All posts tagged: utilities

ELM MicroGrid installs battery storage in its hometown

ELM MicroGrid installs battery storage in its hometown

Battery energy storage specialist ELM MicroGrid has spent more than two decades building a nationwide energy storage and utility infrastructure businesses. Now, the company is bringing that expertise home with the installation of a new battery energy storage system at a solar microgrid project in Peoria, IL. Part of the 2.5-megawatt Peoria Solar Energy Center that broke ground last year, the ELM MicroGrid batteries will help the new Peoria microgrid project produce and manage enough electricity to power more than 400 homes and businesses, provide an economic boost to the region. “At a time when the demand for electricity is outpacing supply in Downstate Illinois, more energy needs to be generated and connected to the grid faster to provide reliability and cost saving benefits for our customers,” said Lenny Singh, Chairman and President of Ameren Illinois, at the project’s launch. “Thanks to a provision in the state’s Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, the Peoria Solar Energy Center – alongside our two other solar facilities in East St. Louis – will produce clean, reliable, and equitable …

US energy sector set to invest 0B in battery storage by 2030

US energy sector set to invest $100B in battery storage by 2030

Last year, the smart money had the American energy sector investing a cool $100 billion (with a “b”) in battery storage for sustainable energy. Today, those batteries aren’t just supporting wind and solar, they’re propping up AI data centers – and the investments are just getting bigger. Whether you love AI (wrong) or hate AI (correct), it’s probably here to stay – with some estimates indicating that AI data centers could represent 17% of total US energy consumption by 2030. (!) That has huge implications for the battery energy storage system (BESS) market, and the original $100 billion estimate we covered last year? That’s looking pretty conservative now. That’s because the ACP estimate focused on building a domestic battery manufacturing base, with companies like LG planning to build out more than 16 GWh of capacity annually from its existing production lines in Holland, Michigan. Today, analysts at Benchmark expect the US to deploy more than 600 GWh of energy storage by 2030, with annual installations nearly doubling again as AI-driven power demand continues to accelerate. Advertisement …

Czech Power Company ČEZ Signs Deal With Rolls-Royce SMR to Prepare for First Small Nuclear Reactor

Czech Power Company ČEZ Signs Deal With Rolls-Royce SMR to Prepare for First Small Nuclear Reactor

ČEZ chief executive Daniel Beneš said that the work includes the project plan and licensing documentation necessary for issuing building permits for the reactor. Beneš said the company hopes to have all the approvals by 2030. The small nuclear reactor will be built at the site of the existing Temelín nuclear plant. On April 13, Great Britain Energy – Nuclear, a government agency, inked a contract with Rolls-Royce SMR to begin design work for the first small nuclear reactors in the U.K. Beneš said that the Czech small nuclear reactor will be the second one built by the British firm after the first one is completed in the U.K. ČEZ has a 20% share in Rolls-Royce SMR and the companies had signed a deal about a strategic partnership, which should result in up to 3 gigawatt energy sources installed in the Czech Republic. The Czech state has an almost 70% stake in ČEZ and the government is taking steps to acquire full control of the company. Small modular reactors are a type of nuclear reactor …

Iran War Leads To Fluoride Shortages For Some US Water Utilities

Iran War Leads To Fluoride Shortages For Some US Water Utilities

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times, Multiple water providers have lowered the amount of fluoride they add to water for millions of Americans, amid shortages stemming from the U.S.–Iran war. The Baltimore City Department of Public Works said on April 13 that it is reducing the level of fluoride from 0.7 milligrams per liter (mg/L) to 0.4 mg/L. The move, officials said, was driven by disruptions to the supply chain caused by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. A key Israeli supplier, specifically, has been struggling to meet demand. “This is an adjustment driven solely by supply availability,” Matthew Garbark, director of the Baltimore City Department of Public Works, said in a statement. “We remain committed to providing safe, high-quality drinking water.” Some 1.8 million people in and around Baltimore, the most populous city in Maryland, are served water by the city of Baltimore utility. Fluoride, a mineral, is put in water as a preventative for tooth decay and cavities. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends adding 0.7 mg/L. WSSC …

Democrats See Georgia’s Failure to Curb Data Centers as an Electoral Gift

Democrats See Georgia’s Failure to Curb Data Centers as an Electoral Gift

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia state lawmakers spent months debating ideas to curb the impact of data centers. But as their annual legislative session ended Thursday, they did nothing. Now with election season upon them, lawmakers are returning home to find local communities up in arms against the warehouses full of computers that power artificial intelligence. “I think they failed us, that’s what I think” said Judy Mullis, an activist fighting plans for a data center near Newnan, southwest of Atlanta. “I think they had the opportunity to do the right thing, and they didn’t. I’m so tired of them prioritizing big money.” Georgia has become one of the country’s top sites for new data centers, thanks to utilities eager to sell electricity and tax breaks estimated to cost state and local governments nearly $3 billion in the year beginning July 1. That gold rush has inflamed opposition, even where business-friendly Republicans dominate local politics. Democrats hope to harness that anger to gain ground in the battleground state, a potential model as the party plots a …

