Showing posts with label Solar Modules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Solar Modules. Show all posts

DOE Opens New Smart Grid Integration Testing Facility



The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) are launching a new user facility for testing utility-scale renewable energy grid integration.

The Energy Systems Integration Facility (ESIF) in Golden, Colo., already has its first industry partner, Advanced Energy Industries, whose aim is to build better performing solar power inverters. The US $135 million facility will test how technologies such as solar modules, wind turbines, electric vehicles, and smart appliances interact with each other and the grid. Wind and solar, for instance, can wreak havoc on the electrical grid because of their intermittency. The center should help accelerate the adoption of smart grid technologies across the grid, from generation and transmission, down to individual buildings.  

“This new facility will allow for an even stronger partnership with manufacturers, utilities and researchers to help integrate more clean, renewable energy into a smarter, more reliable and more resilient power grid,” Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said in a statement.

ESIF (pronounced ē-sif), which was four years in the making, has more than 15 labs, plus outdoor test beds that will allow companies and researchers to test products at real grid load levels. The labs cover technologies in four areas: electricity, thermal systems, fuel cell and electrochemical research and data analysis, and visualization. The latter includes a high-performance data center designed to be one of the most energy efficient in the world, with a power usage effectiveness of 1.06 or better. The data center will allow researchers to do large-scale modeling and simulation.

Advanced Energy Industries worked with the DOE on the Solar Energy Grid Integration Systems (SEGIS) project, which is aimed at bringing solar power more seamlessly onto the grid. Advanced Energy’s solar inverter allows for two-way power flows and utility communications at a lower levelized cost of energy than some other inverters.

Communicating with inverters will be increasingly important as solar penetration in the United States increases. In Germany, where there is far more solar PV, inverters are already required to help minimize negative effects on the grid by providing functions such as power ramping.

The inverter manufacturer will take advantage of ESIF’s megawatt-scale power-in-the-loop system; it can simulate different grid conditions, which will allow Advanced Energy to fine-tune the performance of its inverters and drive costs down further.

“ESIF will do something different. It will fill research gaps and provide a national focal point for systems-integration R&D,” Robert Shapard, chairman of the GridWise Alliance, a coalition of smart grid advocates, said in a statement. “ESIF will be one of a few facilities in the country capable of providing for the fully integrated field-testing of hardware and software technologies, enabling advanced visualization and simulation, establishing a virtual utility operations platform, and providing smart grid interoperability testing and validation.”

Source: www.spectrum.ieee.org

First Solar Power Plant Commissioned in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur France


On August 21 in the commune of Valderoure, the French subsidiary of the global market leader in photovoltaic system integration, BELECTRIC, officially inaugurated the region's first ground-mounted solar power plant. In the presence of the mayor and several regional politicians, BELECTRIC employees – who were involved in the design and implementation of the power plant – gave the guests a guided tour of the solar power plant as well as information about the performance of the plant and general information on BELECTRIC as a company. The solar power plant with an installed output of 1.86 MWp was erected on an area covering 5.5 ha and is a prime example of the Franco-German cooperation. The 24,000 First Solar modules installed generate an annual power production of approximately 2.8 million kWh, which corresponds to the average annual power consumption of around 600 households, saving the environment almost 2,500 tons of CO₂ per year.

The integration of the solar power plant in the landscape was given top priority. A standing committee with representatives from all the responsible environmental agencies accompanied the project in every construction phase. The open and honest cooperation proved successful in particular during the preparation of the site, which is a sensitive phase in terms of flora and fauna. The positive cooperation will also be an advantage in terms of the educational nature trail that is still to be constructed.  Jochen Meyer, Managing Director of BELECTRIC France, summarized his enthusiasm in one sentence: "This project is an excellent example of the positive cooperation between BELECTRIC's excellent technical, personal, and financial competences and the pronounced desire of the local representatives of the commune to set up an environmentally friendly and sustainable power supply in this region."