TOKYO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Toshiba Corporation (TOKYO:6502) today announced that it has received an order to supply a large scale battery energy storage system (BESS) for a power frequency regulation project in Hamilton, Ohio. The project will be carried out by Sumitomo Corporation, Sumitomo Corporation of Americas and Renewable Energy Systems Americas, a US renewable energy developer. Toshiba’s BESS, integrating an array of 6MW-2MWh SCiB™ lithium-ion batteries, will be delivered in November, and the system is scheduled to start operation in December.
Toshiba’s SCiB™ is a highly innovative lithium-ion secondary battery, distinguished by its long-life and excellent performance; it charges and discharges efficiently in a wide range of temperatures, high and low. It has a long lifetime of over 10,000 charge-discharge cycles, and operates with a high level of reliability and safety, including high resistance to external shock. The SCiB™ has found numerous applications, such as the power source for electric and hybrid vehicles.
The USA has seen the emergence of a power trading through a frequency regulation market[1] as a mechanism for preventing instability in the power grid resulting from the feed-in of increasingly and widely used renewable energy sources, such as wind power and photovoltaic generation. Toshiba’s BESS delivers a rapid and fine-tuned response to frequency changes, and with the SCiB™’s long life, it offers an optimized solution for long-term power regulation.
Toshiba is promoting BESS globally as an effective tool for ironing out frequency fluctuations and supporting stable power networks, and has supplied systems for projects in Japan and around the world.
February 20th this year saw the start of commercial operation of the world’s largest 40MW[2]-20MWh BESS that Toshiba supplied for the Nishi-Sendai Substation Battery Energy Storage System Project[3], operated by Tohoku Electric Power Company. The project was launched as a new measure against frequency changes caused by power output fluctuations. Demand for such measures has increased with the growth of renewable generation. The BESS for the Nishi-Sendai Project is the first large-scale BESS connected to Japan’s grid.
Overseas, Toshiba has supplied BESS to contribute to stable power supply by suppressing changes in frequency.
In Europe, Toshiba has supplied BESS to projects in Italy, Spain, and the UK. In Italy, Toshiba supplied BESS for Terna Storage, a subsidiary of Terna S.p.A., an Italian transmission company. In Spain, Toshiba collaborated with Spain’s Gas Natural Fenosa in an on-site verification testing program[4] for a transportable lithium-ion BESS, with the aim of achieving an efficient, reliable and stable distribution network. In the UK, Toshiba supplied SCiB™ for a 2MW energy storage system project led by the University of Sheffield.
In the USA, Toshiba teamed up with Duke Energy, a major US utility, in a pilot project[4] for a BESS designed to regulate frequency and to increase grid stability. The BESS started operation in January this year.
Toshiba will continue to develop innovative solutions to support reliable electric power supply, and to expand its large-scale BESS business in the global market.
Notes: | ||
[1] | Frequency regulation market is the market to secure emergency power for the short-term, from seconds to minutes, to mitigate mismatches between a power station’s operation plan and power demand, and to damp power fluctuations inherent in renewable power generation. | |
[2] |
As of April 21, 2015, Toshiba data |
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[3] |
The project is supported by New Energy Promotion Council (NEPC), under its program for “FY2012 Large-scale Storage Battery System Demonstration Project.” |
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[4] | The projects are supported by Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO), under its program for “Development of Large Scale Energy Storage System with High Safety and Cost Competitiveness.” | |
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