Robeco logo

Disclaimer Robeco Switzerland Ltd.

The information contained on these pages is solely for marketing purposes.

Access to the funds is restricted to (i) Qualified Investors within the meaning of art. 10 para. 3 et sequ. of the Swiss Federal Act on Collective Investment Schemes (“CISA”), (ii) Institutional Investors within the meaning of art. 4 para. 3 and 4 of the Financial Services Act (“FinSA”) domiciled Switzerland and (iii) Professional Clients in accordance with Annex II of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (“MiFID II”) domiciled in the European Union und European Economic Area with a license to distribute / promote financial instruments in such capacity or herewith requesting respective information on products and services in their capacity as Professional Clients.

The Funds are domiciled in Luxembourg and The Netherlands. ACOLIN Fund Services AG, postal address: Leutschenbachstrasse 50, CH-8050 Zürich, acts as the Swiss representative of the Fund(s). UBS Switzerland AG, Bahnhofstrasse 45, 8001 Zurich, postal address: Europastrasse 2, P.O. Box, CH-8152 Opfikon, acts as the Swiss paying agent.

The prospectus, the Key Investor Information Documents (KIIDs), the articles of association, the annual and semi-annual reports of the Fund(s) may be obtained, on simple request and free of charge, at the office of the Swiss representative ACOLIN Fund Services AG. The prospectuses are also available via the website https://www.robeco.com/ch.

Some funds about which information is shown on these pages may fall outside the scope of CISA and therefore do not (need to) have a license from or registration with the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).

Some funds about which information is shown on this website may not be available in your domicile country. Please check the registration status in your respective domicile country. To view the Robeco Switzerland Ltd. products that are registered/available in your country, please go to the respective Fund Selector, which can be found on this website and select your country of domicile.

Neither information nor any opinion expressed on this website constitutes a solicitation, an offer or a recommendation to buy, sell or dispose of any investment, to engage in any other transaction or to provide any investment advice or service. An investment in a Robeco Switzerland Ltd. product should only be made after reading the related legal documents such as prospectuses, annual and semi-annual reports.

By clicking “I agree” you confirm that you/the company you represent falls under one of the above-mentioned categories of addressees and that you have read, understood and accept the terms of use for this website.

I Disagree

22-04-2024 · Insight

Energy storage – the next challenge in the energy transition

Without energy storage, renewable energy’s potential can’t be fully harnessed, putting net-zero targets in jeopardy. But trade-offs and complexities in energy markets mean only a few players stand to benefit from the expansion of storage capacity.

    Authors

  • Diego Salvador Barrero - Equity Analyst

    Diego Salvador Barrero

    Equity Analyst

Summary

  1. Renewable energy’s share of the energy mix expanding

  2. Renewables are clean and abundant but also unreliable

  3. Lithium batteries to dominate storage and grow market share

An urgent need, a growing market

Despite stiff headwinds, in 2023, clean energy investments reached USD 1.7 trillion, 65% more than fossil fuels. Ambitious transition targets assure investments in renewables and related technologies will rise further. At the COP28 in Dubai, the world agreed to triple renewable capacity by 2030. According to BNEF, energy storage investments must triple to USD 93 billion annually to reach net-zero.1

Renewable but unreliable

Solar and wind are naturally clean and abundant, but their supply is unreliable. Moreover, even when weather conditions are ideal, periods of peak renewable supply don’t always match peak periods of electricity demand. Energy storage bridges the gap by enabling surplus renewable energy generated at peak times to be stored and used later when energy demand is high (but renewable capacity is low).

Too little renewable power when its needed is one problem, too much is another. When solar and wind is strong it can overload transmission lines, leading to congestion, diminished performance and even power outages. As a result, renewables must often be switched off or ‘curtailed’ to avoid system overload. In California, 1.9 TWh of solar generated energy was curtailed in 2022; the equivalent of powering 200,000 homes for an entire year.2 In 2020, the UK curtailed wind energy enough to power over one million homes annually.3

Curtailment not only wastes valuable energy resources, it also threatens to delay the rate of renewable expansion. Grid operators are hesitant to invest further in adding supply when revenues from renewables can’t be fully captured or maintenance costs covered.

No universal storage solution

Energy can be stored in many ways leading to a diverse array of storage technologies (see Figure 1). Technologies range from capturing the energy potential of electrochemical reactions inside battery cells to much larger methods such as the pumped hydropower installations that store the energy potential of water flows between massive reservoirs.

