Hawaii
Plus Power's 565MWh 'shock absorber' BESS in Hawaii comes online
It comprises 158 Tesla Megapacks configured into 135MW/540MWh for capacity and energy use cases and another 50MW/25MWh of additional capacity for ‘fast frequency response’ to help keep the grid stable.
Brandon Keefe, Plus Power’s executive chairman claimed: “It is the first time a battery has been used by a major utility to balance the grid: providing fast frequency response, synthetic inertia, and black start. This project is a postcard from the future – batteries will soon be providing these services, at scale, on the mainland.”
The announcement said it will be acting “…as an electrical “shock absorber” (a function) often served by combustion-powered peaker plants”.
Another major energy storage project which has been described as such a “shock absorber” is the 850MW/1680MWh Waratah Super Battery in Australia which is being deployed by system integrator Powin.
KES, Hawaii’s biggest energy storage project, was approved in May 2021 and financing for it was achieved by Plus Power six months later.
Customer-sited solar power has become so abundant that Hawaiian Electric, the main utility in Hawaii, needs to regularly curtail – i.e. pay owners to turn off – utility-scale solar and wind to keep the electricity system in balance.
The utility’s modelling has forecast that thanks to the KES project it will be able to reduce curtailment of renewables by 69% over the first five years of operation, integrate 10% more new utility-scale renewables than previously modelled, and allow for continued growth in customer-sited solar. It is also expected to reduce consumer electric bills by an average of US$0.28 per month over its 20-year contract life.
The utility has been busy progressing the US island state’s clean energy and energy storage development goals, starting negotiations with 2.1GWh of energy storage projects in December 2023 and in May unveiling a long-term renewables plan which included adding add more than 3.7GW of hybrid solar, energy storage and firm renewables by 2030.
Plus Power said that by June 2024 it will have some 1,325MW/3,500MWh of energy storage online across the US, including projects which were part of a US$1.8 billion fundraise it concluded in November, the largest seen in energy storage in 2023.
Energy-Storage.news’ publisher Solar Media will host the 5th Energy Storage Summit USA, 19-20 March 2024 in Austin, Texas. Featuring a packed programme of panels, presentations and fireside chats from industry leaders focusing on accelerating the market for energy storage across the country. For more information, go to the website.
Hawaii
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Hawaii
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Hawaii
Life of revered Loea Hula Nalani Kanakaole celebrated in Hilo
HILO (HawaiiNewsNow) – A light rain fell in Hilo Saturday almost as if the heavens wept alongside the hundreds of mourners who gathered to honor the life of revered Loea Hula Kumu Nālani Kanakaʻole.
Her celebration of life was held in a place named after her mother, the Edith Kanakaʻole Stadium. Kumu Nālani died on Jan. 3 at the age of 79.
She was a respected wealth of Hawaiian knowledge, becoming a master kumu hula, a businesswoman, and beloved cultural leader.
The hoʻolewa was steeped in rich Hawaiian culture and traditional protocol.
“Her life and legacy is a multi-hyphenate kanaka. Everything that she touched, everything that she created, all of the collaborations, the people, the projects, were all grounded in kanaka truths,” her son Kuhaʻo Zane said.
Those in attendance remembered her for both her hard-working spirit and fun-loving nature.
“She enjoyed life. And I think thatʻs what I remember of her. When itʻs time to work, we work. And you work hard. When itʻs time to play, when itʻs time to have fun, she was right there,” kumu hula and longtime friend Vicky Holt Takamine said.
Her family also shared some of Kumu Nālaniʻs famous sayings over the years.
“Come on, everybody, front row mentality. Front row mentality!” her nephew Keala Kanakaʻole shared, as the crowd chuckled.
The celebration also included an ʻawa ceremony and the recitation of her moʻokūʻauhau, or genealogy. Milestones in her life were also on display.
“The life I lived with Nālani for the past 50 years has been an incredible ride. How fortunate to have a partner that would feed me with purity and delight in an amazing way,” said her husband, renowned fashion designer Sig Zane.
Hālau O Kekuhi members danced through their heartache as they sent a final aloha to their kumu.
“She expected excellence from you. She wanted discipline from you. You sat and you learned from her, it was an amazing experience to sit there and learn from her,” Kumu Vicky said.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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