StorageVET ® Applications and Demonstration Energy Storage Valuation Workshop
Ben Kaun, Program Manager
Giovanni Damato, Senior Project Manager CPUC/CEC Joint Workshop
November 2, 2017 10:00AM © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Today’s Workshop Objectives 1. Explain StorageVET® capabilities and methodology 2. Provide concrete illustrations of StorageVET to evaluate energy storage project cost-effectiveness 3. Provide access and engagement instructions 4. Answer audience StorageVET questions and dive deeper into issues of interest
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Agenda CEC Greeting - Mike Gravely, Energy Commission
10:00-10:05am
Meeting Objectives and EPRI Introduction - Ben Kaun, EPRI
10:05-10:15am
StorageVET® Introduction - Giovanni Damato, EPRI
10:15-10:30am
Use Case Analyses with StorageVET - Miles Evans, EPRI and Ram Ravikumar, EPRI
10:30-12:15pm
User Engagement - Giovanni Damato, EPRI and Udi Helman, Helman Analytics
12:15-12:30pm
Lunch
12:30-1:30pm
User Q&A and Advanced Training - Giovanni Damato, EPRI 3 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
1:30-3:00pm
StorageVET Use Cases—Sneak Peak
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Energy Storage Use Cases – Focus for Today’s Workshop Distribution: Substation Upgrade Deferral
Generation: Peaker Substitution 5 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Commercial & Industrial (C&I) Storage
StorageVET Use Case Demos – Focus on Value Stacking Peaker Substitution • Gas Peaker Substitution • Energy Storage vs Conventional Capacity Resources • Capacity, frequency regulation, spinning reserves and energy time shift
C&I Storage • Customer-sited Commercial & Industrial (C&I) Storage • SGIP Incentive • Sensitive to TOU rate structure, demand charges and load profile
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T&D Deferral • Distribution feeder with thermal violations due to load growth • Substation deferral with market services with 20 years horizon
EPRI Energy Storage Program Overview
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EPRI’s Public Benefit Mission Advancing safe, reliable, affordable and environmentally responsible electricity for society through global collaboration, thought leadership and science & technology innovation
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EPRI Energy Storage Program Objectives: Support Energy Storage Transition from R&D to Operations PERFORMANCE AND RELIABILITY DATA
MODELING
Getting the Data Specify relevant data to safety, reliability, value
Analyzing the Options Identify and screen opportunities
Consistent comparison Performance/reliability track record
Feasible and optimal location Design for optimal lifecycle value
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OPERATIONAL EXPERIENCE Putting into Practice Guidelines for deployment Customized tools Technical training
More than Batteries: Facilitating Grid-Ready Energy Storage Systems Project Deployment
Storage Technology
• Establish best practices for siting and permitting
• Explore technology tradeoffs • Optimize technology for utility applications
• Standardize grid connection • Communication and control
Communications and Control • Developing operational and dispatch algorithms
Integrated Product • Ensure safety and reliability
Power Electronics • Guide common functions and control algorithms • Ensure efficient and reliable operation
• Understand cost and performance • Simplify procurement and operation through standardization of specification and interfaces
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• Updated communications and grid controllers to accommodate storage functions and services
Collaboratively Building Reference Tools through the Energy Storage Integration Council (ESIC) Started in 2013, >1000 participants from utilities, suppliers and research community
Identify Gaps
Publish / collect experiences Seven (7) published products at ESIC website: www.epri.com/esic Industry review 11 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Define Work Needed
Develop products together
StorageVET Introduction
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Challenges to Modeling Storage Storage and limited energy resources are still not common Rules and regulations still are evolving Benefit stacking is appealing, but will it be possible – More services = more value – More services = more requirements Can they be satisfied?
