
Battery Storage
Questions & Answers
Just like the batteries you find in your cell phone or laptop, a battery energy storage systems can deliver energy to power our lives. The most common BESS look like shipping containers and are filled with racks of lithium-ion batteries. The containers are designed to safely house, monitor, and maintain batteries as they store and transmit energy to the electric grid.
Batteries are a near-term solution to bolstering the power grid as the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) experiences tremendous growth and additional strain to its system. Batteries can discharge stored energy in fractions of a second. This helps add greater reliability and resilience to the electrical grid helping avoid blackouts, brownouts, and higher energy prices.
BESS facilities can create many benefits with a relatively small footprint. Typically, a 150-200 MW BESS facility has a footprint of about 10 - 20 acres. A project of this size can potentially deliver enough power for roughly 150,000 homes. (Source: US Energy Information Association)
Battery storage provides a modern update to help make the electric grid work better, reducing blackouts and brownouts, helping control electric prices, and helping maintain Texas' energy independence. BESS projects contribute steady, reliable tax payments to the communities they are located in without increasing the use of local services.
Our projects are located in areas that can benefit from additional power resources. We site projects close to existing electric infrastructure so we can help create the most benefits with minimum impacts.
Operations crews remotely monitor each site 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The sites are monitored by the operations center and the battery supplier’s control center. Additionally, regularly scheduled on-site maintenance will be performed by local technicians.
The lifespan of a typical BESS is approximately 20 years.
When a BESS reaches the end of its lifespan, it is decommissioned. That means that the project is dismantled and removed, and the land is returned to its original condition. As an owner and operator, Spearmint Energy is responsible for the cost and completion of decommissioning.
Yes. Spearmint is committed to advancing the circular economy in which recyclable materials are reused and recycled. Battery recycling is already a growing business in the United States.
Yes. Our facilities will comply with National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Code 855, the strongest safety code for energy storage systems in the world. 24/7 monitoring can prevent emergencies by shutting off any portion of the system that isn't operating properly. BESS equipment is designed and tested for safety.
The lithium iron phosphate cells used in our BESS facilities contain almost no liquid. Further, these cells are sealed in modules that are enclosed in racks that are sealed inside of purpose-built enclosures, which are placed on concrete pads. With all these layers of containment, the risk of anything getting outside of an enclosure is incredibly low. Any malfunction in a battery cell would typically automatically shut off the affected equipment and trigger a response from the operations team.
BESS facilities will not create any significant traffic or visual impacts during normal operations. Proper design and siting can help ensure that sound from BESS facilities does not impact the community. The limited sound created by a BESS is primarily related to the HVAC system and inverters.
We provide training to local first responders before any of our projects begin operation. No special firefighting equipment is required and our project designs help minimize risks to the community. In a worst-case scenario, fire departments would only be asked to work with our team to monitor the situation and would not be expected to intervene.
While our projects are built with multiple levels of safety to prevent fires, we always prepare for the worst. We will train local fire departments on BESS safety and emergency response. Our emergency response plans put the health and safety of the public, first responders, and our staff before our equipment. As the project owner, we are responsible for all cleanup and ongoing maintenance of our facilities.