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Energy Storage as a Multi-Use Asset: Applications Across the Power System

Key Points

arXiv:2606.08808v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: The energy transition in power systems requires flexible assets to offset renewable generation variability across multiple time scales, while supporting the integration of renewables and the electrification of demand without requiring costly grid reinforcement. Energy storage occupies a unique position among these assets: depending on the technology, it can provide short-duration grid services at high ramping rates, such as frequency regulation...

arXiv:2606.08808v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: The energy transition in power systems requires flexible assets to offset renewable generation variability across multiple time scales, while supporting the integration of renewables and the electrification of demand without requiring costly grid reinforcement. Energy storage occupies a unique position among these assets: depending on the technology, it can provide short-duration grid services at high ramping rates, such as frequency regulation and voltage support, longer-duration functions such as intra-day peak shaving, or inter-seasonal energy buffering. This multi-service character, combined with the declining costs of energy storage technologies (most notably that of battery energy storage systems), is central to the economic viability of storage investments. The value of a given installation depends strongly on its grid connection point and intended use case: an asset-coupled battery serving a consumer or generation plant faces a different service landscape, and therefore a different business case, than a network-coupled system operating as an independent grid resource. This paper presents a structured taxonomy of grid-connected energy storage applications, discusses the principal application domains, and describes the key challenges that must be addressed to integrate storage effectively into power systems. Services are discussed with special emphasis on the Swiss regulatory context. Finally, the STORE flagship project supported by the Swiss Innovation Agency (Innosuisse), where some of the critical challenges of energy storage integration in power grids are addressed, is introduced.
Energy Storage (ORG) Swiss (ORG) STORE (ORG) the Swiss Innovation Agency (ORG) Innosuisse (ORG)
Originally published by arXiv CS Read original →