California pioneered state policies for deploying solar and
energy storage. Now it’s turning its attention to microgrids.
The state’s energy agencies released a draft microgrid
roadmap September 29, drawing from a more than year-long process spanning
five workshops with stakeholder input from industry, utilities and academia.
The goal: to identify challenges and opportunities presented by
microgrids.
Microgrids have been hard to commercialize because each case
is unique, and there are complexities to resolve regarding the local asset's
relation to the broader grid. Early adopters have been the military and
university campuses, but California officials are determined to build a
robust microgrid market and see microgrids as a tool to help the state achieve
its ambitious clean energy and climate targets.
“We’re looking at: How do microgrids help us meet the state
policy goals of the future?” said Mike Gravely, team leader for energy systems
integration at the California Energy Commission.
On a parallel track, the CEC announced a
grant funding opportunity on August 4 for projects that demonstrate
the business case for advanced microgrids and support the state’s clean energy
and greenhouse gas emissions policies. Applications are due on October
31.
Building a commercial market
Shopping for microgrids will come to resemble the process of
picking out a car, Gravely said.
When consumers are ready for a new car, he observed, they
settle on what they need the car to do and then shop for the vehicle --
minivan, family sedan, SUV, pickup truck -- that meets those
requirements.
"We’re going to see if there’s a way we can define
these microgrids down to a finite number of configurations,” said
Gravely. “With a microgrid, we can say: ‘This is a microgrid to lower
costs.
This is a microgrid for high penetration of renewables. This is a
microgrid to support high concentrations of [distributed energy resources].
This is a microgrid for residential. This is a microgrid for industrial.’"
The vision of preset microgrid designs is still a ways off.
Currently, each microgrid project is custom-fitted to the needs of the
customer. That factors into the costs of design, procurement and installation.
"To be commercial, we have to get to the point where
we’re not doing that anymore, where we have more of a standard configuration
for purposes of reducing costs," Gravely said. "And then the value
becomes clearer.”
The microgrid value proposition boils down to whether a
customer is better off integrating various energy assets into one control
system. In some situations, standalone PV generation and storage could work
just fine. But if the conditions are right, uniting them into a microgrid could
lower the ultimate cost of operation and unlock new abilities like higher
reliability.
"We believe the answer is yes: When you integrate them
together, you’ll get a more valuable package for a lower cost,” Gravely said.
$45 million for next wave of microgrids
The California Energy Commission expects that projects from
the grant
funding opportunity will hasten the commercialization of microgrids as
well as provide answers to open policy questions. State officials also intend
for the projects to clarify the business case for and benefit metrics of microgrids.
The CEC will award a total of $44.7 million to as many as a
dozen projects. The commission has already seen “huge interest” in the
solicitation and anticipates receiving 50 to 60 proposals, according to
Gravely.
Winners should be announced by January 2018, with contracts
awarded that spring.
Who does what?
Perhaps the most important items on the to-do list for
California officials as they write the final microgrid roadmap this fall is
agreeing on the list of action items and determining which agency takes the
lead to implement each action.
The action items will reflect feedback from
respondents to the state’s microgrid roadmap survey.
Respondents’ priority action items include: clarifying how
microgrids can participate in markets and provide multiple revenue streams;
reducing cost barriers for microgrids performing grid services; reducing cost
barriers for microgrid interconnection; and finding ways for microgrids to
participate in wholesale and retail markets.
California officials plan to release the final microgrid
roadmap by the end of 2017.
“It’s ultimately a document to help the state implement
microgrids. But it’s also a document to help people who are in the microgrid
business sell their product,” Gravely said.
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