Canadian company tests pole-mounted battery system

In 2016 the Ontario-based utility company Toronto Hydro received a grant from the Ontario Ministry of Energy's Smart Grid Fund for a project which includes the installation of a prototype battery storage system on one of the existing wood poles. The energy storage system was developed by Ryerson University’s Centre for Urban Energy.

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The system, which uses eCAMION technology, can supply approximately 12 homes with electricity when combined with a 50-kW transformer. The system stores energy during off-peak hours and then releases power back into the grid as required.

Toronto Hydro is trying to extend the lifespan of its infrastructure to a maximum. The company is now testing to see if the new battery system can average the transformer load and limit its load during peak hours. High peak-hour loads can significantly reduce the transformer lifespan. For a short time, the battery system can also supply power if there is a blackout in the grid. If the blackout does not last long, the customers need not even experience any interruption in service.

In a densely populated Toronto, it would be difficult to find room for standard battery systems that can even be as large as a shipping container. If the new prototype system acquits itself well, it could be gradually deployed on all of the nearly 175,000 poles owned by Toronto Hydro. It takes a trained line crew approximately eight hours to install one system.

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Article source TDWorld - Transmission & Distribution World
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