Customers key to solar and battery trials
Jason Krupp Wednesday 14 March 2018 - Contact Energy and Wellington
Electricity are set to unveil to attendees of this year’s
Downstream Technology Conference a key component behind
their consumer solar and battery platform - customers. The energy company and the lines company are due to
present some of the preliminary findings from their ongoing
two-year trial, which installed networked solar and battery
systems in a number of capital city homes. The talk
is being presented by Todd Spencer, Head of Commercial at
Contact and Ray Hardy, Wellington Electricity’s Network
General Manager, and is titled: “Joined up thinking -
solar, batteries, collaboration, energy markets and customer
behaviour.” In the trial, the companies are trying
to assess whether clusters of solar and battery-equipped
households can be used to manage the breakfast and dinner
electricity demand peaks by taking them off the grid, and
switching them to battery power instead. One of the
features of the system is that customers can view and manage
their energy use in real time using a mobile phone app, and
in the future it is hoped that this kind of technology will
help customers decide how and when to use energy. “When rolled out across an entire city like
Wellington, it’s absolutely conceivable that tens of
thousands of customers will actively decide whether to
store, sell or use the electricity they are producing on a
day-to-day basis,” said Contact Commercial Manager Todd
Spencer.
“At that scale this flexibility is also
huge benefit to electricity generators, retailers and
distributors, presenting a whole suite of options around how
to manage peak loads, and whether platforms like this can
replace expensive plant and network investments.” Spencer noted that the ability for the electricity
industry and consumers to flexibly manage how and when
electricity is consumed will become increasingly important
as electric vehicles gain greater penetration in New
Zealand. “What we want to achieve is a managed
approach, where people charge their EVs outside of the
morning and evening peaks, smoothing out electricity demand
over the full 24 hour day,” said Spencer. “Key to
achieving this is to give people seamless options around how
they behave at these times, and smart platforms like our
solar and battery trials enable this.” The people
focus of the technology also features strongly in the video
that Contact is launching at the Downstream Technology
Conference to highlight the solar and battery project. The
video can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsDuwsTNjEQ Wellington City Council is also involved in the trial to
assess the additional resilience these systems can provide
to communities by creating a back-up power supply when the
electricity grid suffers an outage, an important issue in
natural disasters. ENDS
9:02 AM
(17 minutes ago)
to Jason
Customers key to solar and battery trials