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Smart Grid Seminar

Monday, March 24, 2014
12:00pm to 1:00pm
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Annenberg 213
An EROI-Based Analysis of Renewable Energy Farms with Storage
Srinivasan Keshav, Cheriton School of Computer Science, University of Waterloo,

Large renewable energy (RE) farms, such as wind or solar farms, are usually sited in remote areas, far from the transmission grid. Thus, they need to be connected using expensive access lines with limited capacity. The excess of RE generation over this line capacity is wasted; this is called curtailment. We study curtailment using the metric of energy return on investment (EROI), defined as the ratio of useful energy extracted from each unit of energy invested in creating the renewable energy generation system. Curtailment, clearly, reduces EROI.  It may appear that we can extract more energy from an RE farm and increase its EROI by adding storage to the system, where this storage is charged during generation peaks and discharged during off-peak times. However, manufacturing the storage itself requires an energy investment, and, after a certain number of cycles of usage, the storage becomes non-functional. Thus, adding storage may actually decrease the EROI! In this work, we study the EROI for RE farms when used with several types of storage technologies. We find that lithium-ion batteries increase the EROI of both wind and solar farms, unlike lead-acid batteries which generally decrease their EROI. We also show that increasing access line capacity to achieve a target EROI is much more expensive for solar farms than for wind farms.

Joint work with Dr. Yashar Ghiassi-Farrokhfal and Prof. Catherine Rosenberg.

For more information, please contact Sydney Garstang by email at sydney@caltech.edu.

Event Series
Smart Grid Seminar