Solar Industry News

Solar + Batteries Vs. Generators: Batteries are Increasingly Competitive Chip And Gifford In Front Of Battery Ready Solar Home

Chip Means from Pika Energy (left) and Gifford Jenkins-Davis of ReVision Energy in front of a battery-ready solar home in Durham, Maine, powered by Maine-made Pika Energy electronics installed by ReVision Energy.

ReVision Energy is pleased to announce that as of October 2016, we are a Tesla Energy Certified Installer, meaning we are authorized to install the Tesla Powerwall and Tesla Powerwall 2.

This certification adds to our extensive and diverse experience designing and installing advanced energy storage systems from Sonnen, Pika Energy and Adara, as well as Schneider Electric, SMA and Outback Power.

In the year and a half since Elon Musk announced Tesla's Powerwall , we've seen a renewed level of interested in solar + battery products and some impressive gains in the technology "arms" race to develop the energy storage solutions of the future. Don't miss our three-part feature published a year ago .

Here are three things we've seen this last year that we think speak to what will happen in battery storage in the years ahead.

1. Solar + Storage Gradually Becomes the Default

The Pika Energy Island System Offers Integrated Solar + Storage

The Pika Energy Island System offers integrated solar + storage

The rapid progression and cost reduction of advanced battery technology is now making it practical for everyone to explore the combination of a solar electric system with modern battery storage options (solar + battery).

Because storage is a critical part of the large-scale transition to renewable energy, every solar electric system we are designing and installing today is "forward compatible" with storage, whether or not a battery pack is installed at the time of the solar installation. Not only can batteries keep the lights on when the sun or grid is down, but they can also support the utility grid by filling intermittent gaps in renewable energy production when clouds pass over or wind subsides.

2. Competition is Good

Installation of the next-gen Tesla Powerwall lithium-ion battery storage system at a customer's home in Freeport, Maine. With the addition of batteries, a solar PV system can sustain a home through a power outage.

The world's appetite for energy storage is clear, and now is a moment where manufacturers - LG Chem, Sunrun, Juicebox (now Adara), Pika Energy, Sonnen, Samsung, Sony, Panasonic and Tesla Energy, to name a few - are working rapidly to develop solutions that can scale to meet the enormous global demand for energy storage.

At ReVision, our goal is and always has been to install high-quality, dependable, long-lived equipment for our customers. Our engineering team has been following batteries for a long time and we have invested time with dozens of product vendors researching the best products out there.

Our Energy Advisors would be happy to have the opportunity to talk with you about your particular application and to see what makes the most sense for you.

3. Policy Needs to Catch Up

One of the most compelling aspects of including behind the meter energy storage with distributed solar energy systems is that those energy storage systems can not only deliver value to the owner (backup power, time-of-use-load-shifting or demand charge reduction), but they can also help provide value to the grid overall.

When aggregated, customer-sited residential or small commercial energy storage systems can provide a range of so-called "grid support services" including peak shaving, frequency response, a voltage response, as well as being part of a smart and flexible grid that enables high penetration of renewable energy of all kinds. Battery systems and distributed solar systems are two types of solutions collectively known as DERs (or Distributed Energy Resources) which can provide these services to the grid and the utilities, frequently at much lower cost than if the utilities were to do the same thing centrally.

With appropriate public policy and rate setting, that means a solar customer might get paid extra for the services his or her battery is providing to the grid, even while saving all other ratepayers money too because the system can defer the need for expensive, central utility owned infrastructure. This is the broader outcome that ReVision, along with other renewable energy advocates, have been pushing for in utility rate cases and regulatory and legislative hearings around the region: a smarter grid, enabling broad adoption of renewable energy and strategic electrification, while reducing costs for all.

A handful of more progressive utilities, such as Green Mountain Power , recognize the inevitability of the transition to clean energy and are positioning themselves as the utility companies of the future.

In Green Mountain Power's VT territory, a customer can share the cost to install a behind the meter energy storage system with the utility. The utility uses that battery to perform 'grid services' when the grid is up (lowering costs for all ratepayers) and the customer can use that battery for backup power when the grid is down. It is a clear win-win and is a good example of how a utility of the future might integrate DER's to the benefit of both the installing customer and ratepayers generally.

For the planet's sake, as well as that of our local economies, we need as rapid a transition to renewable energy as possible. The technology is here, and it's the onus on regulators and legislators to modernize policy such that these technologies can fairly compete in the regulated monopoly of the electric grid.