W. Virginia Wind Farm Proves It Can Store Energy

11/01/2011
SustainableBusiness.com News

Wind farms have been experimenting with using batteries to store energy, but this large one - online in West Virginia - proves it can be done ... demonstrating that wind farms can produce electricity like traditional power plants. 

The 98 megawatt (MW) Laurel Mountain wind facility is storing excess energy in a huge 32 MW bank of lithium-ion batteries developed by A123 Systems (Nasdaq: AONE).

61, 1.6 MW size turbines are connected to 16 mammoth batteries - each the size of a shipping container.

Wind energy storage

Each battery stores excess wind energy and releases it to the grid in quick bursts of 2 MW of energy for 15 minutes. The batteries release the energy to supplement intermittent wind generation, keeping electricity constantly supplied to the grid. 

Project developer AES Energy Storage says it chose lithium batteries because they're proven in the auto industry. Their use in that industry is bringing the price down, while size and performance is improving.

One of the most criticized aspects of solar and wind is that their inherent intermittency requires fossil fuel plants as back-ups, which raise the costs of operation, in addition to generating emissions. In this case, batteries replace the need for a back-up natural gas plant. 

Next year, Duke Energy plans to deploy a 36 MW battery system at its 153 MW Notrees Windpower Project in Texas. Xtreme Power will supply the batteries, which also include sophisticated power control technology which enhances grid reliability.

The energy-storage industry is still in its infancy, but it's forecast to be a $1.1 billion market by 2015, just for wind power. Beacon Power, which just declared bankruptcy, was developing flywheel technology to store energy, using a DOE loan guarantee.

While opponents point to the couple of failures of the DOE program - Solyndra and now Beacon - this is a success they won't mention. DOE awarded a $25 million stimulus grant to
Southern California Edison to develop and conduct a comprehensive demonstration of lithium-ion battery storage for energy generated by wind projects. A123 supplied the lithium batteries.