Storage and batteries are the “only way” to solve the “massively complex” green grid of the future, said managing director of Adaptogen Capital James Mills last week on a panel on the Energy Storage Summit in London.
While governments are currently primarily aimed at the Clean power goals set for 2030Continuing to achieve legally binding 2050 carbon reduction goals requires a considerable implementation of the battery storage, agreed to the panel.
Paul Wakely, head of strategic network development at the UK’s National Energy System Operator (NESO), said that batteries are important “in all time scales – it is now part of our daily life in the energy system”.
In the meantime, David Noronha, head of future networks and strategic offshore planning for Irish Grid Operator Eirgrid, in Ireland Long-Duration Energy Storage (LDES) said is crucial for supporting the network of the future, but it is on location for all storage “”; The impact storage brings “depending on the location in the network”.
This was also the opinion of Andy Willis, CEO and co-founder of the British developer Kona Energy in the UK. According to him, the focus should be on developing storage, in the short and long term, in areas that it can solve limitations. To allow batteries to thrive in this scenario, Willis said that there must be a good renumeration: “There is a location need for batteries, but their value is not being realized.”
Mills assumed this and noted that there are two important issues for the 2040 grid: massive limitation complexity and the volume of the duration of the terawatt hour that the system needs.
“We must allow the technology to show ourselves what the most cost-effective solution is that energy storage of 10-20 hours is,” said Mills.
“I feel for the transmission owners that the green schedule of 2040 will be enormous in a mathematical sense. I don’t think it can be solved from the middle, [the system] Can only optimize itself and remain stable if you allow co-optimization in real time through price.
“My vision is that we will end up a system of massively distributed Bess at almost every opening.”
This article was Originally published On our sister site, News for energy storage.