Guidehouse: VPP-enabled distributed energy storage deployment to reach 3GW by 2030

June 10, 2022
LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email

Annual deployments of distributed energy storage connected to virtual power plants (VPP) are expected to reach 3GW by 2030, according to research firm Guidehouse Insights.

The VPP Applications for Distributed Energy Storage report expects annual installations of VPP-enabled distributed energy storage (DES) to grow by an average compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 28% over the decade, from 288.1MW installed last year to 3GW by 2030.

“As distributed energy markets increasingly become more connected and designed with intelligent management technology, more DER (distributed energy resource) deployments are anticipated to have VPP capabilities at the ready,” said Maria Chavez, research analyst with Guidehouse Insights.

The company expects the proportion of DES deployments that are VPP-enabled to be over one-fifth by the end of the decade. It defines VPPs as systems that rely on software and a smart grid to remotely and automatically dispatch DER flexibility services to distribution or wholesale markets, via an aggregation and optimisation platform.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Try Premium for just $1

  • Full premium access for the first month at only $1
  • Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
  • Cancel anytime during the trial period

Premium Benefits

  • Expert industry analysis and interviews
  • Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
  • Exclusive event discounts

Or get the full Premium subscription right away

Or continue reading this article for free

Guidehouse anticipates that the Asia Pacific, North America and Europe markets will completely dominate the VPP-enabled DES market by 2030. Asia Pacific will account for around 40% of the 3GW deployment figure, North America around 35% and Europe 25%, the report said.

Utilities are increasingly incentivising participation for residential storage systems in VPPs, like one that Netherlands-based inverter and home storage company Enphase Energy recently participated in. But barriers to VPP penetration remain, like upfront costs of deployment and aggregation, privacy and cybersecurity risks for system owners and regulatory hurdles, the report adds.

The research firm breaks down the VPP market into three segments in a separate but related report, Guidehouse Insights Leaderboard: Virtual Power Plant Platform Vendors.

The first is demand response VPPs, which treat load management as a grid resource and are most advanced in the US. The second is supply side VPPs, which pool portfolios of generation resources through smart grid technology to firm up power, largely pioneered in Europe. The last is a mixed-asset VPPs which combine the three and is where the market is trending towards, the report added.

15 September 2026
San Diego, USA
You can expect to meet and network with all the key industry players again in 2025 from major US asset owners, operators, RTOs and ISOs, optimizers, software and analytics providers, technical consultancies, O&M technology providers and more.

Read Next

January 28, 2026
US sodium-ion (Na-ion) battery technology company Unigrid has begun international shipments of its proprietary sodium cobalt oxide (NCO) cathode cells at commercial volume.
January 27, 2026
Ed Gunn, VP of revenue at home battery storage and virtual power plant (VPP) specialist Lunar Energy, on the market’s recent past and future potential.
January 27, 2026
The global energy storage market is poised for continued expansion in 2026, even as supply chain constraints, regulatory evolution, and emerging applications reshape the landscape, according to Wood Mackenzie. 
Premium
January 22, 2026
Saudi Arabia and the UAE have emerged as two of the world’s most prominent energy storage markets, with mega-scale projects announced and moved forward at a staggering pace over the last two years. But what does the next phase look like?
January 19, 2026
FranklinWH and ConnectDER have had their respective battery and electric meter technologies enrolled into programmes in Arizona expected to accelerate the take-up of home batteries for virtual power plants (VPPs).