Energy November 2020

Page 22

EMBEDDED NETWORKS ENERGY PARTNER CONTENT

ENERGY DISRUPTION IS HERE –

BUT NOT AS WE EXPECTED The rapid uptake and deployment of residential solar and home batteries is having a significant impact on Australia’s energy system. Governments and regulators need to be acting now to ensure we see the full benefits renewables can provide, particularly in the embedded network and prosumer spaces.

F

or some time, we’ve known that increased uptake of new energy technology would revolutionise the energy sector. While this transition has been rapid, it hasn’t been driven by traditional vertically integrated energy players. Instead we’ve seen increased private investment in new energy technologies, which is ushering in the rise of a more distributed generation model. For example, Australia has the highest uptake of solar globally, with more than 21 per cent of homes having rooftop solar PV1 generating their own renewable energy. While this increases the cheap renewable energy being generated, there’s a catch. Solar production doesn’t offset the demand on the network during morning and evening peaks. Instead solar production is at its peak during the middle of the day when there’s lower demand from households. This leads to surplus generation, which then flows back into the grid. Australia’s energy infrastructure was designed to manage only one-way electricity flow – so, if left unmanaged, surplus solar generated electricity can overwhelm the network and trigger widespread power outages. This leaves traditional large generators with two options: they can ramp down generation during the middle of the day then ramp up generation in the evening when solar production curtails, or they can continue to generate during the middle of the day but for a much lower sell price. The former isn’t viable as it takes too long to ramp up and down, leading to operational inefficiencies. The latter has created an untenable situation where some generators are even paying customers to use their electricity. Both of these create pricing volatility – the grid was never set up to operate this way.

Consumers and businesses should be looking to reduce reliance on the grid, to limit exposure to network insecurity and market volatility. While investing in rooftop solar is one way to do this, we now need to see investment in battery technology. A household that invests in battery technology can store surplus solar generated during off-peak hours to then be used during peak hours. This prevents surplus solar flowing back into the grid during off-peak, and reduces demand on the grid in peak, stabilising the network and reducing costs. Simple changes in regulation can encourage more private investment in battery technology. Consumers currently pay a flat price for electricity, so return on investment in battery technology is low. If cost-reflective pricing was introduced, where electricity price is higher during peak and lower during off-peak, then batteries help to avoid peak period pricing and return on investment improves. Then we would see cheaper energy, and create a new generation of ‘prosumers’ who can generate, store and distribute their own power, and buy and sell from the grid as needed. In addition, embedded networks help take solar and battery storage ‘behind-the-meter’. The benefits from the technology can then be shared within residential or commercial developments. Again, this protects consumers from grid volatility. Disruption to the energy sector is here, but not as we expected it. Doing the right things now will reap the benefits of cheaper, cleaner and more reliable energy later.

For more information on how you can benefit from embedded networks and behind-the-meter technologies, head to www.winconnect.com.au

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https://www.energy.gov.au/households/solar-pv-and-batteries#:~:text=Australia%20has%20the%20highest%20uptake,have%20been%20installed%20across%20Australia

November 2020 ISSUE 12

www.energymagazine.com.au


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Articles inside

Harnessing the power of biosolids to make hydrogen

13min
pages 58-65

Electric vehicle subscriptions: the model for the future?

9min
pages 52-57

Australia’s first electricpowered cherry-picker hits the streets

4min
pages 50-51

Why aren’t more Australians driving EVs?

7min
pages 47-49

Queensland's Electric Super Highway takes shape

6min
pages 44-46

Structured plan to help flatten aviation's CO2 curve

7min
pages 32-35

The products at the heart of critical infrastructure

3min
pages 42-43

Batteries in the burbs: exploring the potential

6min
pages 36-39

Safely grounded: timing measurements on gasinsulated switchgear

4min
pages 40-41

Dealer reach means less downtime for Sequentia Services

2min
pages 30-31

Federal Budget misses a trick, but states pick up the slack

4min
pages 28-29

Australia’s renewables journey: moving from fossil fuels to clean energy powerhouse

12min
pages 24-27

Energy disruption is here – but not as we expected

2min
pages 22-23

What the Victorian Default Offer means for the future of embedded networks

6min
pages 20-21

Australia’s first lithium-ion battery manufacturing facility

2min
pages 10-11

Co-locating renewables and batteries: assessing the operational implications

6min
pages 16-19

Maximising solar by rethinking PV panel orientation

6min
pages 12-15

Snowy 2.0 gets construction go-ahead

2min
page 9

Funding changes for ARENA and CEFC

3min
page 7

What the budget means for energy

3min
page 6
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