According to a new report by the Smart Electric Power Alliance (SEPA), utilities are about to enter the energy storage market in a significant way.
The survey, based on responses from 115 utilities, shows that 72% of them are planning on offering behind-the-meter energy storage opportunities for their residential customers, while 80% plan on offering programs to their commercial/industrial customers.
Currently, the market is small – only 622 MW of energy storage, producing 661 MWh – are currently online. Of that, 207 MW producing 257 MWh came online last year. Residential deployments accounted for 4.5 MW (7.5 MWh); non-residential accounted for 54 MW (68 MWh); and utility-supply accounted for 151 MW (181.6 MWh).
What is most intriguing about the survey, however, is where the new energy storage is coming online.
While California still led the way in connecting energy storage in 2016 (121 MW, 177 MWh), Indiana (22 MW, 21 MWh) and Ohio (16 MW, 6 MWh) came in second and third. As pv magazine reported in July, the U.S. Midwest is quickly becoming a hot solar market, with Minnesota and Illinois leading the way. Energy storage can only help those burgeoning markets expand further.
Southern California Edison installed 40% of last year’s new energy storage supply, while Indianapolis Power & Light produced 8%.
“Storage may not yet be a mainstream utility resource, as solar is rapidly becoming, but clearly, many in the industry can see the point on the horizon where that starts happening,” said Tanuj Deora, SEPA’s executive vice president and chief content officer. “Utilities, like those that took part in SEPA’s survey, understand storage will be deeply disruptive and transformative in the value it brings to the grid — even more so than solar — and they need to start preparing for those changes now.”
According to Nick Esch, SEPA senior research associate and report co-author, the 115 utilities that submitted data for SEPA’s survey represent more than 75 million customer accounts, or about 58% of the 130 million customer accounts in the country.
SEPA released the report ahead of the inaugural Energy Storage International, which will be officially launched as part of Solar Power International next week in Las Vegas.
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My wife and I have an ongoing project of reducing the carbon footprint of our household and we have just discussed switching or adding renewable energy sources to our list. It is good to know that more and more states are participating actively in the development of renewable energy infrastructures and making it more viable to the average household. Our sun is our planet’s largest energy source and I hope that one day we can efficiently harness the clean energy it provides.