Negative Price Signals. I always have a hard time with bad headlines. While the Washington Post article doesn’t say anything novel, the headline implies that solar is such terrible energy that it gets thrown away. What it doesn’t say is two important things. First is that cheap solar energy has lowered the cost of energy for all of California in a way that nobody every predicted with a plethora of low cost PPAs that have no commodity price adjustment for fuel. Second, is that a negative price, is a price signal for investments that leverage arbitrage, like batteries. Energy storage arbitrage will enable more solar to be built than the 47GW that already has been built and ultimately create a base case for solar making up for most of the generation on the CAISO grid. That being said, there’s control complications that need to be taken into account and keeping those batteries flexible won’t be easy. This article is the exact reason why I love chairing the energy storage division for SEIA, because the combo of solar with batteries is exactly what we need in this energy transition.
Resilient Puerto Rico. Some humble brags for my team at FlexGen for signing on to a great project in Puerto Rico with Arclight Capital’s Infinigen. We all know how unreliable the Puerto Rico grid has been after many storms have harmed the infrastructure. This is an important step for more resilience that I’m proud to be a part of on Earth Day.
- Washington Post: Rooftop solar panels are flooding California’s grid. That’s a problem.
- Energy Storage News: FlexGen to deploy 15MW BESS in Puerto Rico for Arclight and Infinigen
- PV-Magazine: Earth Day celebrated with $7 billion solar funding announcement
- PV-Tech: Maxeon sues Hanwha QCells over alleged US TOPCon cell patent infringement
- Canary Media: Data centers want clean electricity. Can Georgia Power deliver it?
- GreenBiz: Salesforce to lobby for new rules on AI’s environmental impact
- Axios: Exclusive – New Democratic transmission legislation
- Renewable Energy World: U.S. hydropower generation expected to increase by 6% in 2024
Opinion
Best, Yann