Santa Fe New Mexican

Girding for grids? It’ll be the right move in New Mexico

-

An important task for the elected Public Regulation Commission — before the governor-appointed version of that body takes over — is to smooth the way and incentiviz­e developmen­t of microgrids for new, single-family home subdivisio­ns.

Microgrid is one of those terms that means different things. Santa Fe Community College has one, but that’s not what we’re talking about. The first and only subdivisio­n-scale microgrid in New Mexico went online in 2019 for housing at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerqu­e.

It was installed by Emera Technologi­es, a subsidiary of Emera, a Nova Scotia-based electric utility company that happens to own New Mexico Gas Co. More on that later.

The revolution­ary product of Emera Technologi­es is a cube called Block Energy. It’s the size of central air-conditioni­ng units set outside typical suburban homes. It’s partially buried to cool batteries filling most of the box.

Also inside is an inverter, converting direct current power from rooftop solar panels to alternatin­g current needed to power our homes. So far, nothing revolution­ary. But then they add artificial intelligen­ce communicat­ion capability that connects every box in the subdivisio­n via fiber-optic cables.

Machine learning is the secret to the smartest of smart

grids. Every Block Energy box is communicat­ing with every other box in the neighborho­od, as are rooftop solar arrays. That means when one rooftop array is creating more energy to power lights, gadgets and top off batteries, excess power goes to a neighbor’s depleted battery box and vice versa.

Distribute­d energy, the industry term for thousands of individual rooftop solar systems tied into the wider electrical grid, is well-establishe­d and part of PNM’s plans to achieve carbon-neutral energy delivery by 2040.

Also part of the plan is energy storage. But that’s where it gets dicey.

It’s one thing to have utility-scale fields of solar panels or windmills as far as the eye can see. It’s another thing to contemplat­e utility-scale storage batteries. They don’t exist. There’s a lot of research and pilot programs trying to solve the conundrum, but they’re still a long way off.

Distribute­d storage coupled with distribute­d energy at each new home is an immediate and proven solution. There’s no power loss from long-distance transmissi­on and because microgrids are connected to the larger grid — but can isolate themselves if the larger grid goes down — they guarantee reliabilit­y that Texans would have loved last winter and California­ns would love today.

Emera Technologi­es is so certain of the wisdom of distribute­d storage powered by distribute­d energy — all connected to the larger grid — that it is willing to design and install everything at no cost to developers. That includes rooftop solar panels, Block Energy boxes, fiber-optic cables and a backup, natural gas-fired electric generator in the subdivisio­n to guarantee the microgrid’s reliabilit­y.

Their business model with PNM will be: If we build it, they’ll buy it. For subdivisio­n developers, it means free 100 percent renewable energy homes. For homeowners, it means the system on their roof and the battery box outside are owned by PNM. In exchange, the homeowner gets 100 percent reliabilit­y and rates that should stay fixed for decades.

Santa Fe should be the center of new subdivisio­ns with microgrids daisy-chained together. Tierra Contenta, with 1,200 homes coming online scattered over multiple small subdivisio­ns, is the perfect place to start. All-electric homes are the future. Microgrids will help get us there. And unlike many other communitie­s, New Mexico Gas Co. may even help facilitate the transition.

Kim Shanahan has been a Santa Fe green builder since 1986 and a sustainabi­lity consultant since 2019. Contact him at shanafe@aol.com.

 ??  ?? Kim Shanahan Building Santa Fe
Kim Shanahan Building Santa Fe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States