Last week I had dinner with an executive from a major Florida power company. His company is investing in “municipal scale” batteries. These are the giant, tractor-trailer-sized batteries that can store large amounts of electricity.
The idea is to smooth out peak power demand on the grid.
That’s because electric utilities use “time-variant” pricing. That’s a fancy way to say that the price of power depends on how many people want it.
The peak time of electricity demand acts like the evening rush hour. Everyone comes home from work, lowers the air conditioning, cooks dinner, turns on the television, etc.
That crowds the power lines. Demand soars, driving prices way up. The power company needs auxiliary power plants to generate extra supply.
Right now, peak electricity can cost triple the normal rate. However, at night, rates plummet.
In New York, the state has “superpeaks” of 33,000 megawatt-hour (MWh) demand. They only last for a couple of hours but can cost $450 million per year. That’s a huge problem.
Imagine if you could pay one-third of the price for gasoline if you filled your tank at 1 a.m. I’d do it, and I’m sure you would too. However, with electricity, we don’t have that choice … yet.
Peak Power Demand
Changes in electricity demand aren’t just daily. They’re seasonal too.
According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), air conditioning is the single largest use of electricity by residents. The house heats up during the summer, so we use the power while the sun is up.
The table below is a chart of monthly electric power production in the U.S. Each peak happens in summer. Each low occurs in late winter or early spring.
As you can see, the spread grew larger over the years. The five-year average grew from 94 billion MWh per month to 104 billion MWh per month today.
You can see the problem. We all need electricity at the same time, for the same reasons. That’s why peak power demand happens.