The top microgrid electricity generation modality in the US will soon
be solar photovoltaics (PV), according to a new report from GTM
Research. With the overall growth of microgrids in recent years, a slow shift
from reliance on combined-heat + power systems, or diesel generators,
has been taking place — with solar PV taking position as the top
alternative.
An example of this is the recent move by the Californian
Energy Commission to award $5 million to Trane and Alstom Grid to
develop a new wastewater treatment microgrid utilizing solar PV at the
Laguna Wastewater Treatment Plant in Santa Rosa.
That move certainly isn’t unique, though. The commission has awarded
over $20 million in recent times to microgrids incorporating, or based
around, “low-carbon” generation modalities. While California
is particularly well suited to solar PV, and therefore unsurprisingly
at the forefront of adoption, solar has been gaining a foothold in other
parts of the country as well.
New data from GTM Research shows that solar PV (and few other
modalities) make up the majority of planned capacity — meaning that in
only a relatively short time solar PV is likely to emerge as the most
common microgrid modality in the country.
“With
39 operational and planned microgrid developments, California leads all
states in terms of the highest number of microgrid projects,” stated
Omar Saadeh, a senior analyst at GTM Research, as well as author of
“North American Microgrids 2015: Advancing Beyond Local Energy
Optimization.”
This also represents something of a shift, as New York is currently
in possession of the greatest number of installations — but clearly
won’t hold that spot forever. On a final note, GTM Research states that it expects US microgrid
capacity to reach a cumulative total of 2.8 gigawatts (GW) by 2020.
Meaning a roughly 100% increase in capacity over the current total.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/09/23/solar-set-become-top-microgrid-generation-modality/
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