Storage New York funds four long duration energy storage demo projects 8.18.2023 Share New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced nearly $15 million in awards to four long duration energy storage demonstration projects. Form Energy received the largest award of $12 million. The company plans to develop, design and construct a 10 MW/1,000 MWh iron-air battery system with a project location still to be determined. Form Energy has signed deals to deploy its battery with utilities such as Xcel Energy, Southern Company, and Great River Energy, and recently broke ground on a commercial-scale battery plant in West Virginia. Ecolectro, Inc. received $1.08 million to scale-up the company’s polymer chemistry and materials it expects to significantly reduce the cost of producing hydrogen by electrolysis and create a drop-in replacement for current designs. This project entails scaling laboratory-proven technologies with engineering and validation prototypes to build and test 10 kW electrolysis units. The electrolyzer will be deployed in a pilot demonstration in partnership with Liberty Utilities in Massena, New York. GO DEEPER: Check out the Factor This! energy storage podcast playlist, including episodes on battery storage, long-duration energy storage, gravity storage, and more. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. PolyJoule, Inc. received $1.03 million. The company plans to install a 2 MWh, 167 kW PolyJoule modular battery storage system in partnership with Eastern Generation at its Astoria Generating Station located in Queens, New York. This demonstration aims to prove the safety, technical, operational and economic merits of the PolyJoule Conductive Polymer BESS in a densely populated urban setting. Urban Electric Power (UEP) received $703,965 to install a 100 kW/1 MWh battery storage system, anchored by the company’s rechargeable zinc alkaline battery technology. The proposed project will be designed for 10- to 24-hour applications at commercial and industrial facilities. The project is located in Pearl River, New York. In addition to these awards, the state also opened up $8.15 million in funding to support innovative long duration energy storage solutions, devices, software, controls, and other complimentary technologies yet to be commercialized. Officials say project submissions should advance, develop or field-test hydrogen, electric, chemical, mechanical or thermal-electric storage technologies that will address renewable integration challenges, such as grid congestion, hosting capacity constraints and siting in New York City. New York State has a goal to install 3,000 MW of energy storage by 2030. Related Posts Yellen says ending Biden tax incentives would be ‘historic mistake’ for states like North Carolina A new market emerges: Retrofitting batteries to existing residential solar Wanna see a hockey stick? Click to see what batteries are doing for the grid RE+ is right around the corner, here’s some stuff to look out for