The AI Race Is Pressuring Utilities to Squeeze More From Europe’s Power Grids

The AI Race Is Pressuring Utilities to Squeeze More From Europe’s Power Grids

European countries are racing to bring new data centers online as AI labs across the globe continue to demand more compute. The primary limiting factor is energy—and specifically, the ability to move it. Though Europe is on track to generate enough energy, utilities experts say, grid operators broadly lack the infrastructure needed to transport it to where it needs to go. That’s throttling grid capacity and, by extension, the number of new power-hungry data centers that can connect without risking blackouts. National Grid, which operates the transmission network in England and Wales, says that proposed data centers representing more than 30 gigawatts (GW) of power demand are awaiting connection to its grid, equal to two thirds the peak demand of Great Britain. Even accounting for the likelihood that some of those data centers will never be built, there is currently not enough room to accommodate them. The wait for permission to plug in is causing some data center projects to collapse, undermining European ambitions to capture a share of the hundreds of billions of dollars …

Vermont utility makes it easier than ever to add a home battery

Vermont utility makes it easier than ever to add a home battery

Vermont utility Green Mountain Power is expanding one of the country’s most exciting virtual power plant programs, adding a new battery lease program to its menu of home energy offerings that lets customers add backup power at little to no upfront cost. Green Mountain Power (GMP) has already built a successful home battery program around Tesla’s industry-leading Powerwall – but despite the Powerwall’s excellent reputation, Tesla’s CEO has spent the last few years going out of his way to make himself a polarizing political figure, and a lot of people just don’t want to see their hard-earned money going to support Elon’s causes. GMP gets it, and they’ve expanded the program to include Enphase’s fourth-generation IQ Battery lineup, giving customers more freedom of choice about how they add backup power at home. “Enphase is a great company,” explains Alexander Mintz, owner and operator of Power Guru, a GMP certified backup battery installer. “(Enphase has been in business for over 20 years), they partnered with GMP to make it affordable for folks to install batteries for backup …

Utilities are raising concerns about plug-in solar panels : NPR

Utilities are raising concerns about plug-in solar panels : NPR

Bhavin Misra and his son, Rumi, attach a solar panel while assembling a plug-in solar kit at their home in Houston. David J. Phillip/AP hide caption toggle caption David J. Phillip/AP Easy-to-install solar panels that plug into a regular outlet are getting attention just as Americans are worried about rising energy costs. That’s because these plug-in or balcony solar panels start shaving off part of a homeowner’s or renter’s utility bill right away. “A year ago, nobody was talking about this,” says Cora Stryker, co-founder of Bright Saver, a California nonprofit group that advocates for plug-in solar. The panels are already popular in Germany, where more than 1.2 million of the small plug-in systems are registered with the German government. For the panels to become more widely available in the U.S., state lawmakers are proposing bills that eliminate complicated utility connection agreements, which are required for larger rooftop solar installations and, most utilities say, should apply to plug-in solar too. Those agreements, along with permitting and other installation costs, can double the price of solar …

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

In the United States today, officials at all levels of government generally act as if private enterprise is the only way to provide goods and services. Yet a bastion of public ownership survives: more than a quarter of electricity customers—including the residents of Los Angeles, Omaha, San Antonio, Seattle, Jacksonville, and Tupelo, along with tens of millions of other people—get their power from one of the country’s more than 2,500 publicly owned utilities and rural electric cooperatives. Mostly established in the first half of the twentieth century, these institutions have a long record of offering reliable service at affordable rates; even today, publicly owned utilities charge less and resolve outages faster on average than their investor-owned counterparts. Creating more like them, however, has been extraordinarily difficult. Since the 1940s, few communities have successfully taken control of their private utilities; one such example is the city of Massena, New York, which waged a seven-year political and legal fight before taking over its power grid from Niagara Mohawk in 1981. Residents immediately saw their bills go down …

DC Mayor Declares Emergency, Asks President Trump for Help on Sewage Spill on the Potomac

DC Mayor Declares Emergency, Asks President Trump for Help on Sewage Spill on the Potomac

WASHINGTON (AP) — Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser declared an emergency on Wednesday and requested that President Donald Trump provide federal resources to help the city fight a sewage system leak that dumped 250 million gallons of raw sewage into the Potomac River in its early stages. “Our number one priority is the district, and that we’re going to utilize all resources, local, federal, and regional, or otherwise, to support operations of the district and what’s best for district residents,” said DC Deputy Mayor Lindsey Appiah in a press call announcing the mayor’s action. The local declaration is asking the president to issue a Presidential Emergency Disaster Declaration. It seeks full reimbursement for the money the city and local utility DC Water are spending on repairs. Among actions, the declaration would “direct FEMA to establish a regular interagency coordination calls among federal agencies, affected states, and the District to maintain shared situational awareness and align federal assistance.” It also calls on a variety of other steps, including asking the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to …