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Tesla Building 250MW “Virtual Solar Power Plant” Using 50,000 Homes In Australia

Courtesy of Zero Hedge

After building the world’s largest lithium battery in Australia nearly 40 days ahead of schedule, Tesla has announced plans to build the world’s largest “virtual power plant” by outfitting 50,000 homes in South Australia with solar panels and Tesla battery storage units over the next four years, slashing participants’ energy bill by 30%.

Beginning with a trial of 1100 Housing Trust properties, a 5kW solar panel system and 13.5kWh Tesla Powerwall 2 battery will be installed at no charge to the household and financed through the sale of electricity.

Following the trial, which has now commenced, systems are set to be installed at a further 24,000 Housing Trust properties, and then a similar deal offered to all South Australian households, with a plan for at least 50,000 households to participate over the next four years. –ourenergyplan.sa.gov.au

Over 6,500 households have already applied for the 250MW program (which will provide the panels for free), tweeted South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill on Monday.

More than 6,500 South Australian households have signed up to register their interest in the world’s biggest Virtual Power Plant.

To sign up and find out more, visit https://t.co/TkdmqBUrG9 pic.twitter.com/eXCnU6Q0i3

— Jay Weatherill (@JayWeatherill) February 4, 2018

The AUD$32 million ($25 million USD) project bankrolled by taxpayers and a state-funded techonlogy grant will be recovered by selling the electricity to customers on the grid. “We will use people’s homes as a way to generate energy for the South Australian grid, with participating households benefiting with significant savings in their energy bills,” says South Australia’s premier Jay Weatherill. “More renewable energy means cheaper power for all South Australians.”

Price predicts utility bills for participating households will be slashed by 30%. The installations will begin with 100 households in a low-income housing community. Those systems should be completed by the end of June. Then another 1,000 systems will be installed in similar properties by the end of the year.

After that, another 24,000 Housing Trust residents will be offered the opportunity to join the program, followed by 25,000 more households over the next 4 years. Minister for Social Housing Zoe Bettison said the decision to install the systems in Housing Trust homes would assist the most vulnerable. “We know that people in social housing can often struggle meeting their everyday needs and this initiative will take some pressure off their household budget,” she said. –cleantechnica.com

South Australia’s 1.7 million residents regularly suffer power outages and energy reductions, with several major incidents leaving people without power following storms and a massive heat wave. 

Off to a good start

Tesla’s lithium battery storage project has already proven its worth; after the 129 MWh installation was activated on December 2, the Loy Yang coal power plant – one of the largest in Australia, went offline – depriving the grid of 560 MW of electricity, enough for 170,000 homes. Within 140 milliseconds, the Tesla “Hornsdale Power Reserve Battery System” kicked in, providing the grid with 100 MW of power – buying grid operators enough time to reroute other power sources and make up for the shortfall. Utility customers were largely unaffected. 

That’s a record and the national operators were shocked at how quickly and efficiently the battery was able to deliver this type of energy into the market,” said State energy minister, Tom Koutsantonis, who added “Until now, if we got a call to turn on our emergency generators it would take us 10 to 15 minutes to get them fired up and operating which is a record time compared to other generators.”

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