Peaker plants are power plants that the grid makes use of during times of particularly high electricity demand. The power they supply is typically high in cost and usually high in greenhouse gas emissions. When operating the electricity grid, power sources are generally called upon in order of marginal cost. Only when demand is very high do grid operators make use of the highest-cost assets that tend to be fossil-fueled power plants that can start and ramp up quickly.
For years, there has been the idea that solar-powered peaker plants could eventually replace the polluting fossil-fueled ones. Recently, the renewable energy developer, owner, and operator Arevon Energy began commercial operations of the Vikings Solar-plus-Storage Project in Imperial County, California. It is the first utility-scale solar peaker plant in the United States.
The plant utilizes a 157-megawatt solar array combined with 150 MW and 600 MWh of battery energy storage. It can shift low-cost daytime solar energy to higher-cost peak demand periods. The result is a lowered cost of electricity for nearly one million customers of San Diego Community Power.
The project contradicts the often-held notion that renewable energy is inherently unreliable. It can provide carbon-free electricity at specific times of critical need. Typical hybrid solar + storage plants provide electricity during daylight hours and store only excess generation in their battery systems. The Vikings project is specifically designed to shift the entirety of its generation from solar hours to the peak demand period.
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Arevon fires up the first solar + storage peaker plant in the U.S.
Photo, posted October 15, 2024, courtesy of Jay Inslee via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio
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