Locational value of storage requires sitespecific analysis Complex optimization between storage degradation and service participation scheduling 13 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Storage Made Easy: StorageVET Paving the Way
StorageVET Live in 2016
Integrated Value + Impact Energy Storage Modeling in 2017
StorageVET Expanded Footprint and Validation
2013 CPUC Cost Effectiveness Study using EPRI’s ESVT
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2020 Goal: Make Storage…
StorageVET ® Storage Value Estimation Tool: www.storagevet.com
Web-hosted tool, free to the public Project cost-benefit analysis Time-series constraints and dispatch optimization simulation Multi-services optimization and stacked services Customizable for location, technology, sizing, use cases Made possible through funding support from the California Energy Commission (CEC) 15 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
StorageVET Goals Accessible
Transparent
Validated
Customizable
Users of StorageVET® Today Key Use Cases
Common Communication Platform • Common Benchmarking Tool
Locating & Screening
• Screening, Design, Procurement, & Operations
Regulators
Utilities
Customers
Developers
Sizing/Designing (stacked services) Operational Strategies (Customer and Grid)
• Bill Savings Assessment • Product Selection
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• Sales, Marketing, RFP Response
StorageVET In Action: California Examples Multiple-Use Applications (MUA) Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP) Distributed Energy Resource (DER) Hosting Capacity DER and Microgrid Valuation
Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS)
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Use Case Analyses with StorageVET Miles Evans, EPRI Ram Ravikumar, EPRI
Use Cases Are Illustrative Only, Do Not Cite
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Customer Storage
How does a customer economically justify storage?
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Commercial & Industrial (C&I) Storage
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Customer-sited Services
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Customer Storage - Introduction Customer-sited energy storage for demand charge reduction – Not performing energy time shift – Reserve SOC because load uncertain
There are ‘soft’ reasons for customer-sited ES, including corporate goals or maintaining a green image.
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Customer Storage Benefits Incentives - SGIP
– Additional 20% if equipment comes from approved CA manufacturer 23 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Customer Storage Design and Costs Large Office in San Diego examines a customer-sited ESS for demand charge reduction – ESS can also shift load from peak hours to off-peak
Design: – Power Capacity: 250 kW – Energy Capacity: 500 kWh (2 hrs at rated power)
Cost – Total Installed Cost: $400,000 ($800/kWh*, $400/kWh replacements)
This ESS is servicing a large office load** *Greentech Media Research’s Q2 2017 Energy Storage Monitor Report – low end **OpenEI San Diego Large Office 24 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Assumptions ESS round-trip efficiency = 85% No Auxiliary Power or Self-discharge No O&M Costs ES not net-metered SDG&E AL-TOU Secondary (>500kW) rates – Static over time
No Demand Response participation or backup power
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Demand Charges Two additive monthly demand charges – Facility demand charge (all times) $24.51/kW – On-peak demand charge $21.13/kW summer $7.57/kW winter
Flat fee of $465.74/mo – Only $116.44/mo if load <500kW – Edge case for energy storage here
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Winter
¢/kWh Hour of Day
Energy Charges SDG&E AL-TOU Secondary (>500kW) rates Summer 𝑃𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘 − 𝑃𝑂𝑓𝑓𝑝𝑒𝑎𝑘 = 4.059¢/kWh Winter 𝑃𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘 − 𝑃𝑜𝑓𝑓𝑝𝑒𝑎𝑘 = 3.697 ¢/kWh These are enough to overcome efficiency losses but maybe not degradation losses 27
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Weekday 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Weekend
7.322
Summer Weekday
Weekend
8.148
11.233
9.464 7.322
11.019
12.207
11.233
9.464
7.322
8.148
8.148
Load Power (kW)
Operational Results – StorageVET™ Yearly Peak on Oct 6
1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0
0
2000
4000 Time (hrs)
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6000
8000
Operational Results – StorageVET™
Load Power (kW)
Original Peak Load 1600 of peak day load profile Image before and after
1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0
Modified Peak Load
This month, the battery saved $4615 in demand charges
0
20
40 Time (hrs)
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60
80
Thousands
Financial Results
Illustrative – Do not cite
$800 $700 SGIP, $220
$600
Energy Time Shift, $25
$500
$400 $300
Capital Cost, $455
$200 $100
$0
Net Taxes, $60 Cost
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Demand Charge Reduction, $506
Benefit
Financial Results ESS shifted enough load from peak hours to off-peak hours to reduce energy charges by $26,880 over 10 years – Dispatch not optimized against cycling degradation cost – SOC not bounded
Break-even cost of storage: $1,383/kWh
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Financial Results Thousands
20% SOC Reservation No Energy Time Shift
Illustrative – Do not cite
$800
$700 $600
SGIP, $220
$500
$400 $300 $200
$100 $0
Capital Cost, $455 Net Taxes, $18 Cost
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Demand Charge Reduction , $457
Benefit
PV + Storage in StorageVET® 1400 1200
Storage
$1,200,000
Net Load $1,000,000
PV
SGIP
1000 AC Power (kW)
$800,000 Energy Time Shift
800 $600,000
600 400 200
0 2017-08-01 0:00 -200
$400,000
Initial Capital Cost
$200,000
Principal Interest
Demand Charge Reduction
Net Tax
2017-08-02 0:00
$0
Cost
-400 33 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Benefit
Substation Upgrade Deferral Does the benefit of deferring an upgrade outweigh the cost of energy storage?
