Home » Commentary » CSIRO virtual power station trial cuts household power costs by 60%

CSIRO virtual power station trial cuts household power costs by 60%

One Step Off The GridIt’s been a big week for so-called virtual power plants in Australia, with the announcement that Tesla and the South Australia government will build a “world’s largest” 250MW VPP in the state, linking 50,000 household solar and battery storage systems.

But last week, the results of a much smaller project have helped demonstrate why rolling out rooftop solar and storage in a coordinated way like this – that benefits the both grid and consumers – is such a good idea. And why rolling it out to social housing, first, makes even better sense.

Set in outer south-eastern suburbs of Brisbane, this VPP, or VPS (virtual power station) was developed by the CSIRO, across 67 homes built as part of a new housing development by property giant Lendlease.

The new suburb, called Yarrabilba, has since achieved the highest available rating for sustainable precincts in Australia: a 6 Star Green Star – Communities v1.1 certified rating, from the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA).

And a major part of this achievement comes down to the fact that some of the households taking part in the Virtual Power Station 2.0 have used their solar, battery storage and energy monitoring to save up to 60 per cent on their electricity bills.

Of the participants in the ARENA-backed project – described by Lendlease as the first time a real-world research project of this scale has been rolled out in an new greenfield community development – 17 had solar PV in place, which received a upgraded “smart” inverter produced specifically for the trial, while five also received a battery storage unit for the trial.

Meanwhile, at a grid level, the VPS links the distributed renewables of the households – including their battery storage and load control systems – via a web-based network, to create a single reliable energy supply, much like a power station.

Essentially, as the CSIRO explains it, the VPS is turning a collection of separate, fluctuating power sources into one smooth, reliable energy source of what is known as a dispatchable supply, and balancing out peak power demands.

“Our trial is testing supply-demand management algorithms in 67 households with intelligent air conditioners, batteries and home solar systems,” the CSIRO said.

“If trials are successful, we can expect household savings of hundreds of dollars, the installation of significantly more solar energy systems, and fewer blackouts into the future. All whilst keeping your house cool on a stinkin’ hot summer day.

CSIRO explains that the VPS allows, not just households, but entire neighbourhoods, to use electricity more intelligently, by optimising supply and shifting demand patterns.

“For example, pre-cooling of rooms is a demand-side solution that could be easily adopted in the VPS neighbourhoods of the future. By remotely turning on your air-conditioner before you leave work, you could return home to a cooler and more pleasant home, reducing the energy needed for electricity during the peak demand period.

“You could also store energy produced by your rooftop solar cells during the day in batteries to be used later when its needed most. This would reduce strain on the electricity network, by minimising your demand for centrally generated energy.”

Building on existing CSIRO research, the project is also allowing CSIRO to test new inverter technology they hope will help the grid cope with booming rooftop solar installations on both Australian homes and businesses, and remote demand controllers on air conditioners to manage load requirements during peak demand times.

“Yarrabilba is the result of Lendlease’s approach to social, economic and environmental innovation, underpinned by a strong sense of community, jobs growth and the integration of sustainable urban agriculture,” said managing director of Lendlease’s communities business, Matthew Wallace.

“An affordably priced sustainable display home is also under construction, which will feature innovative design solutions, and will be built by Logan-based social enterprise Access to upskill the area’s long-term unemployed and disadvantaged groups,” he said.

GBCA chief Romilly Madew said Yarrabilba was one of the fastest growing areas in Queensland.

“This world leadership Green Star rating underscores that Lendlease is building this community with the future firmly in mind,” Madew said.

“A number of Yarrabilba’s sustainability initiatives are groundbreaking, and earned Lendlease Innovation points,” she added, including trial plantings of pongamia trees which can be used to improve the soil quality and as a source of biofuel.

“Yarrabilba is also the first master-planned community in Australia to install a 50 kW DC fast electric vehicle charger. And its GroNative app is also a first, providing residents with scientific information about native vegetation in their community.”

This article was originally published on RenewEconomy’s sister site, One Step Off The Grid, which focuses on customer experience with distributed generation. To sign up to One Step’s free weekly newsletter, please click here.

Comments

13 responses to “CSIRO virtual power station trial cuts household power costs by 60%”

  1. Dee Vee Avatar
    Dee Vee

    Seems the CSIRO are clueless as usual. Electricity may be used most by consumers in the evenings/night, but that is not when most power is “needed most”.

    Business is the biggest users of electricity, and its “needed most” in the daytime.

    Why consumers are paying for all the generation capacity that is needed by business, and paying top dollar for their residential consumption is beyond me. Business should be paying more, and consumers paying less as they are using it when the grid has far more spare capacity.

    1. Craig Allen Avatar
      Craig Allen

      Yeah, the CSIRO, what would that bunch of clowns know, spending their careers conducting research and testing ‘clever’ solutions – pffft! Let’s sack them all and replace them with the collective wisdom of a bunch of random people on the internet with total confidence that they know better.

      1. Kate Avatar
        Kate

        Pfft scientists! It’s like they think they know more than rest of us or something!! {indignant huff}

      2. Dee Vee Avatar
        Dee Vee

        Peak demand in NSW yesterday (Friday) was at 2.30pm (11k MW) at 5.30pm it was 10k MW at 9.30pm it was 8.7k MW, base usage sits at around 7.5k MW at night when everyone is asleep.

        Right now, Saturday around 9.30am its sitting at 8.5k MW

        Its pretty obvious it is business and industry using the power during the day (and night), not individuals who aren’t even at home or are asleep.

        1. Craig Allen Avatar
          Craig Allen

          Dee Vee,

          I figured that I didn’t need to understand the details of this stuff because skilled people like this CSIRO team are doing actual research with real equipment in houses connected to the grid controlled by software systems they are building and honing.

          But apparently you are far smarter and understand the system and challenges and numbers and things much better than they do. Silly me.

          1. Andrew Woodroffe Avatar
            Andrew Woodroffe

            Details, people! What the CSIRO is referring to, I suspect, are individual households, what Dee Vee is referring to, I suspect, is the NSW grid net off rooftop solar. This makes you realize just how much potential for rooftop solar for commercial and industry there is.

            Business can whinge about the high cost of electricity, or do something about it.

            It used to be you had to use less of it (probably still the most cost effective use of low risk capex there is) but now there is cheap solar or, if your buffer zones are sufficient, wind class III wind turbines.

    2. mick Avatar
      mick

      are there any businesses in the trial?

    3. Peter F Avatar
      Peter F

      Peak demand is after 5 PM when business demand is winding down

      1. Carl Raymond S Avatar
        Carl Raymond S

        I’d have thought the businesses using most power were industrial, not office workers. They don’t stop at 5pm. Even in white collar occupations, the servers (24hr) pull more than the laptops and the aircon/lights stay on for the last leaver, so overlapping the domestic evening peak.

  2. trackdaze Avatar
    trackdaze

    60% savings…….is that all?

    1. Kate Avatar
      Kate

      Tsk … and here I’ve been, getting hoodwinked all these years by those advertised sales offering up to 20% off…

      Tsk tsk tsk. I should’ve been holding out for … what … um … 80%?

      60% savings is nothing to be sneezed at.

      Or, sorry, were you being sarcastic?

      1. trackdaze Avatar
        trackdaze

        Yes. Im saving 110% ????✌

        1. Kate Avatar
          Kate

          My parents have nibbled at many an investment option in their long lives, and they will swear black and blue that installing solar was THE best investment decision they ever made.

Get up to 3 quotes from pre-vetted solar (and battery) installers.