Storage technology, economics, policy and implications for

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Storage technology, economics, policy and
implications for Australian energy markets
Delivering insights from industry leaders including:
Carla Peterman
Commissioner
California
Public Utilities
Commission
(Via videolink)
Thies F. Clausen
Senior Analyst
Electricity Market
Design and
Renewable Energy
Agora
Energiewende,
Germany
Frank Tudor
Chief Executive
Officer
Horizon Power
Paul Fox
Chief Technology
Officer New Energy
AGL
Phil Mackey
General Manager
Solar and Emerging
Businesses
Origin Energy
Rainer Korte
Executive Manager
Asset Management
Electranet
John Pierce
Chairman
Australian Energy
Market
Paula Conboy
Chair
Australian Energy
Regulator
Nicola Falcon
Group Manager
Planning
Australian Energy
Market Operator
Tony Pfeiffer
General Manager
Effective Market
Reform
Ergon Energy
Gerard Reiter
Executive General
Manager Asset
Management
TransGrid
Alistair Legge
General Manager
Customer and
Technology
United Energy and
Multinet Gas
Vassilios Agelidis
Director
Australian Energy
Research Institute
Simon Gamble
Manager, Hybrid OffGrid Solutions
Hydro Tasmania
John Bradley
Chief Executive Officer
Energy Networks
Association
Matthew Warren
Chief Executive Officer
Energy Supply
Association of
Australia
Sam Behrens, Leader Demand Side Energy Technologies Research Group,
CSIRO Energy Flagship
Iain MacGill, Director, Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets
Keith Orchison, Director, Coolibah Pty Ltd
Zeno Atherton, Associate Director, Corporate and Project Finance, Clean Energy
Finance Corporation
Andrew Hager, Commercial Business Manager, Energex
Gavin Dufty, Manager Policy and Research, St Vincent de Paul’s Society
Jim Snow, Executive Director, Oakley Greenwood
See inside for more…
Addressing the key opportunities and
challenges for integration of electricity
storage into the energy market:
Reducing barriers to the deployment and integration of electricity storage through effective
policy to advance storage uptake while maintaining the integrity of energy markets
Forecasting the impacts of electricity storage, electric vehicles and fuel switching on the
electricity market
Positing potential changes to business models as distributors, networks and retailers adjust
to expansion of storage
Examining key regulatory issues for the deployment of new technologies by new and
existing players and for integration of storage into the market
Assessing the value and cost effectiveness of storage throughout the value chain and
understanding the implications for energy economics
Understanding the transformation of the energy consumer and the implications for the
structure of electricity markets
Supporting partners:
Register TODAY!
PLUS! Full day in-depth learning sessions on Thursday 25 February
In-depth Learning Session A:
Examining the integration of electricity storage and the
implications for stakeholders and practical scenario planning
In-depth Learning Session B:
Examining the latest developments in electricity storage
technologies and the implications for the electricity market
Super Early Bird Offer:
Book before 6 November 2015 and save up to $500 per registration!
Register online at www.questevents.com.au or call +61(0)2 9977 0565
Media partners:
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
Organised by:
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
23-25 February 2016 I Powerhouse Museum Sydney I Australia
Storage technology, economics, policy and implications for Australian energy markets
Conference Day One | Tuesday 23 February
08:15
Registration and welcome coffee
08:50
Opening remarks from the Chair
Keith Orchison
Director
Coolibah Pty Ltd
09:30
10:00
10:30
INTERNATIONAL KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Reducing barriers to the deployment and integration of energy storage
• Examining the drivers for the integration of storage in the California electricity market and an
overview of other US state markets
• Defining challenges for developing regulation for the integration of energy storage in California
for grid optimisation, renewables integration and GHG abatement
• Creating a framework for storage procurement and targets for deployment for the three key
investor owned utilities and the largest targets internationally for storage integration to grid
• Identifying and overcoming the gaps and barriers in legislation to promote non-discriminatory,
cost-effective, transparent interconnection to the state grid
Carla Peterman
Commissioner
California Public Utilities Commission (Via videolink)
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
The emerging role of battery storage and other disruptive technologies in the Australian
electricity market and the outlook for storage
• Examining the emergence of a sophisticated diverse utility business model and influence of
distributive generation on electricity markets
