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The Democratization of Energy

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Presentation on theme: "The Democratization of Energy"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Democratization of Energy
Jay Marhoefer CEO and Executive Manager Intelligent Generation LLC June 17, 2010

2 Tonight’s discussion Overview of the electricity sector
The challenge of renewables Intelligent GenerationTM and the democratization of energy

3 The obligatory plug Intelligent GenerationTM is an integrated hardware/ software platform that democratizes how clean energy is produced and distributed. The optimizer is a smart box that acquires electricity for a building when it is cheap or free and stores it in a battery for later use during peak times. It buys low and sells high. The network forms a virtual power plant from the optimizers. It provides immediate, reliable power to utilities when it is most valuable. The optimizer and network, when combined, can triple the cost savings of solar energy and cut the payback time in half.

4 Questions I hear Why aren’t the wind turbines spinning when it’s a windy day? Why can’t we run everything on renewables and use fossil fuels or nuclear power for backup? Will a smart national electricity grid solve our problems? Will solar ever work without subsidies?

5 Electricity 101

6 It’s a little more complicated
Types of power companies IOUs (investor owned utilities) IPPs (independent power producers) Wholesale power marketers (e.g. Exelon) Munis and co-ops Load generating vs. “wires and meters” ARES (alternative retail electricity suppliers) Regulators FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission PUCs (state public utility commissions) ISOs/RTOs (regional transmission organizations, e.g. PJM) Other stuff Baseload/load-following/peaker RPS (renewable portfolio standards) Deregulation For starters…

7 Seasonal demand varies

8 As does daily demand

9 Which leads to 3 challenges
Availability/reliability Nukes, coal and natural gas are steady Wind and solar are not Resource management Grid was built to be one-way How to match demand with (variable) supply? Inertia Nuclear plant: 5-7 days from cold start Coal plant: 3-5 days Load following natural gas plant: minutes Pure peaker: 15 minutes Wind: minutes Solar: instantaneous

10 Can wind do it all?

11 Maybe in winter

12 But not in summer

13 Wind’s effect on price (Texas)

14 Capacity doubled in 2008

15 …and so did price volatility
ERCOT—Houston Hub 2006 2007 2008 Average kWh price (cents) 5.2 5.4 7.2 Average daily spread 18.7 22.0 41.2 Lowest (95.0) (99.9) (153.6) HIghest 124.8 150.0 380.6 Moral Wind blows most when you need it least (winter nights) and least when you need it most (summer days) Wind’s volatility necessitates more high value ancillary services (storage, voltage regulation, spinning reserve) Wind potential is greatest in areas far away from major cities (other than offshore)

16 What about a national grid?
Probably won’t happen Politics (see next slide) Shifting demographics to Sun Belt Low wind Not aligned with regional transmission groups Cost of new transmission (tens of $ billions) Property rights

17 Retail electricity rates vary

18 What about solar? 92% of Americans think it’s important to develop solar energy and incorporate it in the U.S. electricity system Source: 2009 Schott Solar BarometerTM But…long payback periods and high upfront costs 15+ years even with 30% federal tax credit 10+ years even with tax credit and $300/MWh REC

19 Supply side management
So what’s the answer? Demand side management Supply side management Demand

20 Reshape electricity demand
Demand side management Demand

21 Reshape electricity demand
Solar

22 Reshape electricity demand
Purchased off-peak /wind power stored in battery Demand

23 Reshape electricity demand
Resulting purchased electricity Demand

24 …by democratizing energy
A managed network of distributed renewable generation and storage 100,000 networked buildings is equivalent to bringing a small nuclear plant online immediately Enormous market power even at 5% of total generation (see Texas) The “Holy Grail”: consumer participation in the wholesale electricity market

25 Solar with IG Optimizer

26 Intelligent Generation network

27 Comparison Solar only Solar /battery/ timer Solar/ battery/ IG
Net installed cost $10,000 $11,600 $12,000 Annual electric bill w/o solar $2,000 Electricity cost savings $260 $500 $700 Solar RECs Capacity reduction $0 $200 Ancillary services Peak demand credit $100 TOTAL ANNUAL Savings $760 $1,000 $1,700 Payback period—solar system 13 years 10 years 5.8 years Payback period—battery/timer N/A 1.6 years 1.2 years Payback period—battery/IG Total payback period 11.6 years 7.0 years

28 Other possibilities Smart grid Plug-in hybrids Fuel cells

29 Smart grid Focus has been on demand-side management and investor-owned utilities What consumers like Real time pricing Rewards for peak time reductions What consumers don’t like Utility control of “smart” appliances (HAN)

30 Plug-in hybrids Potential storage capacity is formidable
10 million PHEVs could store 100,000 MWh (enough to power California for 2 hours) “Charging” side makes perfect sense Excess capacity and cheap electricity Discharge side is problematic Peak times coincide with commute home Higher and better use Reducing greenhouse gas emissions? Getting US off foreign oil?

31 Fuel cells E.g., the “Bloom Box”
Darling of the cleantech VC crowd $400 million invested to date Reliable on-site production of electricity But… Won’t be affordable for 5-10 years Needs a hydrocarbon (e.g., natural gas) What happens in winter when the cost of natural gas is 6x?

32 Summary Hardware costs are coming down PHEVs are coming
Solar Batteries/storage PHEVs are coming Legislation (RPS, PACE) is driving adoption Lack of integrated vision Doing what’s cheap (wind) vs. what’s smart Those who democratize energy will reap the major benefits

33 Intelligent Generation LLC
Thank you Jay Marhoefer Intelligent Generation LLC


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