Energy storage

Electric Vehicles and Smart Grid Technology Flourish With Competition

Competitive electricity markets will stimulate plug-in hybrid-electric vehicle (PHEV) technology, facilitate integration of PHEVs with the power grid, and unlock consumer benefits. This message emerged during a conference sponsored by COMPETE and the University of Illinois-Springfield that explored the future of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and the smart grid.

 

COMPETE Coalition Hosts Plug-In Electric Hybrid Vehicle and Grid Modernization Conference

The COMPETE Coalition will sponsor a day-long conference October 5th to discuss the opportunities and challenges facing national electric vehicle deployment, grid modernization and how they tie into America’s Smart Grid future.
 
The free conference – Electric Vehicle Technology and Grid Modernization: How PHEVs and Smart Grid Come Together – takes place at the Phoenix Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., and is co-sponsored by the Center for Business and Regulation, College of Business and Management, University of Illinois-Springfield.
 

New York Times Highlights Emerging Energy Storage Innovations

With the rapid growth of wind energy and demand for renewable energy sources, electricity providers are working with innovative companies to develop and implement energy storage solutions, according to a recent article by New York Times reporter Matthew Wald.
 

Influential Think Tank: Electricity Competition Key to Smart Energy Grid, Technology Innovation

The COMPETE Coalition has long advocated competition in electricity as integral to unlocking technology innovation, development and jobs growth - as we all experienced when competition was injected into telecommunications and other formerly monopoly industry sectors. So we are especially enthusiastic when other voices join us in underscoring this important policy point, as when the Environmental Defense Fund joined us in highlighting the link between competition, technology innovation and environmental benefits.

Now NDN, an influential Democratic policy think tank, has released a comprehensive report pointing to competition in our nation's electricity markets as the launching pad for innovation, such as smart grid technologies and greater development of renewable energy. The report, Electricity 2.0, finds that monopoly protections and hybrid competition in a state-by-state patchwork thwart market entry of new clean energy generation and technologies. Instead, NDN advocates an "Open Energy Network" that would allow competition to provide environmental, economic and technological benefits for the entire country.