Electric vehicles fed power into Australian grid during blackout

09 Jul 2024

During a major storm event that eventually cut power to tens of thousands of homes, a fleet of electric vehicles (EVs) were able to feed power back into Australia鈥檚 electricity grid, according to  from The Australian 精东传媒app University (ANU).

According to lead author of the study, Senior Research Fellow Dr Bjorn Sturmberg, it鈥檚 the first time in the world this type of vehicle-to-grid response to an emergency has been demonstrated. 

 

鈥淚t shows electric vehicles can provide the backup we need in an emergency like this,鈥 he said. 

 

鈥淲e have a fleet of 51 EVs across Canberra that monitor the grid whenever they鈥檙e plugged in and can quickly inject short bursts of power to rebalance the system if the national grid rapidly loses power. They鈥檙e essentially big batteries on wheels. 

 

鈥淭he event in February 鈥 caused by storms in Victoria 鈥 was the first real-world test of our vehicles and chargers. We now know a vehicle-to-grid system can work.鈥  

 

At the time, 16 EVs were plugged in at properties across Canberra. Four were charging, while 12 were idle. 

 

鈥淭hese vehicles quickly stopped charging and within seconds started discharging power into the grid, as they鈥檝e been programmed to do,鈥 Dr Sturmberg said. 

 

鈥淚n total, they provided 107 kilowatts of support to the national grid. To put that in perspective, 105,000 vehicles responding in this way would fully cover the backup required for the whole of the ACT and NSW.  

 

鈥淔or context, there were just under 100,000 EVs sold in Australia last year.鈥 

 

Dr Sturmberg said there is still work to be done to balance the growing demand for vehicle charging with grid security. 

 

鈥淲ith the number of EVs on our roads growing fast, the grid won鈥檛 be able to cope with everyone charging at the same time when they get home in the evening,鈥 he said. 

 

鈥淎dditionally, in the case of the February emergency, once the vehicles had provided power for ten minutes some resumed charging by default. There would be little cost or inconvenience in delaying charging for an hour or two in this kind of situation. 

 

鈥淚t may call for an industry adjustment, for instance, to require EV manufacturers to program their vehicles to stop charging during a grid emergency, with an option for drivers to override for urgent charging. 

鈥淪topping just 6,000 EVs charging would have kept the power on for those 90,000 customers whose power was cut on February 13. 

鈥淥ur results show that vehicle-to-grid can be a powerful contributor to our power system鈥檚 security, and that all electric vehicles have an important role to play.鈥 

The findings have been outlined   

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