Manchester opens LAES facility
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5 June 2018
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Highview Power

The world’s first grid-scale
liquid air energy storage (LAES) plant has been launched. The 5MW/15MWh
LAES plant, located at Bury, near Manchester will become the first operational
demonstration of LAES technology at grid-scale.
Professor John Loughhead OBE FREng FTSE, Chief Scientific Adviser at the
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), switched
on the plant located at the Pilsworth landfill gas site in Bury. The LAES
plant has been developed in partnership with recycling and renewable energy
company, Viridor, and has been enabled in part by over £8m in funding from
the UK government.
Professor John Loughhead, Chief Scientific Advisor at BEIS said, “We
welcome the accomplishment of Highview Power, working together with their
project site partner Viridor, to successfully build and operate this grid-scale
liquid air energy storage technology demonstration plant.
"The deployment of smart, flexible technologies, such as energy storage,
will help to ensure the UK has a secure, affordable and clean energy system
now and in the future in keeping with the priorities within UK Government’s
Modern Industrial Strategy.
We’re pleased to have been able to support the Pilsworth demonstrator
through our Energy Innovation Programme aimed at accelerating the commercialisation
of innovative clean energy technologies and processes.”
Gareth Brett, CEO at Highview Power, said, “Support from Government,
our partners and our supply chain, has enabled Highview Power to successfully
design and build the world’s first grid-scale LAES plant here in the UK.
The plant is the only large scale, true long-duration, locatable energy
storage technology available today, at acceptable cost.
"The adoption of LAES technology is now underway, and discussions
are progressing with utilities around the world who see the opportunity
for LAES to support the transition to a low-carbon world.”
After the launch, demand response aggregator KiWi Power will be able to
draw energy from the LAES plant to power about 5,000 homes for around three
hours. The plant will demonstrate how LAES can provide a number of reserve,
grid balancing and regulation services. LAES technology can scale to hundreds
of MW in line with the energy demand of urban areas the size of small towns
up to large cities. This means that LAES plants could store enough clean
electricity generated by a local wind farm to power a town like Bury (around
100,000 homes) for many days.
Yoav Zingher, CEO at KiWi Power Ltd, said "Liquid Air Energy Storage
(LAES) technology is a great step forward in the creation of a truly de-centralised
energy system in the UK allowing end-users to balance the national electricity
network at times of peak demand. By drawing energy from a diverse range
of low-carbon storage assets, companies can not only balance the grid but
help meet rising energy demand and respond to changing patterns of consumption
on a local and national level. Given the high uptake of renewable energy
in the UK this is the technology that will allow the future grid to maintain
system inertia and ensure the lights stay on. By investing in LAES technology
companies will also be able to earn a predictable, annual, recurring revenue
through the ancillary services with KiWi Power."
LAES technology makes use of a freely available resource, the air, which
is stored as a liquid and then converted back to a gas, involving an expansion
process that releases stored energy, and this drives a turbine to generate
electricity. In addition to providing energy storage, the LAES plant at
Bury converts waste heat to power using heat from the on-site landfill
gas engines.
No exotic metals or harmful chemicals are involved and the process does
not release any carbon emissions. The plant comprises mostly of steel,
which has a lifespan of between 30 to 40 years, in comparison with 10 years
for batteries. At the end of life, a LAES plant can be decommissioned and
the steel recycled. LAES plants can be located at the point of demand which
makes them flexible and able to supply energy to help urban areas keep
the lights on.
Gareth Brett, CEO at Highview Power said “The market opportunity for
LAES technology is exciting – we estimate that 60% of the global energy
storage market comprises long-duration, grid connected storage and that
our LAES technology is ready to meet almost half of this (45%).
“The LAES plant in Bury has already played a key role in the breakthrough
of LAES technology and will continue to do so. Utilities from around the
world who have for some time been assessing our unique solution for their
storage challenges, are now using the operating data to confirm their expectations.
We are therefore already in detailed negotiations to build plants ten times
the size of this one for utility customers of several nationalities and
for various different applications."
Logan Goldie-Scot, Head of Energy Storage Analysis at Bloomberg New Energy
Finance said "The global energy storage market will grow to a cumulative
125GW/305GWh by 2030, attracting $103 billion in investment over this period.
Utility-scale storage becomes a practical alternative to new-build generation
or network reinforcement, especially for underutilized assets in some markets.
We expect energy storage to increasingly be used for longer durations over
this period, providing such services as peaking capacity and renewable
energy integration."