CESA Policy Work
CESA has made grid-connected storage a leading focus area for California and beyond. California policymakers now understand the tremendous role energy storage can play to optimize the electric power system.
CESA policy work is steeped in the following principles:
CESA supports and advances all forms of energy storage
CESA supports and actively helps promote a competitive and transparent marketplace
CESA supports and actively practices collaborative, constructive engagement with all stakeholders, and in particular, key energy storage champions
CESA primarily focuses its efforts in the following domains:
Key CESA accomplishments include:
CESA helped to dramatically expand market opportunities at historic levels in California
Glendale City Council approved Glendale Department of Water & Power plans to replace a significant portion of the original repowering plans with 75 MW of IFOM storage and 12.8 MW of residential solar-plus-storage resources
SCE announced procurement of 81 MW of energy storage to address multiple needs, including alleviating natural gas shortages, providing local capacity in Moorpark, and providing some support for grid resiliency in the Goleta-Santa Clara areas
SCE announced procurement of 100 MW of energy storage (A.19-04-016) for to address local capacity need in Moorpark that replace fossil-fuel plant retirements
Silicon Valley and Monterey Bay CCAs procured 85 MW of storage combined that are paired with solar
East Bay CCA procured 20 MW of energy storage as part of Oakland Clean Energy Initiative in collaboration with PG&E to ensure transmission reliability
All LSEs will need to procure at least 3,300 MW between 2021-2023 to address System RA capacity shortfalls (D.19-11-016)
Incentive rates for Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP) Equity Budget revised upward to support low-income and disadvantaged customers and a new $100-million Equity Resiliency Budget established to support customer resiliency needs (D.19-09-027)
SB 676 (Bradford) was passed with CESA support to establish targets to be achieved by 2025 and 2030 for electric vehicle grid integration
SB 49 (Skinner) was passed with CESA support to develop standards for appliances and buildings to facilitate load management, including grid-integration technologies such as storage
Demand Response Auction Mechanism (DRAM) was approved for $14 million per year extension through 2022 that will test how third-party-operated demand response and energy storage can provide system, local, or flexible capacity (D.19-07-009)
CESA helped California recognize and increase the value of energy storage
Actively participating in modeling efforts at CPUC to appropriately model and value energy storage, with over 11,000 MW of battery storage identified as being needed through 2030 to achieve the state’s decarbonization goals, up from 2,000 MW as identified in the previous 2017-2018 Preferred System Portfolio (D.19-04-040)
Actively modeling and advocating for the capacity value of plus-storage solutions, compelling the CPUC to establish an interim capacity value methodology to support hybrid resources in competitive solicitations
Successfully advocated to get the utilities to be directed to conduct capacity-related modeling in RPS program for 1, 2, and 4-hour pairings of storage (D.19-09-043)
Adopted new GHG emission reduction requirements that aligned SGIP-funded storage systems with GHG goals while balancing other grid-support and market transformation goals that work for different types of storage projects and customers (D.19-09-011)
Shaped contracting terms for storage to provide distribution deferral and multiple-use applications
Advocated for dynamic, performance-based pathways for thermal storage participation in SGIP
CESA helped reduce barriers for Energy Storage
Ensured that wholesale distribution interconnection barriers are fair and reasonable
Streamlined and approved pathways for NEM-paired storage interconnections (D.19-03-013, D.19-01-030)
Developed proposals to enable the interconnection of vehicle-to-X (grid, home, building) under Rule 21 to provide mobile storage capabilities
Developing storage resource management tools in the CAISO to better enable storage participation, including for storage as transmission assets