By Danessa O. Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated December 12, 2015 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines - Belgian solar
project developer Enfinity N.V. is pushing for the use of battery storage as
low cost option in the power mix in the next five years as prices of the
technology declines.
In a statement, Enfinity Philippines
business development director William Ruccius said battery storage would
strategically position solar power as a low cost option in the country’s power
mix and address power outage situations in the future.
“Within five years, battery storage
costs are predicted to go down by 85 percent which will make solar the low cost
choice for intermediate load,” he said.
Intermediate load power plants are
those that can provide supply on optimum operations, such as coal-fired and
natural gas power plants.
But reliable power supply can be
addressed by solar power through battery storage, which is also an ideal match
to solar homes and as a micro-grid solution for areas under the Small Power
Utilities Group (SPUG) of the National Power Corp.
“In the Philippines today, battery
storage on the level of private houses is already affordable and people are
already enjoying the benefits of this system,” Ruccius said.
For its part, Enfinity Philippines
said it has already secured orders for more than 200 houses to be equipped with
battery storage.
This is part of its roll out with
joint venture partner Imperial Homes Corp. on solar homes project due for
construction early next year.
“We would be able to build 10,000 of
those systems (solar homes with battery storage) across the Philippines over a
period of three years. There would be no brownouts anymore for these homes and
the end-users will also be saving money,” Ruccius said.
The company official also noted they
are currently working on a micro-grid solution, with central megawatt battery
storage and solar on the houses that will power the whole community in the
future without getting connected to the grid.”
This is eyed for launching in the
latter part of 2016, Ruccius said.
In off-grid areas, the deployment of
solar with battery storage is expected to drastically cut the P18-billion worth
of subsidy payments that all Filipino consumers have been paying for the
provision of energy in SPUG areas.
“Hybrid solar can provide power to
these SPUG areas today 24 hours a day for a price less than the P14 to P45 per
kilowatt hour – the prevailing electricity rate being charged to consumers in
these areas,” Ruccius said.
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