Daily Report: Batteries May Provide Relief From Summer Blackouts
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/17/daily-report-batteries-may-provide-relief-from-summer-blackouts/
Air-conditioner use during recent hot weather has strained the capacity of power companies across the Northeast and Midwest. Several utilities, including Con Edison, National Grid and the large European utilities Enel and GDF SUEZ, have signed up to fine-tune and test what they hope could lead to an answer a battery half the size of a refrigerator from Eos Energy Storage, the company said Tuesday. If the testing goes well, the batteries hold the promise of providing storage that until now has been unaffordable on a large scale, Diane Cardwell reports in The New York Times.
Energy storage is no longer an idea and a theory its actually a practical reality, said Steve Hellman, Eoss president. Youre seeing a lot of commercial activity in the energy storage sector.
Part of the appeal is economic: utilities could buy power from centralized plants during off-peak hours, when it is cheaper, and use it to feed the grid at peak hours when it is typically more expensive. That could also relieve congestion on some transmission lines, reducing strain and the need to spend money upgrading or repairing them. In addition, batteries could help integrate more renewable sources like solar and wind into the power grid, smoothing out their intermittent production.
Energy storage in general has been kind of a holy grail for utilities a lot of the generation and demand is instantaneous, said Joseph Carbonara, project manager in research and development at Con Edison, who is managing the Eos program. The utilities have always been looking to buffer that.
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