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Decentralized Energy

Wednesday
20 May 2020

New Jersey Regulators Urged to Include Microgrids, Storage in Efficiency Plan

20 May 2020  by Ethan Howland   

The Sierra Club is urging New Jersey regulators to include microgrids as part of the state’s strategy for supporting energy efficiency and peak demand reduction.

The environmental group and others are also pushing the state to use energy storage to improve energy efficiency and peak demand cuts, according to comments filed with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU).

At issue is a proposal to revamp the state’s efficiency and demand reduction programs released by the BPU in March. The proposal grew out of the New Jersey’s 2018 Clean Energy Act, which calls for overhauling the state’s power system and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The proposal includes recommendations on program design and administration, cost recovery mechanisms, performance targets and metrics, program performance reviews, the evaluation, measurement and verification of programs and program effects, and filing and reporting requirements.

However, some groups want the state to go further.

Energy efficiency and microgrids

“Now is the time to initiate an expansion of energy efficiency and peak demand programs to address managing electric services for microgrids and electric vehicle charging stations,” the Sierra Club said in comments filed this month.

Microgrids will be needed to fulfill the state’s energy master plan, which calls for replacing fossil-fueled power plants, heating systems and vehicles, according to the environmental group.

“The proliferation of microgrids is an opportunity to execute a smooth transition to the Clean Energy Grid resulting in cost savings to customers, a reduction in emissions, and more control

by consumers and grid operators to improve reliability and resiliency,” the Sierra Club said.

Expand on New Jersey town center concept

The environmental group called for a distributed energy resources microgrid program similar to the one the state initiated for town centers after Superstorm Sandy. This one should include town centers, commercial centers and industrial clusters, the group said.

Microgrids can be used by their hosts for peak shaving, demand response, and demand charge management, efforts undertaken to reduce the hosts energy costs. Their installation also sometimes goes hand-in-hand with energy efficiency upgrades at the host facility.

The BPU also should also include energy storage in its arsenal for cutting peak demand, the Sierra Club said, noting the state aims to have 600 MW of energy storage by next year and 2,000 MW

by 2030. The group sees opportunity to bolster behind-the-meter energy efficiency through on-site energy storage.

The microgrid program should integrate grid scale energy storage as well as behind the meter energy storage, the group said.

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