Published
June 14, 2019, 10:00 PM By Myrna M. Velasco
https://business.mb.com.ph/2019/06/14/gencos-bat-for-perks-regulatory-framework-for-battery-storage/
With massive scale
penetration of renewable energy (RE) facilities in the country’s power system
starting next year, the generation companies (GenCos) are batting for incentive
mechanism as well as prudent regulatory framework that will underpin the
deployment of battery storage as complement to intermittent generating
facilities in the power mix.
Power industry players
perceive that battery storage installations are still not viable cost-wise.
Nevertheless, it is a space they have been closely watching because the
Philippines will be needing it in the immediate term because of the mammoth RE
integration prescribed under the Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) policy of
the government.
In the long term, RE’s
coupling with commercially viable energy storage is similarly seen as a
practicable technology development that could re-position renewable energy
being able to match the baseload generation capability of more traditional
technologies, including coal.
Aboitiz Power
Corporation Chief Operating Officer Emmanuel V. Rubio indicated his company “is
monitoring developments in battery storage,” with him emphasizing that they
already have two pilot projects as their proof-of-concept to assess the commercial
viability of the technology.
Eric Francia, president
and CEO of AC Energy of the Ayala group, asserted that with the targeted RE
installations through year 2030, battery storage will definitely come into the
picture as supplementing tech to the on-and-off generation of resources like
wind and solar; and even the cyclical generation of hydro assets.
But he said the cost of
battery storage is not seen affordable yet in the pockets of Filipino
consumers. The timeframe for it going down to the competitive level is in the
next five years.
“Based on our
economics, it is still high and we cannot support those kind of economics. But
storage at this point is still enjoying that double-digit decline. I think the
industry conventional wisdom that we subscribe to is, battery storage will need
to break the 100,000/megawatt hour – that’s probably five years away from now
or hopefully sooner, then that will put an all-in intermittent renewables plus
battery at a reasonable P4.00 per kilowatt hour level which more or less could
compete with gas and coal,” Francia opined.
He added that
“long-term equilibrium of prices is probably somewhere in the 8 to 9 US cents
per kilowatt-hour, and that’s where renewables and storage, gas or even coal
might settle over time.”
For First Gen, it
emphasized that it is looking at various battery storage technologies as
prospective installations it could opt for – including those on pumped hydro
and hydrogen-underpinned storage systems.
“What we’re doing is
monitoring what’s happening in other markets because other countries seem to be
developing faster than we are – and if you look at various storage costs, you
can see the exponential drop in cost, that favors a system that will enable
both variable renewable energy and battery storage combined,” First Gen
President and Chief Operating Officer Francis Giles B. Puno stressed.
In an archipelagic
country like the Philippines, he noted that the deployment of battery storage
is also seen as concrete solution into setting forth cost-competitive as well
as cleaner and reliable energy supply to the island-grids and far-flung areas.
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