Each technology carries distinct characteristics that can be a strength or a weakness based on the market conditions in which it is applied. For example, supercapacitors use magnetic fields to store and deliver short bursts of high voltage energy, such as for turning EV motors on and off at a stop light. That makes them ideal for emergency back-up power in a hospital or public transport environment.

Figure 1 – Energy storage technologies by type, duration and end-use application

Figure 1 – Energy storage technologies by type, duration and end-use application

Source: Barclay Research, USAID, NREL, 2021. Distributed services refers to decentralized grids (even micro-grids) where energy must be delivered over smaller distances, small packets and in real-time in response to dynamically changing demand (e.g., residential solar). Bulk power services involve delivery of steady streams of high-voltage energy over long distances to large centralized systems (e.g. municipal coal, natural gas plants) that support base-load demand.

Pumped hydropower is known for its longevity and reliability, making it the most dominant of all installed storage by far. But it is limited to regions that are blessed with abundant water and space. It also suffers from delayed response time, making it less suitable for next-generation energy grids that require near-instantaneous on/off switching. But the biggest trade-offs involve duration and costs.

At one end are technologies that store lots of energy for long durations but which also tend to be infrastructure (and cost) heavy. At the other are those with rapid response times and less infrastructure but also of shorter durations (and costly per unit of energy). Batteries sit somewhere in the middle making them popular for a broad range of use cases.

Bullish on batteries

Thanks to EVs, battery technology has significantly advanced even at the large scales needed for power grids. More importantly, battery costs have dropped 80% over the past decade. Battery storage among utilities is expected to grow 29% annually (CAGR) through 2030 (see Figure 2) and 18% among commercial and industrial energy users such as data centers and hospitals that operate their own energy storage systems.

Figure 2 – Battery storage expected to surge through 2030

Figure 2 – Battery storage expected to surge through 2030

Source: McKinsey, 2023. Annual added battery energy storage system capacity, %. Figures may not sum to 100% because of rounding.

Batteries carry other advantages. They are cheap, easy to install, versatile, and – like supercapacitors – can deliver high voltage that can be rapidly dialed up or scaled back. This makes them ideal for helping grid operators cost-effectively smooth out the daily demand-supply imbalances that have intensified with renewable use. Moreover, they can also add to grid stability by taking energy off the grid to curb congestion (i.e., too much energy trying to flow through too few transmission lines). Likewise, batteries can deploy energy at temporary intervals to keep the grid humming at frequency flows mandated by local market laws.

But batteries are not without drawbacks. A storage duration of only 4-6 hours makes many battery types unsuitable for storage over weeks or seasons. Yet long-term storage is critical for fully capitalizing on renewable potential. Other battery types are also in development, these include redox flow, metal-air, and solid-state but while promising, they face grid-integration hurdles that we believe will limit wide-scale commercial deployment.

Investment outlook – storage plus solutions

We are bullish on lithium-ion batteries as they offer the most competitive and versatile solution to for utilities and grid operators. However, to fully capitalize on their potential, they need to be efficiently integrated into new or legacy grid infrastructure, a process that most often requires more layers of expert services. In our view, that puts providers of integrated storage providers and integrated energy operators in the best position to benefit from building structural drivers.

Integrated storage providers bundle storage solutions such as battery power with system integration and digital management services that help dynamically direct grid flows to match demand. Vertically integrated energy operators broaden service-bundling even further. They not only own solar and wind farms but also have the expertise to construct off-the-grid power supplies for remote or power-hungry customers such as data centers. This gives them control over (and revenue streams from) a diverse array of grid-scale services. Moreover, their project portfolios are expanding across geographies.

One of the US’ largest integrated operators with operations in 49 states is developing Florida’s largest solar-powered battery. Similarly, Australia’s leading renewable energy supplier is developing its largest battery project using Tesla-technology. In South America, Chilean operators are adding battery storage next to critical solar installations in the Atacama Desert. In the UK, energy operators are converting grid infrastructure once powered by coal for use as battery storage facilities.

As renewable targets and installations expand, the need for storage solutions is intensifying. Efficient and versatile storage is key. But efficient integration and power-flow management are equally important for maximizing the gains from renewables.

This leaves integrated service providers with the greatest potential for profitably solving grid-storage issues.

We would like to thank Patricia Garcia Abad for her valuable research and contributions to this article.

Footnotes

1BloombergNEF, Energy Transition Investment Outlook. 2023.
2WEF, 2023. ”Storage is the key to the renewable energy revolution”
3Lane, Clark and Peacock, LLP. January 2021. “Is Battery Storage a good investment.”

Get the latest insights

Subscribe to our newsletter for investment updates and expert analysis.

Don’t miss out