%0 Report %A Joyce McLaren %A Sherin Abraham %A Naïm R Darghouth %A Sydney Forrester %D 2022 %G eng %I National Renewable Energy Laboratory %T Use of Operating Agreements and Energy Storage to Reduce Photovoltaic Interconnection Costs: Technical and Economic Analysis %8 03/2022 %X

This analysis was conducted as part of the Solar Energy Innovation Network (SEIN). SEIN is a collaborative research effort led by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Energy Technologies Office. SEIN supports teams across the United States that are pursuing novel applications of solar and other distributed energy resources by providing critical technical expertise and facilitated stakeholder engagement, giving them the wide range of tools necessary to realize their innovations in real-world contexts. Teams are composed of diverse stakeholders to ensure all perspectives are heard, key barriers are identified, and the resulting solutions are robust and ready for replication in other contexts.

This analysis was conducted in support of the efforts of a team from Rhode Island that participated in Round 2 of SEIN, led by the Rhode Island Office of Energy Resources and joined by National Grid and the Clean Energy States Alliance. The team sought to elucidate the potential value of adding battery energy storage to solar projects to reduce distribution upgrade costs and optimize solar hosting capacity.

The technical and economic analyses presented in this report support the team efforts. This is the companion report to Use of Operating Agreements and Energy Storage to Reduce Photovoltaic Interconnection Costs: Conceptual Framework (Gill et al. 2021).