ROUNDUP: Duke Energy’s pilot plan, 200MW NSW PV-plus-storage application, SunPower’s college project

LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email
Duke Energy testing containerised supercapacitor energy storage systems. Image: Duke Energy.

Duke Energy commits to US$6 billion investment including up to 50MW of battery energy storage

29 August 2017: NYSE-traded US utility Duke Energy will drop the building of a nuclear power plant while committing to investments in renewable and clean energy technologies in Florida, including ‘up to’ 50MW of battery energy storage.

Duke Energy Florida announced Tuesday that it has filed a revised settlement agreement with the Florida Public Service Commission (FPSC) which includes plans for investment in grid modernisation, solar, smart meters, EV chargers and battery storage.

If approved by FPSC in December, the plan, which replaces a previous one in place since 2013, will go into effect early next year. Duke Energy said it would constitute some US$6 billion in investment.

Major features of the revised settlement include the addition of 700MW of PV facilities over the next four years — including the development of a 74.9MW PV project in Hamilton County.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Enjoy 12 months of exclusive analysis

Not ready to commit yet?
  • Regular insight and analysis of the industry’s biggest developments
  • In-depth interviews with the industry’s leading figures
  • Annual digital subscription to the PV Tech Power journal
  • Discounts on Solar Media’s portfolio of events, in-person and virtual

Or continue reading this article for free

In addition, Duke Energy plans to install more than 500 electric vehicle charging stations and up to 50 MW of battery storage through pilot programmes within the state.

By no longer working on the Levy Nuclear Project, residential customers will see a reduction of US$2.50 per 1,000 kWh through the removal of unrecovered Levy Nuclear Project costs. Duke Energy will absorb more than US$150 million in costs that would have been recovered through rates.

Additional reporting by Conor Ryan.

Application put in for 200MW PV farm with energy storage in New South Wales

30 August 2017: Australian renewable energy developer CWP Renewables has applied to build a 200MW solar PV plant with an as-yet-undefined energy storage element, next to a vast wind farm in New South Wales.

CWP made filings last week with the New South Wales government’s Planning & Environment department for the facility, including the required Preliminary Environmental Assessment which details the plans.

The company is already developing the nearby Sapphire Wind Farm, a 270MW generation project with turbines 200 metres tall. The proposed Sapphire Solar Farm could therefore share some offices, maintenance facilities and point of connection to the local 330kV transmission network operated by TransGrid. The opportunity to co-locate the facilities made it a more attractive location for the solar PV plant than alternatives and could establish a renewable energy ‘hub’ for the area, CWP said.

“The project may include an energy storage system which would consist of batteries housed in enclosures the size of a shipping container,” the environmental assessment reads.

CWP talked up the benefits of adding the battery in making the solar energy generated dispatchable at times of high demand and of course in mitigating the effects of the variable output of power from the plant.

The company has yet to decide the size of the energy storage facility or the duration for which it will be able to store energy. It also appears to be open to different technologies, stating that it will assess lithium, lead acid, sodium sulphur, nickel hydride batteries as well as mechanical technologies which could include flywheels.

SunPower building solar carports and 2MWh of Stem’s energy storage at California college

29 August 2017: SunPower will build clean energy facilities including multiple-megawatt solar carports and a 2MWh energy storage system at a college in Santa Rosa, California.

SunPower high efficiency PV panels will be deployed at two carport sites on the 100 acre Santa Rosa campus adding up to 2.6MW, while a separate 1.3MW carport system will be installed at Petaluma, another campus of the college.

Combined with the carport will be a 1.3MW / 2MWh battery energy storage system supplied by Stem, which specialised in intelligent energy storage for commercial and industrial (C&I) customers. Using that energy storage system, the college will be able to lower the demand charge portion of its bill.

On Tuesday, Energy-Storage.News reported on a study from the US’ National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) that said as many as 5 million C&I customers could potentially reduce their electricity bills with energy storage by using it to curb their demand charges, which are premiums payable for periods of high electricity use and can make up to 70% of C&I bills in some cases.

A SunPower carport project, under construction. Image: SunPower.

Read Next

September 18, 2025
Hydrostor has secured US$55 million in funding from Export Development Canada (EDC) to advance development activities for its 200MW/1,600MWh Silver City Energy Storage Centre project in Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia.
September 12, 2025
Dutch BESS operator Return has acquired four ready-to-build (RTB) projects in Germany, while agrifood tech and renewables investor N2OFF has added BESS to a solar project it is developing there.
September 8, 2025
A 12GWh pumped hydro project and a 1,200MWh battery energy storage system in New South Wales (NSW) have been submitted to Australia’s Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.
Premium
September 8, 2025
Energy-Storage.news Premium speaks with Ryan Hledik, Principal at the Brattle Group, and Lauren Nevitt, Senior Director of Public Policy at Sunrun, on the shaky future of California’s Demand Side Grid Support distributed storage programme.
September 3, 2025
During the morning of 30 August 2025, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) responded to a possible vegetation fire in the area of independent power producer (IPP) Arevon Energy’s California Flats solar-plus-storage project.

Most Popular

Email Newsletter