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Distribution Storage
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Substation Upgrade Deferral Feeder thermal violations due to load growth – Only a few hours a year
Either upgrade the substation or install storage to discharge during peak hours and defer upgrade. – Load will continue to grow and necessitate upgrades in the future
Storage can provide other services, including frequency regulation, spinning reserve, energy time shift, and resource adequacy Analysis horizon = 20 years for all cases 36 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Substation Upgrade Deferral 2022 Feeder Load 16
Thermal Limit
14
Power (MW)
12 10 8
6 4 2 0 0
1000
2000
3000
4000 5000 Hour of Year
6000
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7000
8000
9000
Substation Upgrade Deferral Cost-Benefit Costs – ESS Installed Cost (2MW, 2hr) = $3,200,000 ($1,600/kW)* – ESS Installed Cost (2MW, 4hr) = $4,600,000 ($2,300/kW)* – Fixed Operating Cost = $19.5/kW -yr
Primary Benefit: Substation XFMR Upgrade Deferral – 14 MVA to 28 MVA upgrade Upgrade cost = $5.5M** Carrying cost (12%/yr***) = $660,000/yr
Secondary Benefits – Southern CA 2015 frequency regulation prices – SCE DLAP 2015 energy prices – Spinning reserve offered when available *EPRI 2016 ES Cost Study for Utility Planning **Based on SCE 15MVA to 28MVA upgrade in 2016 link 38 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved. ***From Scottmadden study link
Upgrade Deferred until 2022 Upgrade deferral benefits do not cover costs alone • Need stacked value from this MUA to be beneficial Results sensitive to market conditions over 20 years Results do not consider potential benefits from: Resource Adequacy Capacity Flexible Ramping Real-time market participation
Millions
Substation Upgrade Deferral StorageVET™ Results 6 Illustrative – Do not cite
$1600/kW 2MW, 4MWh
5 Net Benefit ~ $500,000
Net Tax
Frequency Regulation
4
3
O&M Replacement Cost
Net Energy Revenue
2 Capital Cost
Upgrade Deferral
Costs
Benefits
1
0 39
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Preliminary – Do Not Cite
Deferral limits 2022 Peak Power Day 16 Energy = 3.09 MWh
14
Power = 1.02 MW
12 10
Failure to defer not from peak load day
8 6 4 2017-04-25 0:00
2017-04-26 0:00
2017-04-27 0:00
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2017-04-28 0:00
Deferral limits 2022 Energy-Limiting Day 16 Energy = 3.93 MWh
Power = 0.911 MW
14 12 10 8 6 4 2017-06-06 0:00
2017-06-07 0:00
2017-06-08 0:00
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2017-06-09 0:00
Upgrade deferred from 2017 to 2030 Higher costs due to larger ESS and more replacements over 20 years
Millions
Deferral with 4hr Energy Storage 8
$2300/kW 2MW, 8MWh
7
Net Benefit ~ $1M
6
Net Tax
5
O&M Replacement Cost
Illustrative – Do not cite
Frequency Regulation
4 3 2
Upgrade Deferral Capital Cost
1 0 Costs 42
-1
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Benefits Preliminary – Do Not Cite
Substation Upgrade Deferral Conclusions In this example, storage needs stacked benefits to break even – Can provide flexible ramping, RTM participation, primary frequency response, and resource adequacy capacity (all not considered)
Batteries have small footprint, so can be added to alreadyowned property relatively easily – Need to decide on how to prioritize land – ESSs have the potential to be moved, but not often done in practice
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Peaker Substitution Economics Example What is the net cost of resource adequacy from energy storage?
