Source: SustainableBusiness.com News
In February, Germany will begin offering incentives for people to tie energy storage systems to their solar arrays.
The three-year subsidy program is for relatively small solar systems, less than 30 kilowatts, that send electricity to the grid. Grants of $1080 will be available for each kilowatt hour of energy storage added. The program is capped at $67 million.
This new, if temporary addition to Germany’s feed-in law is meant to reduce peaks in electricity production and take pressure off the grid.
Storing excess energy in batteris can reduce peaks in electricity production up to 40% and grid capacity by 66%, according to Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems.
Continue reading Germany’s Feed-In Law Adds Energy Storage, Huge Project Slated for California