Concentrated Solar Power with Thermal Energy Storage Can Help Utilities’ Bottom Line, Study Shows
Thursday, December 20, 2012
The storage capacity of concentrating solar
power (CSP) can add significant value to a utility company's optimal mix of
energy sources, a new report by the U.S. Department of Energy's National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) suggests.
The report found that
CSP with a six-hour storage capacity can lower peak net loads when the sun isn't
shining, enough to add $35.80 per megawatt hour to the capacity and operational
value of the utility, compared to photovoltaic (PV) solar power alone, and even
higher extra value when compared to CSP without storage. The net load is the
normal load minus variable renewables such as photovoltaic and
wind.
The additional value
comes because thermal storage allows CSP to displace more expensive gas-fired
generation during peak loads, rather than displacing lower-priced coal; and
because it can continue to flatten the peak load in the evenings when PV isn't
contributing to the mix because the sun has set.
The report, "Simulating the Value of Concentrating Solar
Power with Thermal Energy Storage in a Production Cost Model," by NREL's Paul
Denholm and Marissa Hummon, noted that the $35.80 per megawatt extra value would
come in a scenario in which there is relatively high penetration of renewables
into the utility's mix, about 34 percent. If the penetration was lower, the
extra value would be lessened.
The authors simulated
grid operations in two balancing areas primarily in Colorado. NREL is also using
the same methodology it developed for the Colorado scenario for the more complex
California system controlled by the California
Independent System Operator. A report on the value that CSP with thermal storage
adds to the California system is expected early next year.
The Colorado study
marks one of the first times that the operational and capacity value of CSP with
thermal storage has been evaluated using a production cost model, a traditional
utility planning tool.
The NREL authors
employed Energy Exemplar's PLEXOS simulation model that allowed them to isolate
the relative value of thermal energy storage (TES) with and without
storage.
CSP with TES,
with an ability to store thermal energy in, say, molten salt, can use its
heat-energy to drive turbines at power plants over much longer stretches of the
day.
"We've known for
a long time that CSP with storage adds significant value, however, we are now
able to quantify this value in the language utilities understand," said Mark
Mehos, manager of NREL's Concentrating Solar Power program.
Compared to other
renewable options, at high penetration levels CSP with TES can be dispatched to
displace natural gas rather than coal. This is important because electricity
produced from natural gas fired generators is typically more costly than that
produced from coal.
"With CSP with
thermal storage, you aren't diving as deep into the generation stack, displacing
cheaper and cheaper fuel," Denholm said. "You're always displacing the
highest-cost fuel."
Also, CSP with
TES can lower peak net loads in the evenings when electricity use can still be
high, but PV isn't available. So, it helps utilities offset the need to build
new gas-fired generators in order to meet the electricity demand when the sun
goes down.
"CSP with thermal
storage can continually reduce that peak demand as the peak moves into the
evening," Hummon said. "It continually maintains a high operational value and
high capacity value."
NREL is the U.S.
Department of Energy's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and
energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for DOE by the
Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.
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