Largest battery project in the world comes into operation

Last week, the largest battery storage system in the world came into operation, located in the East Otay Mesa community in San Diego County, California (USA).

Currently, the Gateway Energy Storage project, implemented by LS Power, has an operational capacity of 230 MW and, by the end of this month, should reach 250 MW. Its MWh capacity is estimated to be between 1 GWh and 1.5 GWh.

According to LS Power, construction was carried out by McCarthy Building Companies, while NEC built the system with LG Chem batteries and SMA inverters.

According to Pedro Alves, Country Manager SMA Brazil, the manufacturer's participation in this project consolidates the company's position as the largest supplier of this type of storage solution in the world.

“The state of California has an incentive for energy storage, precisely because of the number of interruptions in energy supply in some regions, which is very significant in this type of solution”, says Alves.

“The objective of the SMA solution is, basically, to improve the stability of the grid and take advantage of photovoltaic generation to charge the batteries throughout the day, when there is solar radiation, and provide energy at times of peak demand. So, for this type of project, there is greater security in the distribution network and because of this, it brings an improvement in consumer dissatisfaction rates, because the incidence of blackouts is reduced”, adds the executive.

“In terms of technology, SMA used an ac coupling configuration and, in partnership with the battery supplier, we provided the entire engineering and commissioning service for the system to allow it to perform in the best way expected from the local utility”, concludes Alves .

Power grid outages

According to LS Power, the Gateway Energy Storage project comes online at a critical time in California. As the growing heat wave in the state overloads the electrical grid, causing continuous blackouts.

With the project, the state's electricity grid operator hopes to add more storage capacity, making it possible to meet demand at night, which is when the photovoltaic solution's collection capacity is reduced.

Ongoing projects

LS Power has several projects in development and under construction in California and New York: Diablo Energy Storage (200 MW) in Pittsburg, California; LeConte Energy Storage (125 MW) in Calexico, California; and Ravenswood Energy Storage (316 MW) in Queens, New York.

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Picture of Ericka Araújo
Ericka Araújo
Head of journalism at Canal Solar. Presenter of Papo Solar. Since 2020, it has been following the photovoltaic market. He has experience in podcast production, interview programs and writing journalistic articles. In 2019, he received the 2019 Tropical Journalist Award from SBMT and the FEAC Journalism Award.

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