Wednesday, December 18, 2024
Infrastructure and TechnologyLatestNews

Allye installs BESS at Roadchef

Clean-tech start-up Allye Energy has installed its flagship MAX Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) at Roadchef Killington Lake motorway services.

The BESS was installed and commissioned ahead of the August bank holiday weekend, which was one of the busiest for road traffic in nearly a decade.

Roadchef made the move as demand for power from the grid could reach or exceed the maximum import capacity (MIC) set by the Distribution Network Operator (DNO). At its Killington Lake site, there are a large number of facilities needing power, such as retail outlets and a hotel, alongside the EV chargers.

The operator therefore installed BESS to act as a flexible buffer to provide additional power and to manage the peaks during times of high demand on site, such as bank holidays.

The MAX battery energy storage system, which uses battery technology from repurposed electric vehicle batteries, now provides constraint management at the site, through peak shaving and lowers costs through smart arbitrage, storing cheaper energy off-peak.

Its software monitors the power demand across the site, responding to peak requirements through intelligent forecasting and prediction, responding in real-time as power loads increase.

EV charging demand often takes the site over its rated capacity, but through intelligent control, the MAX avoids breaches of the site limits by providing a power and capacity buffer.

Roadchef and Allye will use the Killington Lake motorway services installation as the basis to explore other sites that suffer from constraints and support the roll-out of EV charging infrastructure.

Paul Comer, Director of EV Implementation at Roadchef, said:

“Roadchef is delighted to have installed the Allye MAX battery at Killington Lake motorway services. It provides and increases our resiliency, helps us overcome grid constraints and provides reliable onsite power.

“The MAX is an intelligent solution, monitoring the site and providing critical support at times of peak demand, which helps reduce our costs whilst enabling us to better serve our customers”.

Jonathan Carrier, Co-founder and CEO of Allye, said:

“The installation of the MAX at Killington Lake motorway services further demonstrates how Allye is helping customers solve for grid and power constraints.

“Our intelligent software-controlled battery energy storage system can provide more power from an existing connection, reduce power demands to limit demand charges, and provide power off-grid for EV charging, events and host of other uses. As everything goes electric, we need more power and the grid needs more help to deliver cleaner, cheaper energy for everyone.”

Image courtesy of Allye

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