Software that analyzes the complex interplay between solar PV, energy storage systems and customer energy use sounds like a great idea -- but is it something that companies are ready to pay for?
This depends on the level of maturity of the industry in question, and just what financial stake they see in capturing information that is now lost in the sea of data theyâre collecting every day. Thatâs the view laid out by some experts on the topic during a Wednesday panel at Greentech Mediaâs Soft Grid 2014 conference, entitled "Intelligent Analytics for Distributed PV and Storage.â
âWe are starting to see an increased focus, not just on wanting analytics, but wanting to pay for analytics -- which is an important distinction. Whatâs driving this is that the stakes are high,â Michael Herzig, president and founder of solar monitoring company Locus Energy, said during Wednesdayâs panel.
Locus has built its business on metering and managing about 40,000 solar systems around the country for companies like Clean Power Finance, NRG Energy and Sungevity. But itâs also built a suite of analytics tools, including a âvirtual irradianceâ tool that converts weather and satellite data to allow customers to check system performance, and its PVIQ Waterfall software, set for commercial release next year, which can identify and differentiate between soiling, shading, panel degradation, inverter clipping and other reasons why solar systems arenât performing as well as expected, all from raw data.
âYour basic monitoring system will tell you whether your system is up or down,â he said in an interview. âBut this gets at the last 5 to 10 percentâ of system inefficiencies. Back in the gold-rush days of solar, when installers were just putting up as many panels as possible, that wasnât such a big deal. But now that solar is being aggregated, financed and securitized, itâs becoming a pressing issue, he said.
âThe value of the securitization is a clear driver for paying for the data,â he said. âOne of our customers literally guarantees one of its customers millions of dollars per systemâ based on the performance they predict for the system. âIf analytics can give them 1 percent more accuracy, thatâs a lot of money.â
While utility-scale solar is well monitored and controlled in terms of grid integration, distributed solar is spread out and disconnected from utility monitoring and control, making it a particular focus for data analytics, he noted. Knowing what all that customer-owned rooftop PV is doing to the grid is going to become increasingly important as it becomes a bigger part of the energy mix.
Grid-scale energy storage is still in its infancy compared to solar, noted Rogers Weed, vice president of product management for grid battery software startup 1Energy. Most of the big batteries, flywheels and other storage systems deployed on the grid to date have been one-off projects, and âcertainly the first generation of software controlling them wasnât able to take any analytics from the grid,â he said.
Behind-the-meter energy storage systems, by contrast, require a certain level of analytics to provide the demand charge mitigation, load balancing and other tasks they perform for the buildings theyâre installed in, Weed added.
That work could help behind-the-meter battery providers like Stem, Green Charge Networks, Sunverge and SolarCity better manage their goals of aggregating and controlling these distributed resources for grid needs.
âStemâs behind-the-meter storage requires a substantial amount of analytics,â said John Carrington, Stem CEO. Thatâs because each system is monitoring its buildingâs energy use, predicting power spikes, and even providing insight into inefficient use of HVAC systems or other loads, he added. Of course, not every distributed energy storage system needs this kind of sophistication -- âIf youâre using it for emergency backup for a power outage, thatâs a different context,â Carrington said.
But more and more distributed storage is being paired with rooftop solar, plug-in electric vehicles and home and building energy management systems, which makes it a useful tool for helping to balance the disruptions from those grid-edge systems. Stem is bidding aggregated batteries into a California demand response program and just announced a 1-megawatt pilot with Hawaiian Electric to help the island utility manage the effects of rooftop solar.
âYou really have to look at coupling these together,â said Ajay Madwesh, vice president of utilities industry business for Space-Time Insight, a startup providing data visualization and analysis platforms for utilities and grid operators across North America.
Last week, Space-Time Insight landed a new customer -- Japanâs NEC, which is tapping STI's software for its demand response, microgrid and advanced metering infrastructure work with utilities across Asia. NEC is also the new owner of A123 Energy Solutions, the grid-scale energy storage business of the bankrupt U.S. lithium-ion battery maker bought by Chinaâs Wanxiang two years ago.
âNEC bought A123 awhile back, and now theyâve got this great storage platform thatâs generating a lot of data,â Steve Ehrlich, Space-Time Insightâs senior VP of marketing and product management, said in a Wednesday interview. âNow, what do they do with the data?â
Photo Credit: Solar and Energy Storage Data/shutterstock
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Authored by:
Jeff St. John
Jeff St. John is a reporter and analyst covering the green technology space, with a particular focus on smart grid, smart buildings, energy efficiency, demand response, energy storage, green IT, renewable energy and technology to integrate distributed, intermittent green energy into the grid. Jeff majored in English and graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1994. He ...
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