BPL touts customer savings via 15 mil. battery storage system

Tue, Jul 27th 2021, 08:05 AM

Bahamas Power and Light (BPL) customers will see savings over the long term after the completed setup of a $15 million, 25 megawatt battery energy storage system at the company’s Blue Hills station, BPL’s Chief Executive Officer Whitney Heastie said yesterday.

Heastie announced during a press conference yesterday that a contract was signed with energy technology company Wartsilla for the battery storage system, which will be positioned where BPL once operated temporary Aggreko engines to keep New Providence’s power grid stable.

Now BPL will count on the battery storage units for grid stability, as they will reduce or completely remove the spinning reserve, which is the amount of unused capacity of an engine that is running.

“This will certainly allow us to ramp up our engines,” said Heastie. “Consider our engines as thoroughbred horses, they do not want to be held back. Because we always fear the loss of an engine, we typically have to hold these engines back to run at 60 to 70 percent of their rated capacity.

“With the battery storage system, we can now turn these thoroughbreds loose and they can now run at about 90 percent.”

The battery storage unit is expected to be completed by July 2022, according to a BPL press statement. With the engines running at a higher efficiency, Heastie said customers will eventually notice lower electricity rates as fuel use improves. He added that the engines will also become more environmentally sound, running at greater efficiency levels.

According to Heastie, the batteries are being placed at the Blue Hills station because that station has a high load demand from customers in the southern and eastern parts of the island. Heastie also explained that the battery storage units will allow more loads to be transferred to the Clifton Pier power plant. He said the 25 megawatts of battery storage will improve transmission reliance and voltage frequency to the grid.

“Not only would you see us reducing spinning reserve, increasing the loads on the engines, impacting the environment, you’re running less engines because now that you’ve increased the load on the engines, you don’t have to run as many engines to produce the same amount of power,” said Heastie.

“But we’ll also be able to regulate and control the amount of voltage and frequency with the battery energy storage system.”

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