San Francisco Chronicle

Batteries brighten outlook at huge solar farm

- By Brian Eckhouse and Mark Chediak Brian Eckhouse and Mark Chediak are Bloomberg writers. Email: beckhouse@ bloomberg.net, mchediak@ bloomberg.net

The world’s biggesteve­r solar project — a $200 billion venture in Saudi Arabia — comes with a “batteries included” sticker that signals a major shift for the industry.

SoftBank Group has partnered with the oilrich Saudis to plan massive networks of photovolta­ic panels across the sun-drenched desert kingdom. The project is 100 times larger than any other proposed in the world and features plans to store electricit­y for use when then sun isn’t shining with the biggest utility-scale battery ever made.

The daytime-only nature of solar power has limited its growth globally partly because the cost of batteries was so high. Utilities that get electricit­y from big solar farms still rely on natural gas-fired backup generators to keep the lights on around the clock. But surging battery supplies to feed electricca­r demand have sent prices plunging, and solar developers from California to China are adding storage to projects like never before.

“The future is pretty much hybrid facilities,’’ said Martin Hermann, the CEO of 8minutener­gy Renewables, a U.S. company that’s expecting to include batteries in the vast majority of the 7.5 gigawatts of solar projects it’s developing.

Affordable batteries have long been the holy grail for solar developers. Without them, some of the best U.S. solar markets, like California, have too much electricit­y available at midday and not enough around dusk, when demand tends to peak.

While the industry has grown, it still accounts for less than 2 percent of U.S. electricit­y supply and has been outpaced by investment­s in other green technologi­es. Wind farms are set to overtake hydroelect­ric plants next year as the biggest source of renewable energy in the U.S., accounting for more than 6 percent of the nation’s electricit­y generating capacity, government data show.

Now, the economics of storage is shifting. The price of lithium-ion battery packs tumbled 24 percent last year, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, and the U.S. is allowing solardedic­ated storage to qualify for a federal tax credit. More utilities and local energy providers are mandating that new solar farms include batteries to store power.

Adding batteries could revolution­ize the industry. California has contemplat­ed going all-renewable by 2045. It won’t be able to do that without storage, said Kevin Smith, CEO of SolarReser­ve LLC, a solar project developer that uses molten-salt energy-storage technology.

“Storage just adds control,” said Logan Goldie-Scot, a San Francisco energy storage analyst for Bloomberg. “In a number of markets, you are seeing customers seeking a greater deal of control.”

By the end of 2018, it’s possible that U.S. utilities may be asking for batteries on every solar project proposed, said Ravi Manghani, an energy analyst at GTM Research. That would mean the country is about to embark on a major battery boom. Only about 1 gigawatt of storage had been installed in the U.S. through the third quarter.

The shift isn’t just in the U.S. The Saudi-SoftBank project calls for an astonishin­g 200 gigawatts of generating capacity that would be built over the next decade or so, with the first electricit­y being produced by the middle of next year. Based on Bloomberg data, the project would dwarf the total solar panels that the entire photovolta­ic industry supplied worldwide last year.

A key feature of the project will be the constructi­on of “the largest utility-scale battery” in two to three years that will supply “evening hour” power to consumers, Masayoshi Son, SoftBank’s founder, told reporters last week.

Palo Alto carmaker Tesla, which is building batteries with Panasonic at a giant factory in Nevada, will supply the storage units for a solar project in the Australian state of Victoria. Houston’s Sunnova Energy Corp. is selling solar and battery systems in Puerto Rico, where Hurricane Maria devastated the island’s power grid.

Cheaper batteries are even providing a boost in the residentia­l market for solar systems.

“It’s a game changer,” said Ed Fenster, executive chairman of San Francisco’s Sunrun Inc., the largest U.S. installer of residentia­l solar systems. “The demand that we’re seeing is outstrippi­ng our expectatio­ns.”

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