go to top scroll for more

Generation Integrated Energy Storage - A Paradigm Shift

Reference Number
EP/P023320/1
Title
Generation Integrated Energy Storage - A Paradigm Shift
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Other Power and Storage Technologies(Energy storage)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Professor S Garvey
Mechanical, Materials and Manufacturing Engineering
University of Nottingham
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 July 2017
End Date
30 June 2022
Duration
60 months
Total Grant Value
£332,646
Industrial Sectors
Energy
Region
East Midlands
Programme
Energy : Energy
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor S Garvey, Mechanical, Materials and Manufacturing Engineering, University of Nottingham
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Rolls-Royce PLC
Project Contact, ETI (Energy Technologies Institute)
Project Contact, Centro de Investigaciones Energíticas, Medioambientales y Tecnolígicas (CIEMAT), Spain
Project Contact, University of Malta
Project Contact, University of Virginia, USA
Project Contact, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), USA
Project Contact, University of Windsor, Canada
Project Contact, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
Project Contact, Politecnico di Milano (Polytechnic University of Milan), Italy
Project Contact, Highview Power Storage
Project Contact, National Grid plc
Project Contact, Hydrostor, Canada
Project Contact, Dummy Organisation
Project Contact, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati
Project Contact, EDF Energy
Project Contact, University of Galway
Project Contact, University of Melbourne
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
This project will assess a class of systems that blend electricity generation and storage, to understand the role that they could play in future energy systems. Their ability to deliver low-carbon energy on demand, at low system cost, will be investigated from technical, economic, and policy standpoints.With a growing fraction of electricity consumption being supplied by variable renewable energy sources, the ability to match energy generation and energy consumption is rapidly taking centre stage. Flexible ('dispatchable') coal and gas plants are being displaced to lower carbon emissions. At present, both nuclear and renewable energy technologies are generally configured to generate as much electricity as possible, regardless of the electricity demand at the time. Standalone energy storage, in which surplus electricity is converted to an intermediate energy form and then back again, is emerging as a vital partner to these generation technologies but it is prohibitively expensive for the duties that will be required in the near future. Active management of electricity demand (by shutting down or deferring loads) and electrical interconnections with neighbouring countries will also play important roles but these also have costs and they will not obviate the need for storage.This project will build a deep understanding of a class of system which takes a different and potentially much lower cost approach. These Generation Integrated Energy Storage (GIES) systems, store energy in a convenient form before converting it to electricity on demand. The hypothesis is that the lowest cost and highest performance storage can be achieved by integrating generation and storage within one system. This avoids the expense and inefficiency of transforming primary energy (e.g. wind, solar, nuclear) into electricity, then into an intermediate form, and later back to electricity. For example, the heat produced by a concentrating solar power plant can be stored at far lower cost and with lower losses than producing electricity directly and operating a standalone electricity store.A broad range of opportunities exist for low-carbon GIES systems, in both renewable and nuclear applications. The research team's expertise in wind, nuclear, and liquefied air storage will be applied directly to GIES systems in all three. The project will also establish a framework for the wider significance of GIES to energy systems. Technical and thermodynamic metrics that characterise high performing GIES systems will be developed, and used to compare with standalone generation and storage equivalents. The theoretical groundwork laid by this research will have applications far beyond the current project. Opportunities for current and future technologies will be mapped out and publicised, supporting and accelerating further work in the field. The deployment and operation of such technologies will be modelled by means of a pragmatic real options economic analysis. The unique policy and economic considerations of fusing generation and storage will be reviewed in detail, considering challenges and proposing solutions to regulatory and financial hurdles. Taken in concert, these will determine the value and scope for substantial deployment of GIES systems.In bringing to light the potential of the class of GIES systems, the research team will rectify a gap in energy systems thinking, in time to inform what will be a multi-billion pound expenditure in the coming decade. By providing the tools to analyse and deploy these systems, the research will open up a new avenue for cost-effective flexibility across the energy infrastructure of the UK and other regions worldwide.
Data

No related datasets

Projects

No related projects

Publications

No related publications

Added to Database
07/12/18