introduction to Grid Services

The economics of energy storage is reliant on the services and markets that exist on the electrical grid which energy storage can participate in. These value streams differ by region, electrical system, and grid domain (i.e. transmission, distribution, customer-sited).

Storage can be deployed at any level throughout the power grid, from the generation and transmission level down to the customer level.

Regardless of the situation, at a high level, energy storage can be utilized across the grid in the following ways:

  • Capacity Resource: On the electric grid, capacity is synonymous with power, and to be a capacity resource is to provide power that is reliable and firm, so that it can be dispatched when needed. For example, energy storage can charge itself during times when there's excess capacity and essentially become a capacity resource for times when load is peaking in a particular location or region.
  • Flexibility Resource: Energy storage has the ability to increase (charge), or decrease (discharge), the total load on the grid at different times very quickly. This characteristic can be strategically leveraged to decrease ramp rate requirements and stresses on traditional assets during times when high generation ramp rates are required. For example, in the early afternoon when grid load demand is low and renewable generation is at is peaking, traditional generators must quickly ramp down to prevent overgeneration on the system. During this time, energy storage can charge itself with excess renewable energy and discharge the energy later in the afternoon as renewables ramp down and load demand increases.
  • Backup Resource: Energy reserve
  • Power Quality Resource: Voltage and VAR control


Transmission-Connected and Bulk Energy Storage

Distribution-Connected Energy Storage

Customer-Sited Energy Storage

Cost Components and Trends

Clarity on costs is a critical step in energy storage economics. Economic analysis of energy storage systems need to clearly articulate what major components are included in the scope of cost. The schematic below shows the major components of an energy storage system. System components consist of batteries, power conversion system, transformer, switchgear, and monitoring and control. A proper economic analysis identifies the cost associated with each of these components or provides reasoning for exclusion.

Source: EPRI. Understanding the components of energy storage systems is a critical first step to understanding energy storage economics.

In addition to identification of major components, there are key BESS services that occur throughout the system's lifetime that need to be accounted for in an economic analysis. The left side of the graphic below shows the beginning of life stacked costs for battery energy storage systems. As shown in the upfront owners' costs, the largest upfront cost is the battery itself. One important consideration given the significant battery cost are the sizing assumptions that are used for cost estimates. Of the procured energy, a fraction of that energy is delivered to the customer and some fraction is reserved for safety and performance margins, degradation overbuild, AC/DC losses, or is electrochemically inaccessible. Additionally, the graphic shows costs of services throughout BESS operation. These services include operating expenses, fixed system maintenance, and decommissioning and end of life services.

Source: EPRI. "Battery Energy Storage Lifecycle Cost Assessment Summary 2020"- A clear scope of supply is needed to determine owner costs. This includes services and equipment.[1]

Other generation resource costs are often communicated on a $/kW basis, but energy storage has both power and energy components and the normalized cost will vary with duration. This is highlighted in two examples below where it's clear that the longer duration system has a higher cost per kW of power.

  • Source: EPRI. 4 Hour Duration System.
  • Source: EPRI. 2 Hour Duration System.

The image below shows lithium ion cost projections from a 2020 EPRI cost study. As demonstrated in the two examples above, the longer duration systems, as of 2020, are more expensive per kW than the shorter duration systems. However, EPRI's cost study projects that the cost per kW of 8 hour duration lithium ion systems is decreasing at a faster rate than 2 hour lithium ion systems.

Source: EPRI. "Lithium Ion Installed Cost Projections": Battery Energy Storage Lifecycle Cost Assessment Summary 2020


Grid Services and Uses

Energy storage has many capabilities:

  • Capacity Resource: Firm power
  • Flexibility Resource: Fast response and ramping
  • Backup Resource: Energy reserve
  • Power Quality Resource: 4-quadrant watts and VARs


The table below list the grid services energy storage can support.
Es101app1.png
Transmission-connected storage may provide:

  • Generation capacity (resource adequacy)
  • Black start
  • Virtual transmission capacity
  • Energy time-shifting
  • Ancillary services


Distribution-connected storage may provide:

  • Virtual distribution capacity
  • Enhance power quality
  • Resiliency / backup power / microgrid
  • Upstream transmission impacts – either costs or benefits


Customer-connected storage may provide:

  • Customer bill savings: Retail time-of-use tariff energy shifting, Demand charge management
  • Backup power
  • Upstream T&D impacts – either costs or benefits


Modeling Energy Storage

Challenges to modeling energy storage include:

  • Storage is not yet a common grid asset
  • Rules and regulations are still evolving
  • Benefit stacking is appealing, but is it possible?
    • More services = more value
    • More services = more requirements
    • Can these requirements be satisfied?
  • Storage value analyses are site-specific
  • Complex co-optimization between storage technologies, objectives, and constraints


Understanding Service Compatibility

  • Energy Storage Services Hierarchy
    • Energy storage services only flow from bottom up, customer storage may provide distribution and transmission-level services, but transmission storage can NOT provide distribution or customer services
  • Reliability vs. Economic
    • Reliability takes priority (e.g. T&D deferral higher priority than market services)
    • Long-term planning constraints take priority to economic optimization and constraints roll-up; Multi-year >> Annual >> Monthly >> Day-ahead >> Real-time
  • Local vs. System Level
    • Local objectives generally supersede system objectives when there is a conflict (e.g. T&D deferral higher priority than resource adequacy) although should be designed so that reliability services never conflict

Resources


EPRI Tools to Support Valuation Modeling
StorageVET
DER-VET
Reports

Resource Access Level
EPRI Solar Plus Storage Cost Assessment and Design Considerations: Executive Summary (2019) Publicly Available
EPRI Energy Storage Technology and Cost Assessment: Executive Summary (2018) Publicly Available
ESIC Energy Storage Cost Tool and Template Publicly Available
Energy Storage Valuation in California: Policy Planning and Market Information Relevant to the StorageVET Model Publicly Available

References