Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs

This paper determines the profitability of the primary frequency regulation (FR) service considering the wear of the electric vehicle (EV) battery as a cost. To evaluate the profitability of the FR service, the cost of degradation from FR provision is separated from the degradation caused by driving...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisa Calearo, Mattia Marinelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:World Electric Vehicle Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2032-6653/11/3/48
id doaj-2c2f17ff7e104b76a30eaddb177d4213
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2c2f17ff7e104b76a30eaddb177d42132020-11-25T02:37:15ZengMDPI AGWorld Electric Vehicle Journal2032-66532020-07-0111484810.3390/wevj11030048Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation CostsLisa Calearo0Mattia Marinelli1Center for Electric Power and Energy, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Risø Campus, 4000 Roskilde, DenmarkCenter for Electric Power and Energy, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Risø Campus, 4000 Roskilde, DenmarkThis paper determines the profitability of the primary frequency regulation (FR) service considering the wear of the electric vehicle (EV) battery as a cost. To evaluate the profitability of the FR service, the cost of degradation from FR provision is separated from the degradation caused by driving usage. During FR, the power response is proportional to the frequency deviation with full activation power of 9.2 kW, when deviations are larger than 100 mHz. The degradation due to FR is found to be an additional 1–2% to the 7–12% capacity reduction of a 40 kWh Lithium-ion NMC battery pack over 5 years. The overall economic framework is applied in Denmark, both DK1 and DK2, and Japan, by considering historical frequencies. The DK2 FR market framework is taken as reference also for the Japanese and the DK1 cases. Electricity prices and charger efficiency are the two main parameters that affect the profitability of the service. Indeed, with domestic prices there is no profitability, whereas with industrial prices, despite differences between the frequencies, the service is similarly profitable with approx. 3500€ for a five-year period.https://www.mdpi.com/2032-6653/11/3/48degradationelectric vehiclefrequency regulationvehicle-to-grid
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa Calearo
Mattia Marinelli
spellingShingle Lisa Calearo
Mattia Marinelli
Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
World Electric Vehicle Journal
degradation
electric vehicle
frequency regulation
vehicle-to-grid
author_facet Lisa Calearo
Mattia Marinelli
author_sort Lisa Calearo
title Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
title_short Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
title_full Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
title_fullStr Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
title_full_unstemmed Profitability of Frequency Regulation by Electric Vehicles in Denmark and Japan Considering Battery Degradation Costs
title_sort profitability of frequency regulation by electric vehicles in denmark and japan considering battery degradation costs
publisher MDPI AG
series World Electric Vehicle Journal
issn 2032-6653
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This paper determines the profitability of the primary frequency regulation (FR) service considering the wear of the electric vehicle (EV) battery as a cost. To evaluate the profitability of the FR service, the cost of degradation from FR provision is separated from the degradation caused by driving usage. During FR, the power response is proportional to the frequency deviation with full activation power of 9.2 kW, when deviations are larger than 100 mHz. The degradation due to FR is found to be an additional 1–2% to the 7–12% capacity reduction of a 40 kWh Lithium-ion NMC battery pack over 5 years. The overall economic framework is applied in Denmark, both DK1 and DK2, and Japan, by considering historical frequencies. The DK2 FR market framework is taken as reference also for the Japanese and the DK1 cases. Electricity prices and charger efficiency are the two main parameters that affect the profitability of the service. Indeed, with domestic prices there is no profitability, whereas with industrial prices, despite differences between the frequencies, the service is similarly profitable with approx. 3500€ for a five-year period.
topic degradation
electric vehicle
frequency regulation
vehicle-to-grid
url https://www.mdpi.com/2032-6653/11/3/48
work_keys_str_mv AT lisacalearo profitabilityoffrequencyregulationbyelectricvehiclesindenmarkandjapanconsideringbatterydegradationcosts
AT mattiamarinelli profitabilityoffrequencyregulationbyelectricvehiclesindenmarkandjapanconsideringbatterydegradationcosts
_version_ 1724795777098711040