How Microgrids Will Change the Way Electricity Is Made, Delivered and Used

June 8, 2021
Microgrids — managed by sophisticated software — are part of a shift toward on-site power production, driven by businesses and organizations that want to control their own energy destiny.

Microgrids — managed by sophisticated software — are part of a shift toward on-site power production, driven by businesses and organizations that want to control their own energy destiny, according to a group of panelists at the Microgrid 2021 conference.

By Alexander Limbach/Shutterstock.com

Growth in microgrids comes as customers increasingly look for solutions to various issues, such as having a reliable, affordable power supply that meets sustainability goals, said Steve Pullins, chief technology officer for AlphaStruxure and the panel moderator.

It also comes as electric transmission and distribution fees have jumped about 50% in the last decade, federal and state governments adopt renewable energy incentives and storm-related costs for businesses have soared to about $600 billion over the last four years, according to Pullins.

Microgrids respond to cross-cutting concerns

Those cross-cutting concerns will drive near-term microgrid development, according to Ravi Pradhan, vice president of technical solutions at Siemens Energy Management.

“What we see coming up in the future, everything that’s gone on in terms of resilience, in terms of distributed energy resources, everything that’s going on [at] the edges, there’s going to be a need to aggregate these, manage them, but at the same time, take the larger view and see how they all interact with each other, such that you get the best outcomes, both in terms of resilience, in terms of emissions, in terms of economics,” Pradhan said during the panel discussion on “How Microgrids Will Change the Way We Make, Deliver and Use Energy.

An initial emphasis will be on making sure businesses and organizations have reliable electricity as storms and wildfires increasingly cause widespread power outages, Pradhan said.

Power production goes local

There is a shift toward the localized production of electricity, which will change the power system, according to Pradhan.

The emergence of electric vehicles will only add to the grid’s evolution, he said.

“That is going to drastically change everything that we do in terms of both supply and delivery of energy and the use of it,” Pradhan said. “We can foresee that there will be much more highly localized [production and delivery] coming down to not just the microgrid, but down to the nano level.”

Digitalization and software can control local generation and loads, providing an overarching, optimal view to maximize the value of all distributed energy resources, he said.

Increasingly, companies and organizations are setting sustainability targets while also hoping to reduce their energy costs, according to Clark Wiedetz, chief sales officer at GreenStruxure.

“You’ve got to save them money to do the sustainability targets, but you tie in this resiliency element and the reliability element,” Wiedetz said. “Now you’re saving some big bucks because those outages are costing them a fortune.”

In an exciting change, microgrids have become more sophisticated, often including multiple assets that can be intelligently controlled to provide “untapped potential,” according to Marshall Worth, senior product manager for PowerSecure.

Energy flexibility for businesses and organizations

In addition, microgrids provide flexibility and they can evolve. “How you use your assets today doesn’t have to be how you use them 10 years from now,” Worth said. “We can totally change the objective at that point.”

AlphaStruxure, which often has 25-year contracts with its customers, provides those customers with a long-term game plan, Pullins said.

Hydrogen, for example, which may become widely available in the next couple of decades, could be used to replace natural gas generation, he said.

Some regions already provide opportunities for selling grid services in wholesale power markets, a practice that will likely spread, providing new revenue sources for some microgrid customers, Wiedetz said.

Even with a more decentralized system, utilities will likely be needed in the long run, partly to provide opportunities to sell electricity and grid services into markets, according to Pradhan.

“We’re not going to go back to a world where every town has its own utility,” Pradhan said.

Mike Byrnes, executive vice president  and chief operating officer of Source One, Veolia North America, said that the elephant in the room is that no utility representatives were on the panel. “Those are the people who have to send the price signal and accept the power. That is going to be the real rub here. How do they do that? Do they send it out by network, by neighborhood, by block? How granular does this get?”

Byrnes noted that providing power to utilities during high demand periods is a “bespoke” process. “You’re actually providing the power when the utility needs it. You have to have someone who knows what they are doing to look at it and bid it into the market for you. That all has to be automated as you move further down the value stack.”

Overcoming concerns about microgrids

There are still significant misunderstandings about microgrids that need to be overcome, according to Wiedetz.

Many people don’t recognize the multiple benefits microgrids offer, they think microgrids are overly expensive, and they believe they are too risky, he said.

One of the solutions to those concerns is taking an energy-as-a-service approach where a company like GreenStruxure finances, owns and operates a microgrid and is paid for it under a long-term contract, he said.

“What really matters is this transfer of the risk of what’s going on with the energy system that we’re going to own,” Wiedetz said. “And now that risk no longer lives with the client, but it lives with the owner.”

Also, the owner may be able to tap into tax credits for the project that are unavailable to government or nonprofit organizations that don’t pay taxes, he said.

In a sign of how customers are embracing the energy-as-a-service model, last year, during the COVID-19 pandemic, 560 microgrids were set up in the US, and two-thirds were under energy-as-a-service contracts, according to Pullins.

“There’s a couple trends there that say something about how we’re going to use energy, how we’re going to distribute it or deliver it, and how we’re going to make it,” Pullins said.

Watch the full discussion: How Microgrids Will Change the Way We Make, Deliver and Use Energy.

About the Author

Ethan Howland