The US energy storage market deployed 40.7 MW worth of storage in the
second quarter this year, its best quarter in two and a half years,
says GTM Research. GTM Research and the US Energy Storage Association released the latest edition of their US Energy Storage Monitor
report, which highlighted the country’s impressive second quarter
energy storage market growth. Specifically, the second quarter saw the
interconnection of a 31.5 MW solar project in the PJM region — a
regional transmission organisation that coordinates the movement of
wholesale electricity in all or parts of Delaware, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of
Columbia.
This quarter is the largest quarter, and this project is the single
largest solo project to come on line, since the fourth quarter of 2012,
when the Notrees 36 MW project was interconnected in Texas.
Behind the meter, in the non-residential energy storage market, had
its best quarter ever, deploying 4.9 MW of storage, with a big share of
that growth coming from California, where GTM highlights “the massive
pipeline of [Self-Generation Incentive Program] SGIP-approved projects
finally began to be interconnected.
“It is promising to see that outside of PJM and California, 10 states
had significant activity related to energy storage policies and
programs in the last three months,” explained Ravi Manghani, GTM
Research Senior Energy Storage Analyst and lead author of the report.
“This is a good sign for the industry, which has leaned on a handful of
markets for its growth to date. We have states like Minnesota and
Washington that are looking to grow their storage industries, while
others like Massachusetts and New Jersey are using storage to modernize
the grid and make it more resilient.” The authors of the report note that PJM and California will continue
to be the regional energy storage market leaders for the foreseeable
future.
“The number of different states that are actively engaging in energy
storage shows that regulators, legislators and utilities are seeking
innovative ways to deploy systems,” said Matt Roberts, Executive
Director of the Energy Storage Association. “Advanced storage systems
are being leveraged to increase reliability and resiliency in the
Northeast, offset the need for ‘peaker plants’ in the Southwest, and
help replace capacity and integrate renewables across the West. It’s a
dynamic addition to the grid, and provides all of these benefits with
each system install.”
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/09/02/us-energy-storage-market-deployed-40-7-mw-q22015-gtm-research/
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