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by fenixnuke
1619 days ago
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They are likely operating on the wholesale markets, which are market priced. For the western grid there is a significantly wider price range of prices. On peak days in the summer, prices can go up above $1,000/mwh in the late afternoon for several days. During the late fall/early spring, there are negative prices in the late morning (like $20-$50/mwh) due to extremely high solar production and low demand, so utilities are literally paying you to use electricity. It's not inconceivable to get to $1 million a year on 1 mwh of storage. Take a look at the price maps and historical pricing data if you are curious https://www.caiso.com/todaysoutlook/Pages/prices.html |
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Pretty much all the solar plants we're putting in now have combined battery storage systems either for voltage support or "peaker" sales opportunities. In some places (like literal islands) it's about capacity smoothing or resilience, but the driving force behind all the investment is the US western interconnect with arbitrage opportunism starting to make real money and looking to make much, much more over the next decade.
If government-sachs is betting on this, they've probably got an even more pessimistic take on the CAISO market than I do.