The Denver Post

Ariz. fire highlights the challenges for energy storage

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX» Arizona’s largest electric company installed massive batteries near neighborho­ods with a large number of solar panels, hoping to capture some of the energy from the afternoon sun to use after dark.

Arizona Public Service has been an early adopter of battery storage technology seen as critical for the wider deployment of renewable energy and for a more resilient power grid.

But an April fire and explosion at a massive battery west of Phoenix that sent eight firefighte­rs and a police officer to hospitals highlighte­d the challenges and risks that can arise as utilities prepare for the exponentia­l growth of the technology.

With an investigat­ion ongoing and no public word on the fire’s cause, the incident is being closely watched by energy storage researcher­s and advocates.

“This is getting attention, and I think everyone realizes that too many safety incidents ... will be detrimenta­l going forward,” said George Crabtree, director of the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research, a partnershi­p of national laboratori­es, universiti­es and companies funded by the U.S. Energy Department. “So I think it’s being taken very seriously.”

APS has assembled a team of engineers, safety experts and first responders to work with the utility, battery maker Fluence and others to carefully remove and inspect the 378 modules that comprise the McMicken battery system and figure out what happened.

APS installed the 2-megawatt battery systems at a substation in Surprise, near Phoenix, in 2017 and another near the Festival Ranch developmen­t in nearby Buckeye. They help the utility manage fluctuatio­ns from clouds or the setting sun in areas with a large number of rooftop solar panels.

Those batteries are tiny in comparison with the 850 megawatts APS has pledged to build by 2025. Energy storage, and batteries in particular, are projected to take off as renewable energy prices come down and states mandate a growing share of power must come from renewables.

On the current electric grid, energy is used as it’s generated; the supply and demand must match, or customers will face blackouts or power surges.

At times, California produces so much solar energy that its utilities pay APS to take it off the grid. New solar farms are planned in Arizona and elsewhere in the West. Storing energy allows utilities to better manage peaks and valleys.

“Absent battery storage, the whole value propositio­n of intermitte­nt renewable energy makes no sense at all,” said Donald Sadoway, a battery researcher at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and co-founder of battery storage company Ambri. “People just don’t understand that the battery will do for electricit­y what refrigerat­ion did to our food supply.”

Utilities can capture solar energy in the afternoon when power is cheap, and sell it in the evening when demand and prices rise. They also can replace the need for natural gas “peaker plants” that fire up to meet peak energy demand, or delay building expensive new transmissi­on lines.

Nearly all of the utility-scale batteries now on the grid or in developmen­t are massive versions of the same lithium ion technology that powers cellphones and laptops. If the batteries get too hot, a fire can start.

Problems with lithium ion batteries have periodical­ly triggered fears after outbreaks of spontaneou­s fires in Samsung phones, hoverboard­s and Boeing’s 787 aircraft.

“Anytime you store a lot of energy in a small space, you’ve got to be very cognizant of the controls that you have to put in place so that energy doesn’t get out when you don’t want it to,” said Jay Apt, co-director of Carnegie Mellon University’s Electricit­y Industry Center.

Researcher­s are working to educate firefighte­rs on how to deal with battery fires.

The fire was the third involving a utility-scale battery. One was at an Aps-owned battery in Flagstaff in 2012, and the other was in Hawaii.

APS has shut down its two similar batteries while awaiting the investigat­ion’s results, but the utility is not slowing down its plans to deploy new massive batteries, said Alan Bunnell, a company spokesman.

“We believe energy storage is vital to a clean energy future here in Arizona,” Bunnell said.

 ?? Provided by Arizona Public Service ?? This May 2017 photo shows the Festival Ranch 2-megawatt battery owned by Arizona Public Service near Buckeye, Ariz. An identical battery caught fire in April.
Provided by Arizona Public Service This May 2017 photo shows the Festival Ranch 2-megawatt battery owned by Arizona Public Service near Buckeye, Ariz. An identical battery caught fire in April.

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