Agenda


Note: Subject to change.

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

8:00 - 9:00 am
Welcome Coffee & Registration

9:00 - 10:00 am
The Role of Microgrids in Achieving Time to Power

Time to Power is a code phrase for the new competition for power and lack of interconnection approvals. As utilities are challenged by major storms + growth of the data center space + the growth of LD and HD EV, new and expanding commercial and industrial facilities cannot get the power they need. This adds uncertainty for their business and is helping to push them toward Microgrids.

Key Takeaways:

  • Utility capital and staff attention is spread thinner now than in the past with increasing need to address grid challenges like wildfire mitigation and undergrounding, large data center needs that shape the transmission and distribution system changes (100's of MWs), and electrification of buildings and transportation systems. The interconnection queue will not return to normal for many years.
  • Microgrids, in addition to improving reliability and resilience, reducing GHG emissions, and stabilizing energy costs long-term, can reduce the time to power for a new commercial / industrial campus or expansion of an existing site.
  • Microgrids provide an alternative to waiting in a utility interconnection queue that can be more than 5 years. A microgrid can be designed and built in 18 months.
Steve Pullins
Moderator:
Steve Pullins
CEO
ResSET
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Ryan De La Cruz
Ryan De La Cruz
Vice President, Microgrid Development
Endurant Energy
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Ardi Arian
Ardi Arian
President & CEO
Renewable America
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Larry Watkins
Larry Watkins
Vice President, Project Development
AlphaStruxure
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10:00 - 10:30 am
Western States Microgrid Policy Roundup

This session will provide a briefing on state legislative and regulatory activities in key western states, including discussion on recent advancements & opportunities to deliver greater community impact.

Allie Detrio
Allie Detrio
Chief Strategist
Reimagine Power
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10:30 - 11:00 am
Networking Coffee Break

11:00 am - 12:15 pm
Microgrids and Energy Storage

Energy storage is critical to reliable electricity. However, if power sources, storage capacity and load requirements are not effectively managed, higher costs and inefficiencies can result. Automated controls can ensure that the cleanest, least expensive source(s) of energy are maximized and made available through storage. We will present case studies that show how storage can minimize grid and back up power usage saving money.

Complete decarbonization is not possible without battery storage at scale. Given the forecasts of more than 100 GWs of battery storage installations by 2030 to support the grid integration of unprecedented amount of renewable (solar and wind) generation, it is clear that batteries will play a big role in this transition. Likewise, U.S. microgrid installed capacity has reached more than 10 GWs and is forecasted to exceed $10B in investment by 2030. Battery storage and microgrids are in at an interesting juncture in time given the attractive cost curves related to batteries and microgrid components, delays in large scale transmission projects, more stringent power quality requirements (e.g. data centers, chip manufacturing), and other factors.

In light of these synergies and industry drivers, will battery storage and microgrids hit an inflection point and experience significant growth? Will microgrids, like batteries currently, provide grid functions? How will microgrid/battery services get monetized, and how is the business model evolving? This panel session will explore these and related questions during this in-depth discussion.

Paul DeCotis
Moderator:
Paul DeCotis
Senior Partner, Energy & Utilities
West Monroe
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Adrienne Pierce
Adrienne Pierce
CEO
New Sun Road
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Soam Goel
Soam Goel
Senior Advisor
West Monroe
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Michael Sanford
Michael Sanford
Business Development Manager - New Energy Solutions
Cummins Inc.
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12:15 - 1:15 pm
Lunch

1:15 - 1:45 pm
Lessons Learned from Microgrid Deployments and Operation

Discussion of lessons learned through the deployment and operation of several inverter based microgrids across the multiple jurisdictions within Duke Energy since 2016.

Jaclyn Whiteman
Jaclyn Whiteman
Director of CD Project Management
Duke Energy
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Junior Hatcher
Junior Hatcher
P.E., Manager, Renewable Engineering
Duke Energy
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1:45 - 2:30 pm
Microgrid and Remote Grid Initiatives and Planning

This session will discuss the ever progressing regulatory and policy landscape for front-of-meter, and to a lesser extent behind-the-meter 3rd party microgrids in California with a specific focus on multi-property microgrids. We will touch on the utilization of microgrids and remote grids for Wildfire Mitigation purposes, as well as clean multi-property microgrids that serve disadvantaged and vulnerable communities (i.e., the Microgrid Incentive Program (MIP)). Additionally, we will discuss Southern California Edison's roadmap for microgrids and remote grids going forward.

Farzad Khalilpour
Farzad Khalilpour
Engineering Manager, GTI, Grid Edge Analytics and Control
Southern California Edison
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Stacy Fuhrer
Stacy Fuhrer
Advanced Clean Technology Policy & Strategy Manager
SDG&E
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2:30 - 3:00 pm
Remote Grids: Cost-Effective Strategies for Enhanced Resilience and Disaster Prevention

Erin Redding, Program Manager at BoxPower, leads the company's Design Studies Program, overseeing early-stage microgrid designs, feasibility assessments, and cost estimation. In this session, Erin will discuss the challenges posed by aging infrastructure, with over 60% of U.S. distribution lines past their life expectancy, and how Remote Grid Standalone Power Systems offer a cost-effective alternative to traditional grid upgrades, such as undergrounding, which can cost up to $5 million per mile.

Erin will highlight how remote grids serve as utility-owned distribution assets that improve energy reliability, resilience, and decarbonization in wildfire-prone and rural areas. She'll present case studies demonstrating the evolution of remote grids in various use cases, such as telecom and grid-connected microgrids, Additionally, Erin will share insights from feasibility studies, key indicators of success, and broader lessons learned from deploying remote grids at scale.

Key Takeaways:

  • Cost Savings & Resilience: Learn how remote grids reduce infrastructure costs while improving reliability in areas prone to wildfires and severe weather.
  • Feasibility & Standardization: Understand the importance of feasibility studies in ensuring the successful deployment of standardized microgrids across a fleet of sites.
  • Case Studies & Lessons Learned: Explore real-world examples, including partnerships with PG&E, SCE, and Liberty Utilities, showcasing the benefits of remote grids.
Erin Redding
Erin Redding
Program Manager
BoxPower
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3:00 - 3:30 pm
Networking Coffee Break

3:30 - 4:00 pm
RAPID-Microgrid-in-a-Box and Other Clean Energy Resiliency Systems
Ryan Davis
Ryan Davis
Systems Engineer
Idaho National Laboratory
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4:00 - 4:30 pm
A Blueprint for the Mass Deployment and Scaling of Microgrids

My talk explores the future of our energy grid, focusing on scalable and easily deployable microgrids for resilience and outage management. I will discuss the role of microgrids in EV charging and Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) scenarios, along with solar PV and energy storage strategies for decarbonizing the energy mix. By integrating Distributed Energy Resources (DERs), we can minimize energy costs and optimize hybrid renewable systems for public, municipal, commercial, and military deployments. DERs enable large-scale deployment through cost-effective, resilient, and flexible solutions, addressing fluctuating demand and building extra capacity.

Key Points:

  • Enhanced resilience: Microgrids improve outage management and adaptability across various sectors, enhancing grid stability.
  • EV and renewable Integration: Combines EV charging, V2G technology, and renewable sources like solar PV to decarbonize and stabilize the energy grid.
  • Cost-effective DER Solutions: Utilizes Distributed Energy Resources to reduce costs and manage energy demand efficiently, allowing scalable deployment.
Alok Singhania
Alok Singhania
Partner
Gridscape
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4:30 - 5:00 pm
Co-optimizing Energy, Peak Shaving, and Ancillary Services Participation for a Texas Microgrid

This session explores the deployment of AI-based Optimization software and hardware at a Tier 4 diesel-based microgrid at a cold storage facility participating in ERCOT's Ancillary Services, Real-Time Energy Markets, and 4CP transmission cost avoidance programs. The microgrid, designed to meet stringent emission standards, provides resilient power and optimizes energy costs and market opportunities for the site. By leveraging advanced control systems, the facility offers ancillary services such as ECRS, contributing to grid stability.

Participation in real-time energy markets allows for strategic buying and selling of electricity via export, enhancing economic efficiency. Additionally, the microgrid dispatches in 4CP events, yielding substantial transmission cost savings. Attendees will gain insights into the technical, operational, and economic benefits realized, highlighting the opportunity for program co-optimization to increase the financial viability of grid-tied microgrids, especially in ERCOT.

Key Takeaways:

  • By providing multiple grid services in Texas, this cold storage facility was able to significantly reduce the payback period of their microgrid investment while securing resiliency for themselves and enhancing the stability of the local grid
  • With the right equipment and expertise, many BTM microgrids can participate as effectively as FTM generators in open markets, with additional savings enhancements driven by transmission cost avoidance
  • AI and forecasting technology is necessary to ensure the optimal market or non-market decision is made every hour of every day
Alden Phinney
Alden Phinney
Regional Director
GridBeyond
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5:00 - 6:00 pm
Drink Reception
 
Wednesday, September 25, 2024

8:00 - 9:00 am
Morning Coffee

9:00 - 9:30 am
Community Microgrids

This session will examine solar-driven microgrids that cover Solar Microgrids that harness behind-the-meter (BTM) solar & storage assets and Community Microgrids that harness both front-of-meter (FOM) and BTM solar & storage assets. Solar Microgrids deliver an unparalleled trifecta of economic, environmental, and resilience benefits for facilities.

The session will provide an overview of the Microgrid Incentive Program (MIP) in California and highlights from the Clean Coalition's experience across a handful of actual MIP applications, and share insights into how Solar Microgrids can accommodate facility load growth, even in areas where the grid is fully constrained -- and the electricity utility is refusing to increase the service level. i.e., how Solar Microgrids provide BTM solar & storage assets that accommodate load growth without having to change the service level from the electricity utility. Ideas for positioning for future solar-driven microgrid opportunities will also be discussed.

Craig Lewis
Craig Lewis
Executive Director
Clean Coalition
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9:30 - 10:00 am
Microgrids, Public Funding, and Sustainability - A Pathway to a Resilient Energy Future

This session explores the critical intersection of microgrids, public funding, and sustainability, highlighting their collective role in shaping a resilient and sustainable energy future in the United States. As climate change and extreme weather events increasingly challenge traditional energy infrastructure, microgrids have emerged as a key solution for enhancing grid resilience and promoting the integration of renewable energy sources. Public funding has been pivotal in driving the development and deployment of microgrids, particularly in regions prone to severe weather, where the need for reliable, localized energy systems is most acute.

We will examine how public funding initiatives, such as the U.S. Department of Energy's Grid Modernization Initiative and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, have facilitated the growth of microgrids across different regions. We will also discuss the role of public funding in the future of microgrid deployment in the U.S., considering various scenarios and options for moving forward.

Deji Sonoiki
Deji Sonoiki
Director, Utilities
Momentum
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10:00 - 10:30 am
Grid 2.0: Pairing VPPs with Microgrids for the C&I Segment

As grid stressors, like extreme weather events, aging infrastructure, and increasing energy demand become more prevalent, large energy users are embracing the microgrid for energy security and autonomy. Microgrids can also deliver energy savings and new revenue streams through participation in Virtual Power Plants (VPPs). VPP participation not only improves the reliability of the grid, but also improves the economics of microgrid investments.

Key Takeaways:

  • How VPP participation can unlock new revenue streams by aggregating DERs to support energy arbitrage and time-of-use optimization.
  • How asset owners can develop an optimization strategy for VPP participation from the conceptual state to full execution.
  • How to optimize and automate participation in grid services programs to unlock the full potential of DERs to improve grid reliability while maintaining operational continuity.
Eric Steinhofer
Eric Steinhofer
Director, Distributed Generation Partnerships
CPower
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10:30 - 11:00 am
Networking Coffee Break

11:00 - 11:30 am
Electrification and job development for rural applications in the USA: Case Study of the Wind River Reservation

Electricity is vital for modern economic development and quality of life; however, residents of rural or developing areas often lack, or have limited access to, electricity as a public utility. Consequently, communities must consider non-municipal sources for delivering electricity when municipal sources are either not available or are cost prohibitive. This session examines the impact of an electrification project in Wind River Reservation located in Fremont County, Wyoming, USA. The proposed project is the deployment of 1,000 decentralized mini grids to generate energy for residential, commercial, and industrial purposes that match the needs, opportunities, and resources available in the area. The study predicts that this will result in a 60% increase in land access for economic development and the creation of 575 jobs.

Wind River Reservation in the USA is rural and vast, comprising 3,466 square miles. The reservation is home to 25,581 people with an employment rate of 56.5%, a median household income of $58,266, and a poverty rate of 16.0%. Located in western Wyoming, the local economic opportunities include agricultural crop production, animal husbandry, oil and gas extraction, and tourist activities. Due to the rugged nature of the region, energy solutions must be capable of continuous operation despite periodic high winds, extreme cold, and high snowfall.

Reasons for the lack of access to electricity at Wind River Reservation include the vast area, the cost of infrastructure, and the capacity of the local workforce. At approximately $8,000-13,000 per post-erected power line, this option is cost-prohibitive for the community and this fact motivates the use of off-grid stand-alone systems. Mini-grid installations yield a significant socioeconomic impact through addressing energy sovereignty and economic opportunity. For many Native American tribes, solar power is a tool that allows tribal self-determination regarding energy acquisition and use, as well as employment and entrepreneurship opportunities for all individuals including those with minimal education.

Dr. John Abraham
Dr. John Abraham
Professor of Mechanical Engineering
University of St. Thomas
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11:30 am - 12:00 pm
Microgrid Energy Innovators: How Communities in Alaska are Responding to the Climate Change Threat
Peter Asmus
Peter Asmus
Senior Advisor, Microgrid Strategy & Thought Leadership
Alaska Center for Energy and Power (ACEP)
Executive Director
Alaska Microgrid Group (AMG)
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12:00 - 1:00 pm
Lunch

1:00 - 1:45 pm
UCLA South Bay Smart Microgrid Project

There has been a growing focus on renewables, with increasing investments across all levels, locally and nationally. UCLA has also committed to lowering its emissions by 50% by 2030 and achieving net zero emissions by 2050. With increasing enrollment and the entrained rise in housing demand, UCLA's challenge to lower its carbon footprint and its overall emissions over the next decades requires creative solutions. Our project team is piloting a PV system integrated with Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) microgrid to support student dormitories and electric bus infrastructure at UCLA's recently acquired South Bay Campus.

Through strategic integration of solar and BESS, along with advanced data analytics and AI-based predictive load monitoring, we optimize generation and consumption to project significant progress towards net zero for the campus. With the project, we aim to facilitate continued work in green infrastructure and establish UCLA's South Bay Campus as a hub for research in renewable energy.

Maya Deshpande
Maya Deshpande
Sustainability Data Science
Mattel
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Reza Sheikhani
Reza Sheikhani
Project Engineer
TransGrid Energy
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Kumar Saunack
Kumar Saunack
Member of Technical Staff (at Stealth Startup)
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1:45 - 2:15 pm
Bulk Microgrid Deployments: Optimizing the Model
JP Ross
JP Ross
Vice President Local Development, Electrification and Innovation
Ava Community Energy
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2:15 - 2:45 pm
Networking Coffee Break

2:45 - 3:15 pm
Lab-size Microgrid Test Bed at California Polytechnic State University

This session discusses a lab-size microgrid under development at California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly), which can function like an actual microgrid and is suitable for an indoor laboratory. This microgrid will contain all the necessary components and will be tested under various contingencies and load patterns without actual PV cells, wind generators, fossil-fuel synchronous generators, and other necessary devices.

The system includes:

  • A programmable DC 5 kW source with a PV emulator software that simulates the function of PV units and is programmed to operate similarly to an actual PV located in San Luis Obispo's weather conditions. This eliminates the logistical issues of installing PV panels on campus
  • Controlled-speed 250 Watts motors that run asynchronous three-phase and asynchronous single-phase generators to replicate single-phase and three-phase wind generators
  • A set of resistors, inductors, and capacitors to imitate 3-phase and single-phase AC transmission systems
  • Two synchronous 250 VA generators run by DC motors at 60 Hz generate active and reactive power
  • All necessary SEL relays to protect and control the system's operation and safety
  • Switches to apply different types of faults
  • Real-time digital monitoring system
  • A set of static and dynamic loads
  • Three-phase and single-phase transformers
  • Three-phase and single-phase transmission system with RLC elements

    The system is currently functional, and a Tabuchi BMS power pack with battery storage is being integrated into the microgrid. The completed system will be a physical microgrid with all the essential devices, capable of analyzing various contingencies and load patterns, including peak load shaving, load shedding, and voltage/frequency control.

  • Majid Poshtan
    Majid Poshtan, PhD
    Associate Professor, Electrical Engineering
    Cal Poly
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    3:15 - 3:45 pm
    Public vs. Private 5G Networks for Microgrid Implementation

    The advent of 5G technology promises transformative capabilities for microgrid systems, offering enhanced connectivity, reliability, and security for critical energy infrastructure. This session delves into the nuances of implementing 5G networks within microgrid environments, examining both public and private network solutions.

    Through a structured analysis, attendees will gain insights into the strategic considerations necessary for effective deployment and operation of 5G-enabled microgrids. This session will provide an initial roadmap for energy sector stakeholders, enabling informed decision-making in the deployment of 5G technology to implement microgrid operations.

    Phil Ziegler
    Phil Ziegler
    Chief Technical Officer
    Redevi, Inc.
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    Dan Witmer
    Dan Witmer
    Head of Customer Delivery & Account Management
    Redevi, Inc.
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