USA TODAY US Edition

Hawaii quickly becoming a clean energy paradise

Enormous 185-megawatt battery huge leap forward

- Elizabeth Weise

Americans don’t have to imagine what it’s like to live someplace that’s aggressive­ly switching to 100% clean energy, where 1 in 3 people have rooftop solar, 15% of new cars are electric and giant batteries store energy for use when the sun goes down.

They just have to go to Hawaii. Hawaii pledged to be “Coal free by ’23,” and state law requires 100% clean energy in just 21 years. Attaining that goal came closer last month when an enormous 185-megawatt battery near Honolulu hummed into full operation.

“If you’ve been to Hawaii, you’ve seen a renewable future – and it’s paradise,” said Jeff Mikulina director of the Hawaii Climate Coalition and a board member of the Blue Planet Foundation.

The Kapolei Energy Storage facility is tucked away in 8 acres of industrial land about 20 miles west of Honolulu. More than anything it looks like 158 white storage sheds, each about the size of a shipping container, neatly lined up on concrete pads.

These lithium iron phosphate batteries can hold 185 megawatts of power, or 565 megawatt hours of energy, enough to supply electricit­y to 17% of the island of Oahu for three hours at peak load or six hours at half load, said Brandon Keefe, executive chairman of Plus Power, the Texas-based company that built the Kapolei battery.

These kinds of grid-scale energy storage systems are becoming increasing­ly common in the U.S. and are crucial to shifting to ever-higher percentage­s of wind and solar power. But Hawaii is in a class by itself.

“This system is larger as a percentage of the electricit­y system than any other battery in the world,” said Colton Ching, Hawaiian Electric’s senior vice president of planning and technology. The utility provides electricit­y to 95% of the state’s residents.

Hawaii is different when it comes to energy

Hawaii is blessed with an abundance of wind, sun and geothermal power but doesn’t have a drop of fossil fuel. Instead, every 10 days or so an oil supertanke­r arrives at a refinery near the Honolulu port, producing almost 80% of the state’s energy, Mikulina said.

Almost all that oil comes from as much as 6,000 miles away, primarily from Libya and Argentina, which makes energy in Hawaii expensive and prone to weather and geopolitic­al disruption.

“We’re one supertanke­r away from becoming Amish,” he said. “We have a 25-day oil supply in storage.”

Now, Hawaii’s energy is coming home, which the state believes will provide stability, cheaper prices and a greener environmen­t.

Each of Hawaii’s six main islands has its own electrical grid, not connected to any other island. The state already gets 32% of its energy from renewables. Today 6.25% of Hawaii’s electricit­y comes from its seven wind farms. On the Big Island of Hawaii, about 30% of energy comes from geothermal from a plant that gets heat from near the Kilauea volcano that erupted in September.

It also has a growing number of electric vehicles. Last year, 15% of new vehicle sales in Hawaii were electric.

It makes sense, Mikulina said. “Gas is expensive and we don’t have to drive very far, so the biggest hurdles of cost and range anxiety aren’t here.”

But what makes the state stand out is solar power – especially where it comes from.

In 2022 Hawaii hit upon an innovative plan to make up for the shutdown of its last coal plant. State regulators created the Battery Bonus program, which subsidized households to add rooftop solar and battery storage.

In exchange, the household feeds electricit­y back into the grid for two hours sometime between 6 and 8:30 p.m., when the sun has gone down and Hawaii needs power.

By the end of 2023, the island of Oahu enrolled 40 megawatts of power and Maui had added 6.29 megawatts.

There’s some controvers­y over new rules created for 2024 which are more complex and less favorable to customers, and the island’s solar industry has asked the state Public Utilities Commission to reconsider.

The state also has a number of utility-scale solar farms. The largest on the Big Island of Hawaii, the Waikoloa solar plus storage project, plugged in last year and now supplies more than 7% of the island’s electricit­y. “It’s in the middle of a lava field, and already it’s lowering people’s bills by at least $5 a month,” Mikulina said.

But the remarkable thing about Hawaii when it comes to sun is how many households have solar. A record 37% of Hawaiian homes have rooftop solar, which accounts for an impressive 44% of the state’s renewable energy, according to Hawaiian Electric.

The only place in the world that’s even remotely close to that is Australia, where 28% of that nation island’s energy comes from solar panels on people’s roofs, according to research by Australian National University.

“We talk to those guys a lot. They have very similar challenges to us,” Ching said.

Hawaii is proud of the amount of renewable energy it has now. But to fulfill its state mandate, it’s going to need a lot more, quickly.

That’s where batteries come in.

Why you need a battery so big it’s in a class by itself

Three kinds of carbon-neutral power produce 24 hours a day – nuclear, hydroelect­ric and geothermal. But all are politicall­y difficult to expand, which means wind and solar are the go-tos to meet the nation’s energy goals.

As detractors frequently point out, the wind doesn’t always blow and the sun doesn’t always shine. Grid-scale batteries help even things out. When there’s more energy coming from wind and solar than can be used, the batteries are charged up, then they discharge when the wind slows or the sun goes down.

These batteries store so much energy they can bridge the gap between when energy from solar goes off the grid at sunset and when everyone finally turns out the lights to go to bed.

But Hawaii is in a class by itself. It has so much solar it can’t always use all the energy those 200,000 or so homes with solar panels provide the grid. When that happens, grid operators have to shut off either utility scale wind or solar, called “curtailmen­t,” to keep things even.

With the new Kapolei battery, the island of Oahu will be able to add 10% more solar power without having to worry it will overload the system.

Grid services help state’s goal of going 100% renewable

The Kapolei Energy Storage facility doesn’t just store lots of energy, it also does some complicate­d and crucial things that help with the state’s goal of going 100% renewable – things more batteries on the mainland will be doing in the coming years.

Think of an electric grid as a teetertott­er. On one end you’ve got energy coming in, on the other energy going out. If the in and out aren’t perfectly balanced, the system becomes unstable and can collapse.

“When you flip on a light switch, a power plant somewhere is working a little harder,” Keefe said.

For the past 120 or so years, electric power grids have relied on fossil fuel plants whose operators constantly monitor the need for energy, powering up or down to keep the frequency of the system in balance. That first line of defense is called frequency regulation.

If frequency imbalances grow, the second line of defense is either speeding or slowing the already-spinning turbines in the plants – a process called inertia – to generate more electricit­y and fill the frequency imbalance.

The Kapolei Energy Storage facility can do both, providing what’s known as “synthetic inertia.”

“In 250 millisecon­ds, a little slower than a blink of an eye, we can race up and fill major gaps in the system,” Keefe said.

These kinds of batteries will allow Hawaii to eventually get rid of all its fossil fuel plants, Ching said.

Eventually, the one Achilles’ heel to the state’s green dreams will be the amount of aviation fuel required to bring the visitors who fuel its economy. Changing that will require advances in sustainabl­e aviation fuel.

For tourists, nothing will change. The air will remain balmy, the ocean refreshing, the resorts enticing.

Hawaii will be a case study for the rest of the nation, Mikulina said: “We can be a living laboratory for what’s possible for clean energy.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY PLUS POWER ?? The Plus Power Kapolei Energy Storage facility, located on 8 acres of land in Kapolei on the island of Oahu about 20 miles west of Honolulu, helped replace the island’s coal-fired plant that closed in 2022. The Plus Power facility was turned on just before Christmas of 2023.
PROVIDED BY PLUS POWER The Plus Power Kapolei Energy Storage facility, located on 8 acres of land in Kapolei on the island of Oahu about 20 miles west of Honolulu, helped replace the island’s coal-fired plant that closed in 2022. The Plus Power facility was turned on just before Christmas of 2023.
 ?? PROVIDED BY PLUS POWER ?? The Plus Power Kapolei Energy Storage facility, a 185-megawatt battery project, is part of Hawaiian Electric’s mandated shift to 100% green energy. The batteries help bridge the gap between when energy from solar goes off the grid at sunset and when everyone finally turns out the lights to go to bed.
PROVIDED BY PLUS POWER The Plus Power Kapolei Energy Storage facility, a 185-megawatt battery project, is part of Hawaiian Electric’s mandated shift to 100% green energy. The batteries help bridge the gap between when energy from solar goes off the grid at sunset and when everyone finally turns out the lights to go to bed.

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