• The transformation of energy consumers from passive consumption to empowered energy
conscious and literate consumption
• Assessing the role and state of play for storage in Australia, implications for grid stability and
flexibility and impact on the centralised grid business model
• Enabling a modern home energy storage ecosystem embedded with the smarts and insight for
choice, flexibility and control
Paul Fox
Chief Technology Officer New Energy
AGL
Forecasting the impact of battery storage, electric vehicles and fuel switching on the
national electricity market
• Investigating the key policies and economic drivers for battery storage uptake
• Quantifying the potential impact of storage technology on operational consumption and
maximum demand from the electricity grid
• Examining how emerging storage technologies are changing the generation mix and the
opportunities for consumer engagement
• Monitoring and assessing the potential impact on reliability and security of supply
• Challenges for monitoring future uptake and adoption of emerging technologies
Nicola Falcon
Group Manager Planning
Australian Energy Market Operator
Morning tea
CHARTING THE TECHNOLOGICAL ROADMAP FOR ENERGY STORAGE
11:00
11:30
Examining the advantages and disadvantages of storage applications for economic and
practical reasons
• Considering storage technology characteristics and their suitability for grid-connected applications
in Australia
• Technical challenges and identified knowledge gaps that could limit the effective deployment of
storage technologies in Australia
• Considering the potential uptake of particular technologies based on their relative technical
maturity and relevance for Australian markets
Sam Behrens
Leader Demand Side Energy Technologies Research Group
CSIRO Energy Flagship
PANEL DISCUSSION
Enabling technological innovation to integrate storage in the energy market
• Developing standardisation and interoperability of communications and controls with existing
utility control and communications systems
• Examining the current deployment models in the market and the technological barriers and
challenges for advancing participation
• Managing data privacy between consumers and the grid
Panel Moderator:
Panellists:
Keith Orchison
Paul Fox
Director
Chief Technology Officer New Energy
Coolibah Pty Ltd
AGL
Panellists:
Alistair Legge
Thies F. Clausen
General Manager Customer and Technology
Senior Analyst Electricity Market Design
United Energy and Multinet Gas
and Renewable Energy
Agora Energiewende, Germany
12:10
Networking lunch
Register TODAY!
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
13:10
Future regulatory impact of the integration of storage technologies in the electricity market
• Examining key regulatory issues for the deployment of new technologies by new and existing players
and for integration of storage into the market
• Ensuring the market is flexible and resilient enough to respond to new market dynamics brought on by
emerging technologies
• Incentives and disincentives in current regulation for business model evolution in response to
technological change
• Strengthening the consumer protection framework to remain balanced and effective as technology
changes how they engage with the sector
John Pierce
Chairman
Australian Energy Market Commission
THE STATE OF PLAY FOR STORAGE TECHNOLOGIES IN THE ELECTRICITY MARKET
09:00
DEVELOPING REGULATION TO ENABLE DEPLOYMENT WHILE MAINTAINING THE
INTEGRITY OF ENERGY MARKETS
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
13:40
Providing the appropriate level of regulation and regulatory certainty while encouraging
storage innovation
• Implications for all levels of energy market as on-site generation, storage and advances in technology
enables consumers to more actively manage use of energy
• Understanding how storage and other innovative products and services may impact energy selling models
• How the current framework can be applied to these new products and services and emerging energy models
Paula Conboy
Chair
Australian Energy Regulator
14:10 Examining market and policy barriers for deployment of energy storage
• Considering how storage and other disruptive technologies will impact the electricity value chain
• Analysing the regulatory gaps and barriers to the deployment of technology in current market conditions
• Assessing the regulatory levers that could enable deployment, uptake, access and market integration
Tony Pfeiffer
General Manager Effective Market Reform
Ergon Energy
ASSESSING THE VALUE AND COST EFFECTIVENESS OF STORAGE FOR ENERGY ECONOMICS
14:40
INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATION
Debating the value of energy storage against non-storage options
Agora Energiewende has commissioned a series of leading projects by a consortium of European energy experts
to analyse the implications of Germany’s energy transition, the growth of renewables and in this context the
potential advantages and costs for energy storage in this emerging picture.
