Utility-Scale Energy Storage Surges in Q1, While Behind-the-Meter Falters RSS Feed

Utility-Scale Energy Storage Surges in Q1, While Behind-the-Meter Falters

The U.S. energy storage industry just had a very good start to the year. With 234 megawatt-hours of capacity deployed in the first quarter of 2017, installations grew 945 percent compared to the first quarter of 2016.

Growth in the utility-scale energy storage sector was more astonishing — 5,040 percent.

Still, there were only 4.3 megawatt-hours deployed in Q1 2016. But the statistic is impressive.

The front-of-the-meter segment drove 94 percent of new capacity deployed in the first quarter. And with a pipeline of 9,217 megawatts, it shows no signs of slowing down.

Behind-the-meter installations have slowed, however. Customer-sited storage amounted to 13 megawatt-hours deployed, down 28 percent from the same quarter last year. In megawatt terms, installations were down 32 percent.

The trouble with incentives

Behind-the-meter storage remains highly concentrated in first-mover market California, with a particular reliance on that state’s Self-Generation Incentive Program. That dependence took its toll last quarter.

SGIP, which gives rebates on behind-the-meter storage and other distributed energy assets, went through an overhaul last year. The new design gave storage more value over other distributed resources, so many developers canceled applications to the previous program and put plans on hold until the new disbursements began in May.

Because California dominates the overall market, this pause dragged down the nationwide deployment numbers. The tiny residential market held steady overall, but California’s commercial storage slowdown overshadowed gains in Massachusetts, Hawaii and other states. This was the smallest quarter for commercial megawatts deployed since Q2 2015.

“There is always that ‘gold rush’ risk — I think there’s a lot to learn from that when folks are designing incentive programs,” said GTM Research analyst Brett Simon.

In April, Michael O’Sullivan, senior vice president for development at NextEra Energy Resources, alluded to this problem at the Energy Storage Association’s annual conference.

“Keep it away from being a tax-advantaged business,” he said. He advised against going down a path “where we all start spending a lot of time in Washington, D.C., asking for something.”

That was related to whether the industry should lobby for its own investment tax credit, but the logic applies to other government incentives as well. Too much reliance on finite grant programs creates boom-bust cycles, to the detriment of steady growth. (GTM’s Simon says he expects a big rebound in the second half of the year, as the new SGIP deployments kick in.)

To solve this problem, regulators will need to reconstruct rates to encourage monetizable revenue streams.

A change will come

GTM Research analysts predict an inversion ahead. The behind-the-meter segment is on track to take a small lead from grid-scale storage by 2022, deploying more megawatts and earning more money. In energy capacity, the grid-scale sector maintains an edge.

One key to growth will be distributed resource aggregation, so that residential and commercial storage can play a broader role in the grid. Several companies are doing this already; the applications today fall into the buckets of demand-charge management, resiliency/backup and grid and wholesale market services, according to the ESM report.

The last category, wholesale services, has the potential to really change the way the grid operates. So far, it’s underway in a few places like Southern California Edison’s 50-megawatt Preferred Resources Pilot program, and in pilots in New York and Hawaii.

One challenge is convincing utilities that they can trust a network of dozens or hundreds of units scattered across a service territory, with an external company saying it can call them up to deliver needed capacity on demand.

My colleague Jeff St. John will grapple with that question at Grid Edge World Forum in a discussion on the rise of virtual power plants, featuring a group of leading thinkers from the distributed resource aggregation space. Later on, Elta Kolo of GTM Research will share strategies for successful “bring-your-own-device” demand response programs. Other GEWF panels will address the crucial question of how to compensate utilities in the role of platform provider, and the ways that distributed resources can serve utilities’ needs as non-wires alternatives.

Harness the FOMO

The good news for the industry is that storage has already become a hot topic in grid conversations; the market is moving fast and policymakers and utilities across the country want a piece of it.

This speed of uptake is evident in the work of Arizona Public Service. After installing 4 megawatts of storage to test how it operates, the utility went ahead and proposed 503 megawatts of new storage in its 2017 Integrated Resource Plan.

Read full article at GreenTech Media