Techno-economic analysis of grid-connected battery storage
•Techno-economic evaluation of grid-connected storage under a TOU electricity tariff.•We study the storage system’s profitability for the electricity consumer.•We analyse the total net present cost and compare it with a system without storage.•Lead-acid batteries cost would need to be reduced to abo...
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Published in | Energy conversion and management Vol. 91; pp. 394 - 404 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier Ltd
01.02.2015
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Techno-economic evaluation of grid-connected storage under a TOU electricity tariff.•We study the storage system’s profitability for the electricity consumer.•We analyse the total net present cost and compare it with a system without storage.•Lead-acid batteries cost would need to be reduced to about 0.05€/kWhcycled.•Li-ion batteries cost would need to be reduced to about 0.075€/kWhcycled.
This paper presents a methodology to evaluate the technical and economic performance of a grid-connected system with storage under a time-of-use (TOU) electricity tariff. The storage can help smooth demand, reducing peak demand from the grid and, in some cases, also reducing the electricity bill for the consumer. The methodology is valid for any kind of storage, but it has been used for lead-acid or Li-ion batteries, technologies that could be applied in any kind of building (residential, commercial, or industrial). This kind of system could make sense with a TOU tariff: each day, electricity would be bought during off-peak hours (at a low price) to charge the batteries, and during peak hours (at a high price), the batteries would be discharged to supply the whole load or a part of it. We focus on the storage system’s profitability for the electricity consumer, analysing the total net present cost (NPC) of a system with storage and comparing it with a system without storage. The results show that even given a Spanish TOU special for electric vehicles (with a great difference between on-peak and off-peak prices of 0.135€/kWh), at the present cost of battery storage (battery bank+bidirectional inverter+control), the storage system is not profitable for the consumer. For the battery system to be economically profitable, the costs of batteries would need to be reduced to about 0.05€/kWhcycled in the case of low-efficiency lead acid batteries (with bi–di converter of 700€/kW) or to 0.075€/kWhcycled in the case of efficient Li-ion batteries (with bi–di converter of 300€/kW). The most critical parameters are the acquisition cost of the battery bank and the number of cycles to failure, which determine the acquisition cost of the battery bank per kWh cycled. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0196-8904 1879-2227 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.enconman.2014.12.038 |