The University of Adelaide has received $1.4 million in funding to develop an online Australian energy storage knowledge bank and build a mobile energy storage test facility.
Funding was provided by the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) and the bank will act as a central repository of energy storage expertise bringing together reports and case studies, along with information on regulation and safety.
ARENA CEO Ivor Frischknecht said the new mobile facility will be able to conduct independent simulated and field testing of energy storage technologies and generate high resolution data for the knowledge bank.
“This project is set to build industry confidence in energy storage technologies and has the potential to accelerate investment in grid connected and remote locations, particularly where there are high levels of renewable energy generation," he said.
Project leader Associate Professor Nesimi Ertugrul, from the University of Adelaide, said industry participation would be critical to the success of the project.
“We expect battery storage to become a major industry over the next five to 10 years, offering solutions from small domestic to very large-scale applications,” Associate Professor Ertugrul said.
“The University of Adelaide is pleased to be leading this project that will provide technology developers with valuable resources and assist electricity infrastructure operators to better manage the integration of renewable energy into power systems.”
SA Power Networks, Energy Networks Association, Solar Storage Australia and the South Australian Government are collectively contributing $650,000 towards the project.
Integration specialists Power and Drive Solutions and ZEN Energy Systems are providing in-kind expertise and support to build the test facility, which is scheduled for deployment at the first site on the SA Power Networks grid by early 2016.
The University of Adelaide is one of Australia’s leading research-intensive universities and is consistently ranked among the top one per cent of universities in the world.