Energy storage is a critical component in the current and future energy systems, providing numerous benefits across various configurations and systems, including the electrification of energy use and the diversification of energy sources.
The findings of the recent research indicate that energy storage provides significant value to the grid, with median benefit values for specific use cases ranging from under 10 dollars per kW-year for voltage support to roughly 100 dollars per kW-year for capacity and frequency regulation services.
Does energy storage deliver value?
In a case study of a system with load and renewable resource characteristics from the U.S. state of Texas, we find that energy storage delivers value by increasing the cost-effective penetration of renewable energy, reducing total investments in nuclear power and gas-fired peaking units, and improving the utilization of all installed capacity.
The energy output of the storage device ( Et) will always be a fraction of the energy that is supplied to it ( ES ), i.e. the energy that was required to charge the storage device. Some energy will be lost during charging and discharching of the storage device due to inefficiencies inherent to the storage device.
Cost-benefit of energy storage: system value of 10-h energy storage capacity for different carbon emissions goals and minimum and maximum current estimated cost of pumped-hydro storage systems (∼30 year life) for comparison.
What is the value of a storage service?
Value represents the monetary remuneration storage would receive if it is deployed: the value can be tied immediately to the service, or a model can be built to understand how the market value of the service is affected when storage enters the energy mix.
Can storage provide energy indefinitely?
Thirdly, and in terms of energy provision, storage cannot provide energy indefinitely: thermal generation can provide energy as long as fuel is available, but a 4-hour limit of firm energy provision is considered typical for storage .