• Making a meaningful comparison between the system, installation, integration and management costs
for energy storage & alternatives
• Defining the need or value of storage for integration and variability management of renewables to the grid
• In an era of innovation and expansion of demand response strategies and systems can storage become
a viable and cost effective option
Thies F. Clausen
Senior Analyst Electricity Market Design and Renewable Energy
Agora Energiewende, Germany
15:10
Afternoon tea
15:40
Evaluating the impact of advancing battery storage and other technologies on energy economics
• Assessing the economics of storage against existing assets and examining the payback period if adoption
proceeds at pace
• Comparing the key elements that catalysed the solar boom including rising electricity prices and
government incentives and how this would resonate for advancing storage adoption
• Considering the point at which economies of scale will begin to take effect with more production and
innovations as cost of production and installation fall
Gerard Reiter
Executive General Manager Asset Management
TransGrid
16:10
Examining the impact of storage systems on demand side participation
• Enabling demand side participation to manage consumption, efficiency and reduce network investment
• Leveraging the ability to provide shared-value to networks for efficient management of available capacity
• Overcoming system integration challenges for renewables
Iain MacGill
Director
Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets
16:40
Assessing storage profitability and the implications for the economics of energy markets
• Modelling the cost of storage, PV and electricity and other regulatory costs to understand the economics
of storage
• Determining the economically optimal configuration in terms of technology, production costs, market
conditions and demand
• Examining the factors that will determine cost going forward including retail and wholesale prices and
access to the market
• Assessing the potential value systems that energy storage brings into play on different levels
Senior Representative
School of Economics,
University of Queensland
17:10
17:20
19:00
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
Closing remarks from the Chair
End of Day One & networking drinks
Official event dinner
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
23-25 February 2016 I Powerhouse Museum Sydney I Australia
Storage technology, economics, policy and implications for Australian energy markets
Conference Day Two | Wednesday 24 February
08:30 Registration and welcome coffee
08:50 Opening remarks from the Chair
Jim Snow
Executive Director
Oakley Greenwood
12:20
EXAMINING THE EVOLUTION OF NEW BUSINESS MODELS THAT ARE ADAPTING TO
THE INTEGRATION OF STORAGE
09:00
09:30
10:00
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Preparing for the changing dynamics of the modern electricity business model
• Operating in a dynamic new environment of prosumers and distributed energy resources and
increasing consumer engagement on price and technology
• Evolution of the design principles for new operating models in the electricity market and the
supply and demand drivers for service and technological change
• Why the shifting business strategy to focus on regional priorities makes sense and how electricity
storage will drive this transition
• How the convergence of localised renewable generation, energy storage, and smart software will
change the business model of the future
Frank Tudor
Chief Executive Officer
Horizon Power
Comparing the relative benefits and implications of the three emerging storage ownership models
for the electricity market
• Determining the emerging pathways for private ownership and the potential consequences for
utilities and retailers
• Deploying batteries as an extension of energy infrastructure owned and operated by utilities and
the functioning of such ownership with the wholesale electricity market
• Optimising the energy mix and costs through gentailer provision and ownership of battery systems
Phil Mackey
General Manager Solar and Emerging Businesses
Origin Energy
KEYNOTE PANEL
Positing potential changes to business models as distributors, networks and retailers adjust to
expansion of storage
• Debating how far and how quickly utilities will engage to expand and integrate storage
• How prepared are traditional market and economic structures as storage offerings and options grow?
• Managing the infrastructure adaptations brought on by integration of storage
• Developing a business model that allows for flexibility to ensure the optimal level of investment in
distributed storage to maximise multi stakeholder benefits
Panel Moderator:
Panellists:
Jim Snow
Phil Mackey
Executive Director
General Manager Solar and Emerging Businesses
Oakley Greenwood
Origin Energy
Panellists:
Frank Tudor
Gerard Reiter
Chief Executive Officer
Executive General Manager Asset Management
Horizon Power
TransGrid
10:40
Morning tea
11:10
Developing a clear view of the investment opportunities for battery storage
• Complexities of the investment case for storage considering technology, market conditions, applications
and users
• Assessing the development and nature of the market, cost-competitiveness, operating risks and
regulatory frameworks
• Creating innovative financial solutions to fund the storage market at different scales and levels of risk
• Translating the technical case for batteries into a business case that is investable
Zeno Atherton
Associate Director, Corporate and Project Finance
Clean Energy Finance Corporation
11:40
PANEL DISCUSSION
Examining the economics of storage for multiple stakeholders in the energy chain
• Assessing the potential of increased storage uptake for reliability, demand response, transmission, flexible
generation
• Increasing the penetration and value of renewables to individuals, network operators and investors
• Examining the importance and necessity of batteries within isolated renewable energy systems
• What will be the biggest challenge for suppliers, networks, generators and users?
Panel Moderator:
Jim Snow
Executive Director
Oakley Greenwood
Panellists:
Matthew Warren
John Bradley
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Executive Officer
Energy Supply Association of Australia
Electricity Networks Association
Gavin Dufty
Manager Policy and Research
St Vincent de Paul’s Society
Register TODAY!