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Generation: Standalone Storage
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Resource Adequacy Services
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Peaker Substitution – Overview and Illustrative Economic Case Primary service: resource adequacy Secondary services: frequency regulation, spinning reserves, and energy time shift Alamitos Energy Storage – Economic 100MW peaker substitution with grid services contracted in LA Basin
Aliso Canyon gas leak caused emergency resource adequacy problem, due to peaking gas delivery constraint – 6 month development vs years for CT if it were an option 47 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tesla Battery in Southern California
What is the Net Cost of Resource Adequacy? – Find the minimum RA payments required to cover all costs after receiving market benefits – 𝑁𝑒𝑡 𝐶𝑜𝑠𝑡 𝑜𝑓 𝐶𝑎𝑝𝑎𝑐𝑖𝑡𝑦 ∗ = 𝑃𝑉 𝑅𝐴 𝑝𝑎𝑦𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑠 = 𝑃𝑉 𝐶𝑜𝑠𝑡𝑠 − 𝑃𝑉 𝐵𝑒𝑛𝑒𝑓𝑖𝑡
Value
Combustion Turbine (CT) vs Energy Storage System ESS
Total PV Costs
Total PV Benefits
Compare CT net cost of capacity to ESS net cost of capacity
Net Cost
Benefits – Energy prices are LMPs from SCE
Costs
Benefits
•
2016/17: historical LMPs
•
2024: CAISO LTPP model results for RPS 33% and RPS 40% scenarios
•
After that, energy and market revenues grow with inflation (2%/yr)
– Frequency Regulation and Spinning Reserve prices from CAISO southern region incremented by 2%/yr 48
* Also called Net cost of new entry (Net CONE)
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Net Cost
Costs Battery Costs (100MW, 400MWh) – $1600/kW – $2700/kW Installed Cost* – $250/kWh Replacement Cost – 1.5% per year Fixed Operating Costs
CT Costs (100MW) – based on GE LMS100PA – $1305/kW Installed Cost ** – 0.9% per year Fixed Operating Costs – $5.9/MWh Variable Operating Costs*** – Historical fuel prices (not important due to low capacity factor) *EPRI 2016 ES Cost Study for Utility Planning low and high end **CEC 2017 Estimated Cost of New Renewable and Fossil Generation in California ***Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engine Study: 2016 Review. EPRI, Palo Alto, CA: 2016. 3002008269. 49 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Dispatch Requirements In StorageVET® ESS and CT dispatch based on energy and ancillary services prices ES is free to co-optimize services other than RA CT can provide energy, frequency regulation, and spinning reserves when profitable to turn on (~1.5% capacity factor)
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Standalone Peaker Substitution Economics (StorageVET) Millions
Assumes 3rd Party Developer-Owned Business Model
$350.00 $300.00
Replacement Expenses
$250.00 $200.00
Initial Capital Expenses
Preliminary – Do Not Cite
Net Tax
Net cost of resource adequacy comparison for high-cost ESS vs CT
Frequency Regulation
Net Energy Revenue
$150.00 Principal
Net Tax
$100.00 Interest $50.00 $-
Principal Interest
O&M ESS Cost
51
Net Cost of Resource Adequacy
Initial Capital Expenses
O&M ESS Benefit ESS Net Cost CT Net Cost
2016/17: Historical Energy and Ancillary Services Prices 2024: CAISO’s LTPP RPS 33% Model Projections EPRI 2016 ES Cost Study For Utility Planning High-End ES Prices
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CT Benefit
CT Cost
Standalone Peaker Substitution Economics (StorageVET) Millions
Assumes 3rd Party Developer-Owned Business Model Illustrative – Do not cite
$250.00
$200.00
Replacement Expenses
Net Tax
Frequency Regulation $150.00
$100.00
$50.00
Initial Capital Expenses
Lower net cost of resource adequacy capacity due to low ESS costs
Net Energy Revenue CT Net Cost
Principal Interest
Net Cost of Resource Adequacy
O&M $ESS Cost
ESS Benefit
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ESS Net Cost
Net Cost of Capacity Sensitivity to Renewable Penetration Net Cost of Capacity ($/kW-yr)
130 Illustrative – Do not cite
Net Net cost cost of of capacity capacity decreases under higher increases when renewables scenario negative prices are eliminated
110 90 70 50 30
Net Profit, Not Cost
10 -10
2016 Incremented
33% RPS
Low ESS Cost
40% RPS
RPS 33% (min=0)
High ESS Cost
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RPS 40% (min=0)
CT Net Cost
Peaker Substitution - Conclusions In this example, the net cost of resource adequacy between storage and CT is in the same range but, – Need to normalize for capacity contribution of each resource Thermal derating is well-established for fossil generators Duration derating for energy storage is an under investigation.
