RMI Launches Virtual Power Plant Partnership
January 11, 2023
RMI formed the Virtual Power Plant Partnership (VP3) Tuesday. In recognition
of the critical work needed to tackle scaling the market for virtual power
plants, initial funding of the VP3 effort was made possible by General
Motors and Google Nest. Today, VP3 includes founding members Ford, General
Motors, Google Nest, OhmConnect, Olivine, SPAN, SunPower, Sunrun, SwitchDin,
and Virtual Peaker.
VP3 is an initiative based at RMI that works to catalyze industry and
transform policy to support scaling VPPs in ways that help advance
affordable, reliable electric sector decarbonization by overcoming barriers
to VPP market growth. Virtual power plants are portfolios comprised of
hundreds or thousands of households and businesses that offer the latent
potential of their electric vehicles (EVs), smart thermostats, appliances,
batteries, solar arrays, and additional energy assets to support the grid.
VP3 follows in the path of successful institutional spinoffs in the electric
sector space previously incubated by RMI including the Clean Energy Buyers
Association and the Energy Web Foundation.
“Virtual power plants are poised for explosive growth, and RMI is committed
to being at the forefront of their success by launching VP3,” said RMI CEO
Jon Creyts. “Our analysis shows that VPPs can reduce peak power demand and
improve grid resilience in a world of increasingly extreme climate events. A
growing VPP market also means revenue opportunities for hardware, software,
and energy-service companies in the buildings and automotive industries. For
large energy users, VPPs can significantly reduce energy spend while
providing new revenue streams.”
“The next 12 to 24 months are critical for policy and program development to
seize the potential offered by virtual power plants, and VP3 is here to
ensure that the energy transition doesn’t miss a beat,” said Mark Dyson, RMI
Managing Director for Carbon-Free Electricity. “Policy change, customer and
stakeholder education, and unilateral action by individual businesses or
organizations all take time and resources. We’re excited to partner in this
work with leading businesses in VPP-related sectors including electric
vehicles, building controls, residential energy technologies, utility-facing
software solutions, and more.”
More About VP3’s Goals:
With the guidance and support of its members, VP3 is working toward a future
where businesses, households, and communities are empowered through VPPs
which can help to support cost-effective energy, emissions reductions, and a
more resilient electricity grid.
To achieve this, VP3 will work to:
Catalog, research, and communicate VPP benefits
Develop industry-wide best practices, standards, and roadmaps
Inform and shape policy development
“Virtual power plants present an exciting opportunity to unlock additional
value for homes, businesses and communities, helping to drive greater energy
independence and grid decarbonization” said Mark Bole, GM VP and Head of V2X
and Battery Solutions. “This collaboration underscores GM’s commitment to
creating a more resilient grid, with EVs and virtual power plants playing a
key role in helping to advance our all-electric future.”
“We are thrilled to partner with RMI to scale Virtual Power Plants and bring
their benefits to households and communities across the US,” said Parag
Chokshi, Director, Nest Renew. “Google is committed to building a more
sustainable future and continues to lead and encourage others to join us in
improving the health of our planet. VP3 will empower individuals and
businesses alike to strengthen and decarbonize their local grid with the
goal of making energy more affordable for all. Because when we each do a
little, it adds up to a lot.”
More About Virtual Power Plants:
A
virtual power plant (VPP) aggregates and coordinates distributed energy
resources to benefit all those who rely on the electric grid. It is
comprised of hundreds or thousands of households and businesses that offer
the latent potential of their electric vehicles (EVs), smart thermostats,
appliances, batteries, and solar arrays to support the grid.
In a VPP, these decentralized distributed energy resources (DERs) are
aggregated into a portfolio. Customers themselves or their authorized energy
management companies — with customer permission and the help of advanced
software — can adjust charging, discharging, output, and demand from DERs in
response to signals from markets and grid operators. In this way, VPPs can
play an important role in seamlessly and efficiently matching energy supply
and demand. |