The EV driver doesn’t need a home EVSE or charging to their home electric
bill. As a result, workplace charging becomes a good thing.

http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/Youve-Got-to-Charge-Your-EV-While-the-Ducks-Are-Quacking
You’ve Got to Charge Your EV While the Ducks Are Quacking
by Richard Lowenthal  April 21, 2014
***
Richard Lowenthal is founder and Chief Technical Officer of ChargePoint, an
open electric-vehicle charging network with more than 17,000 charging
locations. 
***

[image  
http://dqbasmyouzti2.cloudfront.net/assets/content/cache/made/content/images/articles/CAISO_DuckCurve_518_337.jpg
Net load - March 31
]

Electric vehicles and the Duck Curve

As the electric vehicle industry grows, so should our discussion about its
impact on the California electric grid. In a recent Greentech Media article,
Jeff St. John gives a clear explanation of the Duck Curve, a graphic that
illustrates the shape of net demand on the California electric grid given
the impact of renewable generation. The good news is that the Duck Curve is
good for electric vehicles, and electric vehicles are good for the Duck.

We saw it coming

Since 2007, I have been advocating the idea that contrary to prevailing
beliefs, well-managed daytime vehicle charging is a boon to the grid.
Frankly, those claims were understandable in that until recently, the peak
electric load for California was in the hot afternoons of the summer when
much of the state's population turns on their air conditioners.
Consequently, the conventional wisdom was that charging at home is good for
the grid, and workplace charging, which typically occurs during the day, is
bad. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

Why does it matter?

Grid generation and transmission must be sized to the peak load of the grid
or else blackouts will occur. Since the cost of fuel accounts for less than
5 percent of the cost of electricity, it is important to use the big costs
of transmission and generation efficiently. This entails finding a delicate
balance between building and maintaining no more infrastructure than is
needed and encouraging customers to use every kilowatt-hour that is
generated. So the flatter the curve is, the more efficient the grid is. A
flattened duck means that consumers pay the lowest possible price for
electricity.

What happened?

Since California has made such spectacular progress with solar generation,
we now have no afternoon peak at all; the sun is brightly shining and
generating electricity at just the time that the air conditioners need it. 
The result is a glut of power at 2 p.m. and a reduced load after dark.

Enter electric vehicles

Electric vehicles are good electric loads -- especially with workplace
charging. It may seem counterintuitive, but charging your car during the day
is a lot better than charging when you get home. Charging at home creates a
new peak load at about 8 p.m. when solar power is no longer being generated.
Charging cars the minute you get home is exactly the wrong time to do so.

To drive our average daily trip of 39 miles, a vehicle needs 13
kilowatt-hours of electricity, which takes about 3 hours at a conventional
charging station. That means we can charge two cars a day at a workplace
charging station and fill the Duck’s belly with electric load. This has
added benefits. The head of the duck -- our big new potential problem -- is
flattened out because these cars are not charging when EV drivers get home
from work. It also means that the EV driver doesn’t need a home charging
station or to add vehicle charging to their home electric bill. As a result,
workplace charging becomes a good thing.

Incentivizing good behavior

This charging scenario decreases costs for all electric customers, reduces
the need for utilities to add generation and transmission to handle a new 8
p.m. peak, and reduces the costs of charging at home. Because of those three
major benefits, we need to find ways to encourage this scenario. We need the
infrastructure to charge vehicles during the day at workplaces and garages.
We also need pricing policies that encourage charging when energy is the
most plentiful and cheapest to produce. For today’s load profile, we want
plenty of daytime charging opportunities combined with low prices at about 2
p.m.

What does the future hold?

Current time-of-use pricing policies made sense seven years ago, but are now
precisely the opposite of what we need. As it stands now, the highest prices
are at 2 p.m., just when we need people to charge. It’s backwards because of
the success of policies that encourage renewable energy generation, which
happen to produce best at 2 p.m. As time goes on, new load curves will
emerge. It is vital that the charging of manageable loads like electric
vehicles can be controlled by real-time networks that are influenced by the
current conditions of load and generation. We need to be able to react to
sunny days and cloudy days, shifting loads, and the unknowns of tomorrow so
we can adapt to whatever shape characterizes the grid in the future.
[© greentechmedia.com]
...
http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/retired-cpuc-commissioner-takes-aim-at-caisos-duck-curve
Retired CPUC Commissioner Takes Aim at CAISO’s Duck Curve
March 24, 2014



http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1091683_why-electric-car-charging-at-work-matters-explaining-the-duck-curve
Why Electric-Car Charging At Work Matters: Explaining The 'Duck Curve'
Apr 24, 2014 - For many electric car owners, charging at work is a nice
bonus, but not a necessity. For others, it's the difference between choosing
an electric vehicle, and not doing so--the extra charge at work makes all
the difference. But there's another reason charging at work is important,
and it's all do do with the electricity grid and the "duck curve" ...




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