Adding an energy storage option to your onsite solar system can also help protect against demand charges, provide a flexible tool when utility rate structures change, and in certain cases, protect against blackouts and brownouts, allowing your company to become even more independent from the power grid.
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To achieve sustainability goals while meeting the increasing electricity demands of electrification, organizations are pairing on-site solar PV generation with on-site energy storage. These systems, which are considered as “behind-the-meter” (BTM) systems, allow facilities to maximize the benefits of on-site renewable generation.
Onsite solar solutions enable businesses to generate their own clean energy, reducing reliance on traditional power sources. With the integration of BESS, excess solar energy produced during the day can be stored for use during low generation periods, ensuring a constant reliable and flexible power supply.
Why do businesses need onsite solar systems & battery energy storage systems?
As global electricity demand rises and fossil fuel dependence threatens our climate, innovative solutions like onsite solar systems and Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) are essential for businesses. These technologies offer a revolutionary way to harness and utilise solar power, addressing its intermittency and grid stability issues.
Can on-site storage be used alongside solar PV?
If a utility restricts the exports from a facility to the grid, the use of on-site storage alongside solar PV can provide a solution to avoid costly infrastructure upgrades, thus increasing the feasibility of larger on-site PV installations.
Adding a storage option to your onsite solar system can also help protect against demand charges, provide a flexible tool when utility rate structures change, and in certain cases, protect against blackouts and brownouts, allowing your company to become even more independent from the power grid.
When a solar system is installed directly on the purchaser's property, and the renewable energy that it produces is consumed there, it's considered an onsite system.