We explain how the low prices in the UK’s landmark tender were achieved – and what this means for the future of storage.
There’s a question that my solar colleagues and I keep on hearing. Perhaps you’ve heard it too. It tends to run something like this: “These painfully low energy prices are seriously eating into the revenue of my PV farms. Could batteries help solve this problem?” Here’s what Everoze Partner Felicity Jones has to say about that.
Scotland’s next generation of onshore wind farms could be at least 20% cheaper if the Scottish and UK governments work with industry and regulators to remove barriers.
With the deadline for the UK’s biggest storage tender now firmly behind us, Fliss Jones soaks up the sun and shares her thoughts on what’s been learnt.
Everoze’s report ‘Cracking the Code: A Guide to Energy Storage Revenue Streams and How to Derisk Them’, was written with input from RES and the University of Strathclyde’s Power Networks Demonstration Centre, and commissioned by Scottish Renewables.
Combining revenue streams for energy storage is theoretically neat. Implementation in real life can prove tough. Fliss Jones highlights one big commercial pitfall – and what to do about it.