Microgrids - Storage This microgrid can power an entire North Carolina town during an outage John Engel 2.2.2023 Share Duke Energy's Hot Springs microgrid consists of a 2 MW (AC) solar facility and a 4.4 MW lithium-based battery storage facility. During its testing phase, Duke Energy’s microgrid was able to pick up the town’s entire load from a black start without any help from the energy grid. (Courtesy: Duke Energy) Follow @EngelsAngle During its testing phase, Duke Energy’s microgrid was able to pick up the town’s entire load from a black start without any help from the energy grid – using only solar and battery storage to restore power. The microgrid served the town’s load while the company gathered data. Duke Energy worked with the technology company Wärtsilä, which supplied the battery energy storage system for the project. The microgrid utilizes Wärtsilä’s energy management system, the GEMS Digital Energy Platform, for integrated control of both the solar and energy storage facilities. Duke Energy has over 60 MW of microgrid capacity connected throughout its regulated areas. In Asheville, North Carolina, Duke Energy operates a 9 MW lithium-ion battery system at a substation site in the Rock Hill community. In Haywood County, North Carolina the company has a 3.8- kWh lithium iron phosphate battery and 10 kW solar DC microgrid installation serving a communications tower on Mount Sterling in the Smoky Mountains National Park. Related Posts What is holding back the energy transition? Energy producers, buyers weigh in Microgrids seen as crucial to sidestep EV charging roadblocks, survey finds Nation’s largest microgrid transit depot breaks ground in Maryland NERC: Poor models, studies to blame for renewable energy reliability issues