A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Sep 19, 2016

Southern California Utility Buys 80 Megawatts Of Battery Storage From Tesla Following Natural Gas Storage Methane Leak

Just as we have learned from the internet, the notion that there is one source or solution for any problem is delusional. And when it comes to the environment, the alternatives are increasingly alternative. JL

Megan Geuss reports in ars technica:

Regulators ordered Southern California Edison to invest in utility-scale battery networks after natural gas provider SoCal Gas leaked 1.6 million pounds of methane into the atmosphere when a well ruptured at its Aliso Canyon Natural Gas Storage Facility.
Tesla announced that it had been chosen “through a competitive process” to supply utility company Southern California Edison with 20 MW (or 80 MWh) of battery storage. In May, regulators ordered Southern California Edison to invest in utility-scale battery networks after natural gas provider SoCal Gas leaked 1.6 million pounds of methane into the atmosphere when a well ruptured at its Aliso Canyon Natural Gas Storage Facility.
The Aliso Canyon leak was the second-largest methane leak in US history, but it was far more damaging to the environment than the largest methane release, which happened in Texas in 2004. The Texas methane leak occurred when a natural gas storage facility collapsed, but a subsequent fire turned much of the escaping methane into carbon dioxide as it burned up. Carbon dioxide, while a pollutant, is considered less polluting than methane, which is a much more potent greenhouse gas in the short-term.Last May, Tesla announced its intentions to sell stationary storage batteries in addition to its electric vehicles. The company now sells two stationary battery products: the Powerwall battery, meant for homeowners, and the Powerpack battery network, meant for business and industry. The batteries are being built at Tesla’s Gigafactory, a $5 billion factory outside of Reno, Nevada, that has been slowly opening its lines to daily operation.
The battery and electric car company said that it would deliver the 80MWh Powerpack system before the end of the year, when it will be installed at Southern California Edison’s Mira Loma substation. Regulators closed the Aliso Canyon Facility after its leaking well was plugged in February, four months after the leak began. But Aliso Canyon was the largest natural gas storage facility in California, and its closure has utilities and lawmakers worried that there will be shortages come winter.
That said, some state energy officials warned that this summer could see up to 14 days of power outages related to gas shortages. That forecast has not come to pass, in part due to the fact that Southern California experienced a milder summer than usual. Still, the batteries will provide backup power in the event that shortages of natural gas do strain utilities this winter.
“Upon completion, this system will be the largest lithium ion battery storage project in the world,” Tesla wrote. “When fully charged, this system will hold enough energy to power more than 2,500 households for a day or charge 1,000 Tesla vehicles.” The company said that no other battery provider was awarded a contract in the bidding process.
Neither Southern California Edison nor Tesla has disclosed how much the project will cost, but Bloomberg points out that a 2MW Powerpack system costs about $2.9 million, according to Tesla's website.
Until recently, batteries were not considered an important part of utility grid operations. But as policy has pushed grid owners to adopt more renewable energy, storing that energy (which can be intermittent due to the nature of sun and wind power) has become more popular. Batteries are also useful in energy production to provide a buffer if a utility wants to hold off in turning on a generator for a short period of time, or batteries can help with so-called frequency transients, keeping a station’s electricity output at the required voltage while the station manager gears up a new generator. In California, the Public Utility Commissioner has mandated that utilities install 1.3 gigawatts of battery storage by 2020.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been vocal about his intentions to change the “energy infrastructure of the world,” and part of that plan also requires that the US’ aging power grid be moved to more resilient micro-grids, where a variety of power sources—from diesel generators to solar panels—serve smaller areas.
Tesla wrote on Thursday:
In order to achieve a sustainable energy future, one which has high penetration of solar and electric vehicles, the world needs a two-way, flexible electric grid. The electric power industry is the last great industry which has not seen the revolutionary effects of storage. Working in close collaboration with Southern California Edison, the Tesla Powerpack system will be a landmark project that truly heralds the new age of storage on the electric grid.

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