Energy

Moxia and ScottishPower Launch Smart Battery

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Moxia Technology have teamed up with ScottishPower to produce an innovative smart battery. Moxia’s smart battery, manufactured by Maslow, is expected to help homeowners use more of the energy they generate whilst at the same time save them money. Moxia has said their product is a good example of how storage technology can be used to combat the surplus of energy faced by Britain’s national grid.

In pilots with major energy industry partners (ScottishPower, British Gas, SSE PD, Good Energy), government (DECC), and direct customer sales, Moixa has deployed 1 (megawatt hours) MWh of its British-manufactured Maslow smart battery system, deployed across 500 sites (combined with solar panels). These smart batteries can be aggregated to provide a range of services and income, using the patented “GridShare” battery software platform.

Smart batteries mean a revolution for utilities. They are home storage units that enable customers to save money through accessing smart tariffs, store excess solar energy for use during peak hours or share batteries with the grid for a range of network saving benefits.

Moixa has deployed 47 Maslow energy storage systems for ScottishPower in partnership with BillSaveUK. Its GridShare software dashboard enables ScottishPower householders to view energy, battery and solar use in real time on a smartphone or iPad, and identify improvement opportunities. This can lead in some cases to over 20% reduction in energy costs.

Moixa has already delivered multiple storage projects for DECC, InnovateUK and many of the other biggest utilities, including British Gas, Good Energy and Co-Operative Energy. Moixa is also working with many of the “new utility” entrants, to use energy storage to lower customer bills.

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Other projects include over 175 kilowatt hours (KWh) of Maslow storage systems installed in social housing in Oxford as part of a study with British Gas on new smart tariffs and local community energy flows, and showing benefits in reducing fuel poverty, and 250 storage systems installed in 2014/15 as part of a comprehensive demonstration for DECC on storage opportunities across private, social housing and small business, including with Good Energy.

Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change Amber Rudd said: “Storage can help maximize the benefits and minimise the costs of secure affordable and clean energy in the UK.”

Lord Bourne, Under Secretary for Climate Change described the Moixa battery storage system as a “radical new business idea.”

Furthermore, a recent Smart Power report by Lord Adonis and the National Infrastructure Commission, identified potential £8bn/pa savings from storage, and cited Moixa and Tesla as leading examples in distributed storage.

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Sue Riddlestone, Chief Executive of Bioregional, said: “We’re proud to be part of a project which has now installed Maslow systems with 175kwh total capacity in the community of Rosehill in Oxford, cutting carbon and bringing cost savings that have really benefitted local people. Our partners include British Gas and Scottish & Southern Energy Power Distribution.

The projects have added to Moixa’s experience in market, now with over 5 million run-time hours of Maslow systems, and deeper partnerships across multiple channels. The acquired data helps validate business models and asset finance scenarios for new smart tariff, GridShare incomes and end savings to customers.

As an early leader and significant innovator, Moixa has also developed a powerful portfolio of patents. These patents are valuable to Moixa and its partners such as third-party battery providers who integrate into the GridShare platform. Patents granted include aggregating batteries for grid services to create the much-talked-about “Virtual Power Plants”. It may interest readers that Moixa was developing patents for these VPPs as far back as 2008. Moixa’s patent portfolio is now cited by some 140+ international companies.

Bill Rumble, Director at BillSaveUK, said: “The UK renewables industry has weathered some stormy times of late, but as this pilot with Moixa and ScottishPower is demonstrating, the successful installation of ‘smart batteries’ presents a viable route forward and potentially the start of a new era for domestic power generation.”

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With traditional utility models under threat by distributed energy generation, energy storage offers utilities and customers a major opportunity.

Simon Daniel, CEO of Moixa, said: “Whereas renewables such as solar and wind have often been seen as a liability to generation networks, the arrival of storage batteries provides an asset not only to householders but also to the grid which can use batteries for balancing and other services.”

“We will also shortly be announcing closing a round of finance which includes several former CEOs of Big6 utilities, which is great validation of how important energy storage is going to be in the new utility landscape”.

Neil Clitheroe, CEO of Retail and Generation at ScottishPower, said: “Electricity is the only commodity that we can’t store at scale. We need to develop more large-scale storage projects, like pumped-storage hydro schemes, but also smaller in-home storage ideas, like Moixa’s smart battery concept.

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“As one of the UK’s leading renewable energy companies, we plan to take a leadership role in the development of electricity storage. Our work with Moixa and BillSaveUK will allow us to understand how customers interact with electricity storage at home, and how systems like this can be tailored to offer real benefits for customers.”

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