From pv magazine USA.
The ERCOT grid operator that serves most of Texas has completed full interconnection studies for 58 solar projects totaling 11.9 GW of capacity so far this year. The completed studies will allow project developers to proceed toward commercial operation.
In the first seven months of this year, ERCOT has already completed nearly twice as many solar interconnection studies, for nearly twice as much solar capacity, as it did in all of 2019.
These data reflect an analysis of ERCOT’s Generator Interconnection Status reports for December 2019 and July 2020.
Contributing to this dramatic increase in productivity, said an ERCOT spokesperson, is a resource integration group that ERCOT formed, with staff from the operations, planning and grid coordination functions, to help streamline the interconnection process. ERCOT also created new tools to aid its staff and market participants in processing interconnection requests, she said.
The spokesperson credited transmission service providers for doing “most of the work” on full integration studies, while ERCOT staff “is responsible for reviewing and approving FIS studies.”
ERCOT has been reducing its count of full interconnection studies underway since about February, as shown by the shrinking light blue bars in this ERCOT graph:
ERCOT’s solar workload remains high because so far this year, solar developers have requested full studies for 49 projects totaling 13.3 GW. At last count, ERCOT had about 2.7 GW of utility-scale solar capacity.
Battery projects languish
ERCOT’s battery queue has grown to about 9 GW. Developers of 32 battery projects totaling 4.9 GW have requested full studies this year, while ERCOT has completed only nine such studies this year for projects totaling 0.7 GW. In 2019 ERCOT approved only two battery projects for 0.25 GW, while it received 43 requests for full studies, representing 4.1 GW.
ERCOT’s 2019 “State of the Grid” report says that the grid operator has created a battery energy storage task force, and staff have begun exploring technical requirements, modeling needs and market rules for battery storage.
ERCOT’s wind queue is stable, with 15 wind projects totaling 2.5 GW approved since January, and developers of 10 wind projects totaling 2.4 GW requesting full studies since then.
For a solar project developer, ERCOT’s full interconnection study is a major hurdle, and requires payment of the second and larger of two interconnection fees to ERCOT. A developer must complete many other steps after ERCOT completes a full study, including work with the transmission service provider to connect the project to the grid.
Milestones in ERCOT’s interconnection process are shown below, with the full interconnection study shown in the middle of the top row:
ERCOT interconnection data were analyzed for this story by Driscoll Consulting LLC, a firm owned by the author. An ERCOT spokesperson said that staff reviewed the solar and battery data, which were provided in a press inquiry, and found the data to be “close to what we’re showing in our system.” The spokesperson said that ERCOT staff could make changes to FIS approval dates over time, “and as a result, comparing an older GIS report with a new one may result in some differences. As an example, technology changes could require additional studies which would in turn impact the FIS approval date.”
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Solar and Battery power technology is definitely having an effect on our daily lives. With all of the home improvement products being pushed with battery power vs standard electrical power, I have to wonder if the power grids can continue to provide enough juice to charge all of these battery powered products. And I am not convinced solar provides enough to make much of a difference.