http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-electric-cars-20131229,0,5640652.story
Electric cars may hold solution for power storage
By Evan Halper  December 29, 2013

[image  
http://www.trbimg.com/img-52c03c84/turbine/la-la-electric-car2-jpg-20131228
Electric car power storage - A row of Mini Coopers acts as a sort of power
plant, drawing energy during off-peak times and delivering it back to the
grid when it's needed most in a pilot project at the University of Delaware.
(Evan Krape, Evan Krape / December 23, 2013)
]

In a Delaware pilot project, electricity is stored in and retrieved from the
batteries of idle vehicles. Car owners would be paid.

NEWARK, Del. — The thick blue cables and white boxes alongside an industrial
garage here look like those in any electric-car charging station. But they
work in a way that could upend the relationship Americans have with energy.

The retrofitted Mini Coopers and other vehicles plugged into sockets where a
Chrysler plant once stood do more than suck energy out of the multi-state
electricity grid. They also send power back into it.

With every zap of juice into or out of the region's fragile power network,
the car owner gets paid.

The pilot project here at the University of Delaware has had enough success
to set off a frenzy of activity in the auto and electricity industries,
particularly in California, where Gov. Jerry Brown's transportation plan
this year promoted "vehicle-to-grid" technology.

Entrepreneurs and government agencies see the technology as a possible
solution to a vexing dilemma: how to affordably store renewable energy so it
can be available when it is needed, not only when the wind blows or the sun
shines.

"This is a fascinating option," said Robert Weisenmiller, chair of the
California Energy Commission. "The technology works. You can do this. The
question is … what do we need to do to make it happen?"

California has the nation's most aggressive goals for renewable power and
also wants to put 1.5 million zero-emission vehicles on the road over the
next decade. State officials say vehicle-to-grid technology could point
toward a way to accomplish both goals faster, for less money.

The idea is that utilities would pay vehicle owners to store electricity in
the batteries of electric vehicles when the power grid has a surplus and
drain electricity back out of them when demand rises.

The plan takes advantage of a key fact about cars: They spend most of their
time parked. The technology makes idle vehicles a source of storage for
utilities and cash for car owners.

The "Cash Back Car" is how the concept is described by Jon Wellinghoff, the
recently retired chair of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. "It
provides another incentive for people to buy electric cars," he said.

The technology could solve a potentially serious problem. The power grid, a
massive tangle of power plants, transformers and thousands of miles of wire,
needs to maintain a steady and balanced flow of power. Sudden surges
threaten crashes that can cause blackouts. That makes the stop-and-go nature
of energy from the wind and sun a constant source of worry.

A cost-effective method of storing renewable energy and controlling its flow
into the system has long eluded the energy industry, which has taken to
calling storage the "Holy Grail."

Of course, nothing with electricity is simple. To begin with, carmakers are
not in the business of keeping the electricity grid stable. They build cars
to perform on the road and worry what all this usage will do to their
batteries.

"Almost without exception, their first response is, 'If you use my battery
for that purpose, we will void the warranty,'" said Tom Gage, chief
executive of EVGrid, a California vehicle-to-grid technology company.

Innovators in the field are gradually convincing car manufacturers of the
potential to create a "value proposition for the car owner" and thus boost
sales, Gage said. Ultimately, however, carmakers may be put at ease by
experiments being conducted by the military.

The Navy has begun an intensive study with MIT to test batteries used only
for driving against those that are plugged into the grid for storage.

And the week before Christmas, the Pentagon transported 13 Nissan Leafs to a
Southern California Edison charging facility in Pomona as part of a
$20-million program involving dozens of vehicles at Los Angeles Air Force
Base and the Naval Air Weapons Station at China Lake.

The Pentagon hopes to eventually employ the technology at bases across the
country, which could jump-start mass production of the chargers and software
involved.

"We're looking to determine if we can make electric vehicles
cost-competitive with conventional vehicles," said Camron Gorguinpour,
executive director of the Defense Department's Plug-In Electric Vehicle
Program. The department pays about $200 per month to lease a Nissan Leaf.
Using a vehicle to store energy, he said, could generate enough revenue to
offset most of that cost.

"You could pay close to nothing for the lease," he said.

But battery wear is just one hurdle. An even bigger challenge is reshaping
utility regulations, electricity markets and the complicated tangle of
algorithms that form the backbone of the grid.

"It can be an administrative nightmare to have a bunch of little power
sources being fed into the grid," said Scott Shepard, an analyst at Navigant
Consulting.

Staff members at the California Public Utilities Commission are exploring
the regulatory changes that would be needed.

Utilities may prefer other emerging technologies that could prove more
lucrative. Power companies typically make money by investing in large plants
and charging customers enough to provide a guaranteed rate of return. There
are no large storage plants involved with vehicle storage.

Nevertheless, back in Delaware, the professor who gave birth to the program,
Willett Kempton, is gratified to see the concept taking hold.

He first proposed the idea in a paper in 1997. Researchers had begun their
hunt for storage options. The electric car industry was also starting to
have success. Kempton hit on the idea of combining the two.

"In industrialized countries, the average car battery is used only one hour
per day," he noted. Why not put the storage devices to work?

Ten years later, he had a concept car up and running and demonstrated the
technology in front of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission headquarters
in Washington, where regulators could see, for the first time, a car sending
juice back to the grid.

This year, the university began getting paid for power storage created by
its fleet of Minis. And just this month, Honda provided a vehicle to the
pilot.

"There is momentum behind this idea," Kempton said. "These batteries are a
huge resource, and we are going to need them."
[© 2013 Los Angeles Times]




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