Ben,
Whether it makes sense depends on the total picture:
- how much money can you save by shifting load to low cost hours versus
- how much does the solution cost you?

To start with the latter - we know how much the battery costs and its warranty.
We do not know what kind of inverter can be used with it, due to the skinny 
specs
and then there is the issue of the (professional!) installation and permit(s) to
satisfy building inspectors and others involved, incl your insurance (the 
safety aspect).
Safe to say that the total system will be 2-3 times the cost of the battery, so
probably somewhere between 8 and 10k for the 10kW pack and likely your cost 
goes up
by about 5k for each additional 10kW pack you add, so the max would be some 
$50k for 90kWh
installed and working as a system in your home.

Now let's look at the income side.
If you have no ToU like me, the result of load shifting is exactly zero.
So, for me it makes sense to install solar to reduce the kWh overall, not to
shift kWh from afternoon to night.
My previous home did have a ToU meter after I reported to PG&E that I had an EV,
they swapped out my meter for free and I was very eager to shift loads to the 
night
so I would start saving money. I was very disappointed that even with only 
charging
throughout the night (midnight to 7AM) and convincing my wife to only run the
clothes dryer and bread maker during the night, we were still breaking even in 
overall
costs compared to the situation before where we had a fixed kWh cost.
What was the problem? Well, the night tariff was indeed lower than the old 
fixed one,
but only be about 4 cents. The summer day tariff however was about 25 cents more
expensive, so even though we used only a fraction of the power during the day, 
we were
paying about the same overall. Not a very happy result, even though I like to 
make things
good for utilities - they did not give me any benefit on my E-9 schedule rates.
Now for the case with the PowerWall:
Just for reference - I am taking numbers from the "EV" schedule as published 
here:
http://www.pge.com/tariffs/tm2/pdf/ELEC_SCHEDS_EV.pdf
since that would be most appropriate for a ToU customer with an EV who is adding
a PowerWall to shift load.
Since the price of the old fixed tariff 
(the E-1 schedule, see http://www.pge.com/tariffs/tm2/pdf/ELEC_SCHEDS_E-1.pdf )
has risen to 16 cents (when I had E-9 the E-1 rate was still 10 cents)
you can see that the differences with peak and off-peak versus the fixed rate 
are
*still* in the same order: 6 cents cheaper off-peak and 26 cents more expensive 
on-peak:
off-peak 0.10; winter peak 0.29; summer peak 0.43
Winter is Nov through April and Summer the other 6 months. Every day has a peak 
period
so 365 days/year you can do load shifting.
The average income for a kWh shifted (ignoring efficiency losses and different 
fixed
fees between schedules) is 19 cents in winter, 33 cents in summer, so avg 26 
cents/kWh

Again, the most optimal case would be that you can shift the full 10kWh each 
day, which
would yield $2.60 per day or $950 per year.
In 10 years that would give you $9,500 which is about the money you invested in 
a 10kW
system, 10 years earlier so this would give you a zero-percent investment with 
risks. Not good.

For the 90kWh system that cost you $50k the situation is better *IF* you are 
able to
shift 90kWh of energy around each and every day. Since in the weekends and 
holidays the peak
hours are only 3-7PM, you have only 4 hours to dump the energy into the grid, 
so your 90kWh
needs to be pumped at a rate of 90/4 = 22.5kW which is 94 Amps at 240V to empty 
the pack in time
so this will require a dedicated 125A service just for your powerwalls. It 
might be feasible,
I am not sure how much this could add to the cost if you need so much capacity 
added.
Again, for me this is not feasible since my feed is limited to 100A at 240V so 
it would
overload my main house feed.
The income picture would look like 9 times the previous calculation (again, 
ignoring losses)
so a little over $8.5k per year, $85k in 10 years. This at least looks to be 
positive,
but the percentage is not that high, a little over 5%, but still with risks of 
tariff changes
and maintenance cost to keep the equipment running for 10 years. Also, 
efficiency issues or
legislation that limits the amount of power you can suck up and pump back, can 
throw a wrench
into this business plan. It might work, but I still expect that the most likely 
chance of
making good money is if you are dealing directly with the utility and get paid 
for the
ability to stabilize the grid (load control) and not necessarily to breathe kWh 
on a daily basis.
But time will tell...

Cor van de Water
Chief Scientist
Proxim Wireless

office +1 408 383 7626          Skype: cor_van_de_water
XoIP   +31 87 784 1130          private: cvandewater.info
www.proxim.com


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-----Original Message-----
From: Ben Goren [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, May 04, 2015 2:58 PM
To: Cor van de Water; Electric Vehicle Discussion List
Subject: Re: [EVDL] virtual power plant

On May 4, 2015, at 1:07 PM, Cor van de Water via EV <[email protected]> wrote:

> I mean 8 Amps at around 400V is not an EV power level, it is actually 
> rather underwhelming - I wonder why Tesla with a profile of high-power 
> application is releasing such a low power spec.

A "nominal" 5.8A @ 400V is comparable to a 20A load on a 110V line, in line 
with a typical single home circuit. You can put up to nine of them in a single 
unit, with up to a 30kW combined peak load. That's pretty well in line with 
typical household circuitry and usage.

They're selling them less as whole-home backup or off-grid batteries and more 
as arbitrage devices. Fill the batteries at off-peak hours, drain them during 
on-peak hours and only feed from the grid during on-peak when the batteries are 
empty. I've heard payback figures bandied about in the three-year range, making 
them the equivalent of a 25% annual return on investment -- simply phenomenal. 
If true, if you've got the capital to invest in them, you'd be an idiot to not 
buy them.

...if true....

b&
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