On August 24, 2020, the Energy Storage Association (ESA), the national trade association dedicated to energy storage, announced an expanded vision for energy storage called 100×30: Enabling the Clean Power Transformation which charts a path for the storage industry to deploy 100 GW of new storage by 2030.[1] [2] The vision is informed by market developments and draws inspiration from ESA’s 2017 vision document (35×25: A Vision for Energy Storage). The 100 GW of new energy storage will include technologies like batteries, thermal, mechanical, and pumped storage hydropower. According to the ESA, 100 GW of storage deployment by 2030 would produce 200,000 jobs which is approximately three times current levels. This figure assumes that 100 GW of new storage will lead to 15 GW to 20 GW of annual installations for 2030, at a rate of 10 jobs per MW installed. The 100 GW will also reduce operating costs of the grid and lower customer cost. It will also significantly reduce emissions by enabling greater amounts of clean generation to reliably displace fossil generation
In order to reach the new goal, the ESA says that policy support is key. At the federal level, ESA points to a combination of increased policy support like investment tax credits (ITCs) for standalone storage facilities and the continuation of emerging policies that remove barriers to market participation. At the state level, ESA says energy storage targets corresponding with renewable portfolio standards will be important tools to ready the grid for increased renewable penetrations.
[1] https://energystorage.org/the-u-s-energy-storage-association-reveals-100x30-vision-for-the-industry/
[2] https://energystorage.org/about-esa/our-plan/100x30-a-vision-for-energy-storage/