Skip to content
1900

Modelling Hydrogen Storage Requirements to Balance the Future Western Australian Grid

Abstract

Increasing renewable energy technology penetration into electrical grids to meet net zero CO2 emission targets is a key challenge in terms of intermittency; one solution is the provision of sufficient energy storage. In the current study we considered future projections of electrical demand and renewable energy (in 2042) for the Southwest Interconnected System grid in Western Australia. Required energy storage considered is a mixture of battery energy storage systems and underground hydrogen storage in a depleted gas reservoir. The Southwest Interconnected System serves as an excellent case study given that it is a comparatively large, isolated grid with substantial potential access to renewable energy resources as well as potential underground hydrogen storage sites. This work utilised a dynamic energy model that summates the wind and solar energy resources on an hourly basis. Excess energy utilised battery energy storage systems capacity first, followed by underground hydrogen storage. The relative size of the renewables and the storage options is then optimised in terms of minimising wholesale energy production costs. This unique optimisation analysis across the full, integrated system clearly indicated that both battery energy storage systems and underground hydrogen storage are required; underground hydrogen storage is predominately necessary to meet seasonal unmet energy demand that amounts to approximately 6% of total demand. Underground hydrogen storage costs were dominated by the required electrolyser requirements. The optimised levelised cost of electricity was found to be US$106/MWh, which is approximately 45% larger than current wholesale electricity prices.

Funding source: This research is supported by the Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship. The work has been supported by the Future Energy Exports CRC (www.fenex.org.au) whose activities are funded by the Australian Government’s Cooperative Research Centre Program.
Related subjects: Policy & Socio-Economics
Countries: Australia
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal7685
2025-09-15
2025-12-05
/content/journal7685
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test