25,000 PG&E and Tesla Customers Invited to Form World’s Largest Distributed Battery to Support Electric Grid Reliability

More than 1,500 Customers Already Enrolled in Home Battery-Based Virtual Power Plant

Cash Incentives Offered for Participating Customers

Enrollment is Ongoing through October

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) and Tesla Inc. have launched a new pilot program that creates a virtual power plant, to help support electric grid reliability and save customers money.

On June 22, Tesla invited approximately 25,000 PG&E customers with Powerwalls to join the VPP and help form the world’s largest distributed battery. In the first two weeks of the new program, more than 3,000 customers have expressed interest in enrolling, with more than 1,500 customers officially in the program.

Through this collaboration, Tesla is participating in PG&E’s Emergency Load Reduction Program (ELRP) pilot by enrolling and combining residential Powerwall home battery systems into a virtual power plant to discharge power back to the grid in California during times of high electricity demand. Participating customers will receive compensation for the energy their Powerwalls discharge.

“VPPs are a valuable resource for supporting grid reliability and an essential part of California’s clean energy future. Our customers’ home batteries offer a unique resource that can positively contribute to our state’s electric grid and will become more significant as our customers continue to adopt clean energy technology. In collaborating with Tesla, we are further integrating behind-the-meter battery-based VPPs on the largest scale yet, helping to make customer resiliency technologies more accessible and continuing a long tradition at PG&E of actively integrating VPP resources into our energy supply portfolio,” said PG&E’s Aaron August, vice president, Business Development & Customer Engagement.

This venture aims to accelerate the growing trend of customers adopting distributed energy resource technologies—which can both support customer energy needs and contribute to the reliability of the grid—by expanding access to new customer program offerings and participation opportunities.

“Enabling Powerwall customers to support the grid and their community is a necessary and important part of accelerating the transition to sustainable energy. We seek to partner with utilities and regulators everywhere to unlock the full potential of storage to bring more renewable, resilient, and less costly electricity to everyone,” said Tesla’s Drew Baglino, senior vice president of Powertrain and Energy Engineering.

If all eligible customers throughout PG&E’s Northern and Central California service area participate in the VPP, the available megawatts would be equivalent to the energy generated by a small power plant.

How the PG&E Tesla VPP Works

PG&E will call load management events for participating customers, directing their battery to discharge when there is high demand for electricity from 4 to 9 p.m. (May through October).

Participating customers receive $2 for every incremental kilowatt-hour of electricity their Powerwall discharges during an event. Through their Tesla app, customers can set their backup power needs to ensure they still have enough energy for their personal, essential needs in the event of an outage, or they can opt-out of an event completely in the app, as necessary.

PG&E residential customers are eligible if they own a Tesla Powerwall, have an interconnection agreement with PG&E, and are not enrolled in other demand response programs.

Eligible customers can use their Tesla mobile app to sign up for the PG&E Tesla VPP or learn more here.

About Virtual Power Plants

VPP resources are in customers’ homes or at their businesses (“behind-the-meter”) in the form of, but not limited to, smart thermostats, smart appliances, electric vehicles, and batteries. These resources are a flexible electric load that can be dispatched by the California Independent State Operator (CAISO), by PG&E, or by a third party.

In 2021 PG&E had approximately 150 MW of VPPs making up its energy supply portfolio (as dispatchable demand response), some of which comes from pilots including the Emergency Load Reduction Program.

Other PG&E VPP service offerings include the CAISO market integrated Capacity Bidding Program for aggregators and the Smart AC program.

About the Emergency Load Reduction Program

The ELRP is a 5-year pilot program beginning in 2021 designed to pay electricity consumers for reducing electricity consumption or increasing electricity supply during periods of electrical grid emergencies.

The purpose of the ELRP pilot is to offer a new tool for the electric grid operators and utilities for reducing energy consumption during a grid emergency to reduce the risk of electricity outages when the available electricity supply is not sufficient to satisfy the anticipated electricity demand.

The ELRP is managed by the State’s three large investor-owned utilities (IOUs) – PG&E, San Diego Gas & Electric, and Southern California Edison.

The ELRP is called upon during an emergency, or impending emergency, grid situation issued by the CAISO.

Learn more about PG&E’s residential demand response and energy incentive programs here.

For more information about PG&E’s ELRP and other business energy incentive programs, visit www.pge.com/demandresponse

About PG&E

PG&E, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is a combined natural gas and electric utility serving more than 16 million people across 70,000 square miles in Northern and Central California. For more information, visit pge.com and pge.com/news.

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