Energy Storage Can Support a Renewable Energy Future

Elizabeth Berg
Environment America
3 min readJan 18, 2018

A few years ago, New York City’s utility, Con Edison, made an unorthodox decision: instead of adding new transmission wires and substations to its overworked grid, it chose to use a combination of renewable energy generation, demand management and energy storage to meet growing demand in parts of Brooklyn and Queens. This project will cost roughly $1 billion less than building a new substation, reduce the city’s fossil fuel consumption, and make it easier for Con Edison to build more renewable energy generation plants in the future.

While this project won’t be finished until later this year, New York State has already made it easier for other utilities to follow Con Edison’s lead. Earlier this month, Gov. Andrew Cuomo pledged that the state will build 1,500 megawatts of energy storage by 2025. Though bigger than any other statewide storage goal so far, this commitment fits into a larger trend. Similar benchmarks have been set in states including California, Massachusetts and Oregon, and as of last spring, 140 state-level policies and regulations were pending or in place across the country related to the utility side of the energy storage market.

New York — both city and state — have been energy storage leaders. Photo credit: Aurelien Guichard via Flickr, CC BY 2.0

As variable energy sources such as wind and solar become a larger part of our energy system, utilities are increasingly using storage technologies such as lithium-ion batteries and thermal storage systems to help maintain a reliable electricity supply. To get the most benefit out of energy storage, however, policy-makers and the general public need to understand how energy storage works, where and when it is necessary, and how to structure public policy to support the appropriate introduction of energy storage.

Our new white paper, Making Sense of Energy Storage, addresses these questions. The paper looks at the role that energy storage plays in various proposed pathways to generating 100 percent of our energy from renewable sources, provides a user-friendly guide to current and emerging storage technologies, and describes how utilities and consumers are already benefiting from the integration of storage into the energy system.

Overall, the report finds that energy storage is becoming an important part of our modern electric grid:

· More than 300 new grid-connected storage projects have been completed over the last decade. Excluding pumped-storage hydropower, six times more energy storage capacity now is connected to the grid than in 2007.

· In Vermont, the utility Green Mountain Power built a solar farm and utility-scale battery microgrid that has saved the utility roughly $200,000 per year.

· Batteries were quickly brought online in response to the 2015 Aliso Canyon natural gas leak, and the energy they provided prevented power outages across southern California. These batteries were fully installed in just nine months, much more quickly than a new power plant would have taken to build.

Declining prices, improved technologies, and the adoption of ambitious statewide targets are already facilitating a rise in energy storage, but there’s still room to grow. With smart policies and continued renewable energy growth, energy storage can be a key tool for supporting the nation’s transition to a clean energy future.

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