The Anonymous Widower

UK To Fund Hydro Energy Storage Projects

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

New infrastructure aims to help balance the electricity system after the rapid growth in renewables

These three paragraphs infrastructure the article.

Projects that use water to store and release energy are to be given government support, in an attempt to help manage the volatility in supply and demand as more green power enters the grid.

From next year, pumped hydro storage projects will be able to apply for government subsidies, which will be provided via a “cap and floor” mechanism. These would guarantee revenues if prices drop below a certain floor but prevent providers from charging above a ceiling when power prices are high.

Like other government support schemes, any cost will be levied on energy bills, while consumers will be paid back any money generated above the cap. It is yet to be decided precisely how the cap and floor will be set.

I feel it is reasonable to expect the system to be a success, as a similar system is used for interconnectors and this article on Offshore Energy is entitled Over $86 million To Be Split Between UK and Belgium Consumers As 1 GW Subsea Interconnector’s ‘Remarkable’ Revenues Exceed Ofgem’s Cap.

It looks like Ofgem played this right for interconnectors and the Nemo Link is making a substantial payment.

It will be interesting to see what happens when “cap and floor” contracts are assigned.

This move by Ofgem will probably have effects in two areas.

  • SSE, Statera and Statkraft, who are typically developing systems at the high end with a size of about 1.5 GW/25 GWh could find money is easier to come by.
  • At the lower end, companies like Highview Power, who have systems of 50 MW/300 MWh and 200 MW/2.5 GWh under development, will also benefit.

My Control Engineering thoughts are leaning towards the 200 MW/2.5 GWh systems being the popular ones. Especially as they would appear to be close to the right size to support a 1 GW wind farm for two hours.

A Highview Power Two-Hour Liquid Air Battery could fit nearly with a fleet of Two-Hour BESS.

It should be noted that CAF use a little-and-large approach to theit battery-electric trams in the West Midlands.

A large lithium-ion battery is the main storage device.

A supercapacitor handles the high-frequency response and keeps the power steady.

Pairing a Highview Power Two-Hour Liquid Air Battery and a Two-Hour BESS could achieve the same performance and possibly result in some cost savings.

 

October 11, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Finance | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment