Silicon Valley/SEEDZ Energy Storage Symposium

Wednesday, May 21, 2014, 8:00 am to 4:00 pm

Microsoft Auditorium
1065 La Avenida Street
Mountain View, California

Individual: $90 | Partner Networks: $50 | Student: $20

Event registration includes lunch.

Seating is limited. Register today!

REGISTER!

Registration deadline is Monday, May 19 at 5 pm.

Discount codes are available for partners and students.
Please email Rachel Massaro at massaro@jointventure.org for details.

*Please bring student ID. Registration discount limited to first 50 students.

Description

The symposium engages key stakeholders in the energy storage marketplace around the latest developments, challenges and opportunities for customer-side storage, and how Silicon Valley is advancing innovation and uptake in this critical emerging market. Held annually since 2010, the symposium features presentations from national and state-level experts, high-profile solution providers, on-site energy storage customers and utility interests.

In particular, we examine local projects, initiatives, and offerings that are taking the energy storage industry forward. This year’s symposium is presented in association with Joint Venture’s Smart Energy Enterprise Development Zone (SEEDZ) initiative, a public/private collaboration focused on building the ‘smart energy’ network of the future in Silicon Valley.

Topics

California is expanding its mix of renewables on the grid from a current level of approximately 20% to 33% by 2020. As more intermittent wind and solar resources come on line, additional energy storage is viewed as critical for maintaining smooth, reliable delivery of power to customers.

Historically, most energy storage installations have been implemented by the utility. Customer-side energy storage systems have seen limited application because of the relative price of storage and difficulties in making a business case. Yet new market opportunities are emerging on the customer side of the meter, due to:

  • energy market design changes at the federal and state levels
  • new California targets and incentive programs for storage
  • removal of critical regulatory barriers specific to energy storage
  • storage technology advancements
  • high penetrations of variable on-site renewable energy generation

In the midst of a changing storage landscape, Silicon Valley has a unique cluster of energy storage companies, and a number of innovative deployments of storage for demand-side electricity management. According to the Cleantech Group (i3.cleantech.com), Energy Storage has received over $830 million in venture capital investments over the last decade, a third of which was invested in Silicon Valley companies. At the symposium, we will hear from several local companies and energy customers about the technologies, business models, benefits and use cases for behind-the-meter storage applications.

The symposium will address the following questions:

  • What new financial opportunities exist for integrating energy storage systems into operations at commercial facilities? What are the expected financial returns, critical value drivers, challenges, and potential risk mitigations?
  • How do commercial facilities capture these new revenue and cost saving opportunities?
  • What incentives are available?
  • What are ancillary services and how does energy storage participate in CAISO’s ancillary services market?
  • When and how are storage solutions being paired with distributed generation solutions such as solar PV? Why?
  • Who are the market players that are facilitating and implementing energy storage projects?
  • What role will EVs play in the overall customer-side energy storage equation?
  • How has the industry evolved in the Bay Area over the last 20 years to become a global center of gravity for advanced energy storage technology?
  • What are some examples of successful customer-side energy storage system deployments?
  • How will the utility energy storage procurement targets affect customer-side installations?

Click here for more details.