Quite surprising.

  TECHNOLOGYBig batteries are all the rage, but this one's 16 years
oldPublished:
Monday, October 21, 2019

New York City dove headlong into the race to build bigger and bigger
batteries this week, as regulators approved plans for a massive system
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-10-17/long-island-city-will-soon-be-home-to-new-york-s-biggest-battery>
 on the East River in Queens.

But for those keeping score, the biggest of all has been quietly at work
for almost 16 years in a far more remote corner of America: a warehouse in
central Alaska.

The 46-megawatt battery, in Fairbanks, uses a chemistry that's largely gone
the way of fax machines. It's old enough that its operators can't find
replacement parts for some components. But it still works, keeping the
lights in the city of 32,000 near the Arctic Circle, preventing 59
blackouts last year alone.

"Our system operators are very adamant that they don't want it to go away,"
said Dan Bishop, manager of engineering services for the Golden Valley
Electric Association, which owns the battery.

The push to install bigger and bigger batteries on U.S. electric grids
comes as the price of lithium-ion systems has plummeted and states try to
squeeze out fossil fuels. By soaking up excess power and dispatching it
when demand spikes, batteries can help keep grids stable and smoothly
incorporate ebbs and flows of wind and solar. They can also displace so
called peaker natural-gas plants that kick in only when demand surges.

Dubbed the BESS <https://www.gvea.com/energy/bess>, for Battery Energy
Storage System, the array in Alaska uses 13,760 nickel-cadmium cells,
stacked in rows. Guinness World Records certified it as the world's most
powerful battery when it was commissioned in 2003. It's since lost its
global crown as systems including Tesla Inc.'s 100-megawatt battery in
Australia have come online.

Now several installations planned in the U.S. are poised to eclipse it, too.

In California, Tesla is building a 182.5-megawatt installation for PG&E
Corp. In Florida, NextEra Energy Inc.'s Florida Power & Light utility is
planning
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-03-28/the-race-to-build-the-world-s-largest-solar-storage-plant-is-on>
 a 409-megawatt battery pack. Meanwhile, New York's battery at the
Ravenswood power plant in Long Island City will be built in three phases,
with the first coming online in 2021.

But for now, the BESS remains king.

For the record, the U.S. Energy Department considers BESS to be tied
<https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=40072> with a battery in
California as the country's largest, listing the capacity of both at 40
megawatts. Golden Valley, however, says its system in Alaska weighs in at
46 megawatts.

Designed by ABB Ltd. with cells from Saft Groupe SA, the $35 million system
kicks in whenever there's an interruption in electricity supply. The
Alaskan interior lacks the densely woven web of power lines found in much
of the country, and blackouts used to be common, said Tom DeLong, chairman
of Golden Valley's board of directors.

"We were islanded — we had basically one big extension cord down to
Anchorage," he said. "Everyone in Fairbanks, when I was here in the '70s
and '80s, had a generator in their garage."

As such, the BESS represents an earlier generation of energy-storage
projects, BloombergNEF analyst Logan Goldie-Scot said. The large-scale
batteries now being installed provide a variety of services: helping
maintain grid stability, storing excess electricity from wind and solar and
in some cases replacing small power plants. But in BESS's day, large
batteries often served relatively remote communities that needed a backup
power source in a pinch, Goldie-Scot said.

Like any aging system, BESS needs work. Half its cells have been replaced,
and the control system now needs an upgrade or replacement. Golden Valley,
however, has no plans to ditch it.

"Not unlike your other computer-based things, after a certain amount of
time, the chips aren't made anymore," Bishop said. *— David R. Baker,
Bloomberg*
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