Title :
Trends and status of battery energy storage for utility applications
Author_Institution :
Utility Battery Storage Syst. Program, Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
Abstract :
Since the early 1970s, there has been a steady effort to introduce batteries to the electric utility industry for large scale energy storage in a load leveling mode. Utilities, on the other hand, have been relatively indifferent to this technology for a number of technical and institutional reasons that primarily involve the economic viability of this technology in the load leveling mode. However, from the late 1980s and early 1990, the concept of using batteries primarily for load leveling has undergone a radical change as a result of analytical studies as well as changes in hardware design practice. Now, batteries are being promoted for a wider range of high value applications that go beyond load leveling, and potentially affect the transmission and distribution as well as customer-side operations of the electric utility. As a result, utilities are showing a renewed interest in battery energy storage and several utilities are evaluating battery energy storage projects. This paper discusses the significant trends that are driving the renewed utility interest in this technology and reviews the status of ongoing utility projects
Keywords :
battery storage plants; electricity supply industry; energy storage; load management; project engineering; secondary cells; analytical studies; applications; battery energy storage; customer-side operations; distribution; economic viability; electric utility; hardware design; load leveling; projects; transmission; Batteries; Customer service; Energy storage; Laboratories; Large-scale systems; Power generation; Power generation economics; Power industry; Power system planning; Substations;
Conference_Titel :
Battery Conference on Applications and Advances, 1995., Proceedings of the Tenth Annual
Conference_Location :
Long Beach, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2459-5
DOI :
10.1109/BCAA.1995.398527