Other considerations for battery storage – Fast development timeline – No gas or water connections – No emissions – However, unproven durability – Participation in real-time market and flexible ramping 54 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
StorageVET User Engagement Giovanni Damato, EPRI Udi Helman, Helman Analytics
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Becoming a StorageVET User Visit www.storagevet.com for the latest user information Send an email with subject “StorageVET Account Setup Request” to
[email protected] and
[email protected] Include the following in the email body: – Name – Title – Organization – Address: Street, City, State, Zip – Company Email – Phone xxx-xxx-xxxx
Receive email response within 3-5 business days from Analytica Cloud Player
[email protected] with subject “Invitation to Analytica Cloud Player”
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Engage with the StorageVET® Community Create a StorageVET® account and build your model – Visit www.storagevet.com
Browse through User Guides and documents for assistance – Visit www.storagevet.com/documentation
Engage in ESIC User Community – Email
[email protected] with your information
Give feedback on your models during ESIC StorageVET® Online and In-person meetings – ESIC In-person Meeting November 16th Cleveland, OH
Join ESIC Subgroup Validation Efforts, led by industry partners Research collaborative 57 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
ESIC StorageVET Validation Giovanni Damato, EPRI Udi Helman, Helman Analytics
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Methodology 1. Check StorageVET solutions for different applications 2. Compare model results to other commercial and research models 3. Compare model results to operational results from perspective of ISOs and project operators 4. Modify model algorithms as necessary or provide additional data to adjust results 5. Update StorageVET documentation
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General approach Start from more simple and proceed to more complex – Energy arbitrage (day-ahead) – Regulation only (CAISO NGR-REM; other ISO Regulation only models) – Energy + Regulation co-optimized (CAISO NGR) – Energy + Regulation + Spinning Reserve co-optimized (CAISO NGR) – Same as above with generic and flexible RA capacity obligations (CPUC/CAISO capacity obligations in day-ahead market) – Real-time energy and ramping reserves
Once the wholesale market applications have been evaluated, address distribution-connected, customer-sited, and multiple use applications 60 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Why model historical market revenues? Accurate historical day-ahead and real-time market prices and market value are a baseline for future price and value projections Users can validate model results using historical prices against actual revenues of operating projects However, historical revenues are not necessarily a guide to future value due to rapidly changing system conditions 61 © 2017 Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Energy arbitrage, SCE LAP prices, 2014-2017, perfect foresight, 83.3% efficiency
System Specifications
2014 Revenue
2015 Revenue
2016 Revenue
2017 Revenue, Jan. – June
1 MW, 1 hr
$9,363
$8,616
$11,746
$11,354
1 MW, 2 hr
$16,257
$14,972
$20,472
$19,113
1 MW, 4 hr
$24,808
$21,939
$30,026
$27,151
1 MW, 6 hr
$30,229
$26,072
$34,946
$32,281
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Energy arbitrage, SCE LAP prices, 2014-2017, perfect foresight, 83.3% efficiency 40,000.00
35,000.00
Annual energy revenue
30,000.00
25,000.00
20,000.00
2014 2015 2016 2017, Jan-Jun
15,000.00
10,000.00
5,000.00
0.00
1 MW, 1hr
1 MW, 2hr
1 MW, 4hr
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1 MW, 6hr
Energy arbitrage, SCE IFM LAP prices, 2017, January June, perfect foresight, 60% - 100% efficiency
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Persistence result (prior weekday/prior weekend day), energy arbitrage, SCE IFM LAP prices, 2015, 83.3% efficiency 25,000
Annual revenues ($/year)
20,000
15,000
90% of perfect foresight value captured in persistence calculation
10,000
5,000
0
1 MW 1hr
1 MW 2hr
Fully Optimal DA Revenue Only
1 MW 4hr
1 MW 6hr
Weekday/Weekend day persistence
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All results are available on the ESIC collaboration site All inputs and outputs shown on prior slides are now available on ESIC collaboration site: https://collab.epri.com/esic
Review and comparison to your own results are requested
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Lunch
12:30-1:30PM
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User Q&A and Advanced Training Session 1:30-3:00PM
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Together…Shaping the Future of Electricity
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