Joint Manifesto – Practical Policies for a Just and Resilient Built Environment
Along with a coalition of civil society organizations, NGOs, trade unions, local governments, and business representatives, Bellona Europa calls for ...
Publication
Authors: Keith Whiriskey
Publisher: Bellona Europa
Publication
Energy storage will rapidly become an integral part of European electricity supply systems. The huge disruptive effect of energy storage to the existing energy market is being driven by two trends: the need for energy storage to optimise the deployment of renewable energy sources on the one hand, and the high return potential for manufactures, operators and home owners, on the other.
A range of storage technologies are required to maintain security of supply, enable the deployment of renewables and operate effective smart grids. The effect of storage technologies on a liberalised energy market is not well understood. However, one thing is clear: energy storage technologies have the potential to be truly disruptive.
Predicting what this new world will look like will be dependent on the variety of storage technologies, the ongoing redesign of Member States’ energy markets, the unknown behaviour of market participants, evolution of capacity payments and whether energy storage will evolve as primarily distributed or a system scale technology. Energy planners need to have their sights set on a very different future and not in forlornly preserving the models of
the past.
In this paper, Bellona urges European leadership and national policy makers to consider a number of policy recommendations to foster the deployment of energy storage technologies. These include: