Texas battery rush: Oil state's power woes fuel energy storage boom
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[May 31, 2023] By
Nichola Groom and Laila Kearney
(Reuters) -BlackRock, Korea's SK, Switzerland's UBS and other companies
are chasing an investment boom in battery storage plants in Texas, lured
by the prospect of earning double-digit returns from the power grid
problems plaguing the state, according to project owners, developers and
suppliers.
Projects coming online are generating returns of around 20%, compared
with single digit returns for solar and wind projects, according to
Rhett Bennett, CEO of Black Mountain Energy Storage, one of the top
developers in the state.
"Resolving grid issues with utility-scale energy storage is probably the
hottest thing out there,” he said.
The rapid expansion of battery storage could help prevent a repeat of
the February 2021 ice storm and grid collapse which killed 246 people
and left millions of Texans without power for days.
The battery rush also puts the Republican-controlled state at the
forefront of President Joe Biden's push to expand renewable energy use.
Reuters drew on previously unreported data and interviewed more than a
dozen executives from private equity firms, utility companies and energy
storage providers involved in some of the biggest battery storage deals
for this report. They described a rush to take advantage of the high
returns before they erode.
Power prices in Texas can swing from highs of about $90 per megawatt
hour (MWh) on a normal summer day to nearly $3,000 per MWh when demand
surges on a day with less wind power, according to a simulation by the
federal government's U.S. Energy Information Administration.
That volatility, a product of demand and higher reliance on intermittent
wind and solar energy, has fueled a rush to install battery plants that
store electricity when it is cheap and abundant and sell when supplies
tighten and prices soar.
Texas last year accounted for 31% of new U.S. grid-scale energy storage,
according to energy research firm Wood Mackenzie, second only to
California which has had a state mandate for battery development for a
decade.
LEADER IN ENERGY STORAGE
And Texas is expected to account for nearly a quarter of the U.S.
grid-scale storage market over the next five years, according to Wood
Mackenzie projections shared with Reuters.
Developers and energy traders said locations offering the highest
returns -- in strapped areas of the grid -- will become increasingly
scarce as more storage comes online and electricity prices stabilize.
Texas lawmakers this week voted to provide new subsidies for natural gas
power plants in a bid to shore up reliability. But the legislation also
contains provisions that industry groups said could encourage investment
in battery storage.
Amid the battery rush, BlackRock acquired developer Jupiter Power from
private equity firm EnCap Investments late last year. Korea's SK E&S
acquired Key Capture Energy from Vision Ridge Partners in 2021 and UBS
bought five Texas projects from Black Mountain last year for a combined
700 megawatts (MW) of energy storage. None of the sales' prices were
disclosed.
SK E&S said its acquisition of Key Capture was part of a strategy to
invest in U.S. grid resiliency.
"SK E&S views energy storage solutions in Texas and across the U.S. as a
core technology that supports a new energy infrastructure system to
ensure American homes and businesses have affordable power," the company
said in a statement.
UBS and BlackRock declined to comment.
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Arlo Brownlee, an engineer, checks
battery banks at GlidePath's Byrd Ranch energy storage facility in
Sweeny, Texas, U.S., May 23, 2023. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
U.S. energy storage companies attracted $5.5 billion in investment
last year, according to Mercom Capital Group. The U.S. is projected
to install 65 gigawatts (GW) of grid storage over the next five
years, 15 times the 4 GW added last year, according to Wood
Mackenzie, buoyed by a 30% tax credit for energy storage in Biden's
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates
the grid that serves most of the state, has 3.2 GW of energy storage
capacity, according to its own data.
The authority said in a statement that more storage was in
development. It has pending requests to connect to the grid from
plants offering more than 96 GW in storage, according to ERCOT data.
ERCOT declined an interview request.
'CLOAK AND DAGGER'
"It's cheaper to build there, the revenue is higher, and the
problems are real," said Andrew Waranch, president of Spearmint
Energy, which acquired about 1 GW of Texas projects in the last
year.
While some investors have focused on specific locations with maximum
volatility, more than 80% of the revenue comes from the Ancillary
Services Market, which seeks to stabilize power supply across the
grid, according to David Miller, vice president of business
development at Gridmatic, which uses artificial intelligence to
optimize battery use.
Miller said he expects ancillary market prices to "collapse" as more
battery storage comes online.
Average energy storage revenue already fell about 18% last year,
according to a Gridmatic analysis.
Waranch said battery storage plants coming online in 2025 could take
up to eight years to break even compared with four or less for
plants that come online in 2023.
The urgency has helped fuel a rush to install projects that can get
faster regulatory clearance.
Stem Inc and other developers said they are focusing on small
projects of under 10 MW because they face fewer regulatory
requirements.
The diminishing returns have also intensified competition for sites
in areas with the wildest wholesale power price fluctuations,
industry executives said.
"We want to get maximum volatility," said American Enerpower
Chairman Dick Lewis, who scours Texas for plots of land near
constrained parts of the grid to develop battery plants. "Placement
is very important."
So is timing, said Andrew Tang, vice president of energy storage and
optimization at Finland's Wartsila, which has supplied about a third
of the Texas battery market.
"There's a little bit of cloak and dagger secrecy," he said. "If
they think they've seen a trading opportunity that exists in the
marketplace, they don't want to openly brag about it because someone
else will jump in and therefore get rid of the arbitrage
opportunity," he said.
Chris McKissack, CEO of storage developer GlidePath, said that
batteries will likely remain a good bet for a long time -- even if
Texas is seeking to bolster traditional forms of energy like natural
gas.
"If no new generation is built and all you've got is old generation
and load growth, you've got even more volatility," McKissack said.
And that, he said, could lead to more opportunity for storage.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom and Laila Kearney; Editing by Richard
Valdmanis and Suzanne Goldenberg)
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