That said, batteries provide operational benefits that gas plants lack, besides operating without local emissions (the greenhouse gas profile of the batteries depends on the mix of grid fuels when the battery charges).

“You need to match a technology to the need,” said Strata VP of Energy Storage Joshua Rogol. “The solution might look a little bit different, but…storage can provide valuable services to the grid when it’s not waiting around for a peak.”

The 20-year resource adequacy contract leaves Strata free to monetize the battery’s energy and ancillary benefits as a participant in the CAISO market, when it isn’t called on to fulfill its obligation to SCE. That in turn helps improve the project economics relative to a system that only operates during peak events.

Strata started out as a solar developer in North Carolina and branched into storage development over the last 18 months. While it may be a newcomer to large-scale storage, its accomplishments on the solar side demonstrate an aptitude for working at scale. The company has installed 1.5 gigawatts of solar, owns 1 gigawatt and operates an O&M portfolio of 2 gigawatts. Its U.S. energy storage pipeline has grown to 3 gigawatt-hours, Rogol said.

California led the early storage market, with a suite of supportive policies and regulatory support. The demand Strata has seen, however, cuts across many states, not to mention regulated and competitive markets, Rogol noted.

“We’ve been keeping a close eye on where there are constraints in the grid, where there’s thermal capacity coming offline, and looking at where the storage technology can solve a problem,” he said. “Our pipeline has increased exponentially in looking at storage replacing traditional generation for capacity.”

Batteries at the once-mindblowing 100-megawatt scale are becoming increasingly commonplace, in utility project announcements if not yet in practice. As sheer scale loses its shock value, displacing gas plants in head-to-head competition could offer a new way to impress.

Source: greentechmedia