How ‘Virtual Power Plants’ Will Change The Future Of Electricity

Source: Ken Silverstein · FORBES · | July 22, 2020 

Workers install solar panels at the Connexus Energy Athens Township solar-plus-storage project site.

Workers install solar panels at the Connexus Energy Athens Township solar-plus-storage project site.

If “virtual” meetings can allow companies to gather without anyone being in the office, then remotely distributed solar panels and batteries can harness energy and act as “virtual power plants.” It is simply the orchestration of millions of dispersed assets to manage the supply of electricity — power that can be redirected back to the grid and distributed to homes and businesses. 

The ultimate goal is to revamp the energy landscape, making it cleaner and more reliable. By using onsite generation such as rooftop solar in combination with battery storage, those services can reduce the network’s overall cost by deferring expensive infrastructure upgrades and by reducing the need to purchase cost-prohibitive peak power. 

“We expect virtual power plants, including aggregated home solar and batteries, to become more common and more impactful for energy consumers throughout the country in the coming years,” says Michael Sachdev, chief product officer for Sunrun Inc., a rooftop solar company, in an interview. “The growth of home solar and batteries will be most apparent in places where households have an immediate need for backup power, as they do in California, where utilities are turning off the electricity to reduce wildfire risk.”

Home battery adoption is becoming commonplace in Hawaii and in New England, he adds, because those distributed assets are improving the efficiency of the electrical network. It is a trend that is reshaping the country’s energy generation and delivery system by relying more on clean onsite generation and less on fossil fuels.

Sunrun has recently formed a business partnership with AutoGrid, which will manage Sunrun’s fleet of rechargeable batteries. It is a cloud-based system that allows Sunrun to work with utilities to dispatch its “storage fleet” to optimize the economic results. AutoGrid compiles the data and makes forecasts, enabling it to pinpoint potential trouble spots.

Think of it this way: A centralized coal-fired unit may have a generating capacity 1,000 megawatts of electricity. It is also connected to a transmission network, all of which makes it susceptible to cyberattacks or natural disasters. In other words, a series of wildfires took out PG&E Corp.’s transmission network and left whole communities without power. 

Small Assets. Big Impact

But a distributed energy system, or a virtual power plant, would have 200,000 subsystems. Or, 200,000 5 kilowatt batteries would be the equivalent of one power plant that has a capacity of 1,000 megawatts. 

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