GAUGING THE COMMERCIAL PROSPECTS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR
COMMUNITY LEVEL STORAGE SYSTEMS
12:50
Networking lunch
13:50
Assessing the cost and reliability of deploying a high penetration hybrid renewable
system in remote locations
• Installing wind and solar PV generation with storage, to enable high penetration of renewable
energy and demand management flexibility
• Demonstrating an advanced renewable solution for small off-grid communities with multi
stakeholder engagement
• Reducing the reliance of the both King Island and Flinders Island community on expensive,
shipped-in diesel with deployments of alternative hybrid systems
• The relevance of storage technology in enabling reliable and cost efficient off grid systems
Simon Gamble
Manager, Hybrid Off-Grid Solutions
Hydro Tasmania
14:20
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
Leveraging the opportunities of an intelligent grid and distributed renewable energy
generation for regional Australia
• Transforming the electricity grid from a largely centralised generation and supply driven
development model to a highly decentralised customer focused model
• Adapting the opportunities offered by distributed generation to fuel regional viability and profitability
• Allowing more environmentally friendly technologies to be adopted for a smart energy future
Vassilios Agelidis
Director
Australian Energy Research Institute
DEFINING THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE ENERGY CONSUMER AND
IMPLICATIONS FOR SERVICE DELIVERY
14:50
15:20
15:50
Charting the transformation of the energy consumer into an engaged prosumer
• Understanding the new breed of customer and the changing dynamics with the utility
• Building systems for customer engagement micro level to manage demand response and use assets
• Assessing the implications of storage to customer behaviour and the dynamics between
consumers and the utility
• Adapting new business models to reflect consumer sentiment and behaviour
Andrew Hager
Commercial Business Manager
Energex
Enabling the integration of storage as an option for consumers for affordability and
energy efficiency
• Considering why consumers will adopt storage – cost vs non-dependency on grid
• Reviewing the movements in electricity policy and prices and the impact on vulnerable consumers
• Understanding the role of storage and other emerging systems in enabling access, value and
engagement for consumers
Gavin Dufty
Manager Policy and Research
St Vincent de Paul’s Society
Afternoon tea
TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION SPOTLIGHT
16:20
16:50
17:20
17:30
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
CASE STUDY
Energy storage for commercial renewable integration - pursuing the installation of the first
large scale non-hydro energy storage asset in the South Australian transmission network
The ESCRI project will be the first time that utility scale non-hydro storage has been assessed across all of
these elements in Australia. The project will provide a business case that determines if energy storage is a
commercial prospect for integrating intermittent renewable energy into the electricity grid.
• Supporting the National Electricity Market with frequency control services and black-start
capability for fossil power stations
• Opportunities for optimising power generation in South Australia
• Providing value to the transmission network through peak load management and/or deferral of
potential transmission capital upgrades
Rainer Korte
Executive Manager Asset Management
Electranet
The challenges for the deployment of Smart Meter Infrastructure (SMI)
• Considering the key technical requirements for SMI to enable effective technology selection
• Enabling the effective installation and testing of meter hardware and software, communications
and back office systems to ensure that SMI is well integrated
• Managing data collection for effective collection, verification and storage of data from smart
meters and the network under normal operating conditions
• Assessing the impact of deployment of SMI on the network operator, retailers and customers
Alistair Legge
General Manager Customer and Technology
United Energy and Multinet Gas
Developing low-cost, long-life battery technologies that can be installed on the electricity
grid for resilient and reliable energy supply
• Comparing the pros and cons for Lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for stationary energy storage
• Surveying the energy storage options are available today for the stationary power market;
capacitors, compressed air, pumped hydro, flywheels and rechargeable batteries
• Comparing the differences in technical and economic characteristics of the battery types for
different applications
Anthony Vassallo
Delta Electricity Chair for Sustainable Energy Development
University of Sydney
Closing remarks from the Chair and drawing of the lucky door prize!
End of Day Two and close of conference
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
23-25 February 2016 I Powerhouse Museum Sydney I Australia
Storage technology, economics, policy and implications for Australian energy markets
Registration and morning coffee for both sessions is at 08:30 and sessions will conclude at 17:00. Lunch, morning and afternoon tea provided. Choose between:
ly
te
ra ble
pa ka
Se oo
b
Post-conference full-day in-depth learning sessions – Thursday 25 February
In-depth learning session A
Examining the integration of battery storage and the
implications for generators, transmitters, distributors and
retailers and practical scenario planning
In-depth learning session B
Examining the latest developments in battery storage
technologies and the implications for the electricity
market
This practical and interactive session is tailored for professionals in the energy sector
who are directly involved in generating, transmitting, distributing and retailing in the
energy market. This session will give you the opportunity to examine the changes to
the traditional centralised utility model and will give you the opportunity to discuss the
changes that storage and other disruptive technologies bring to customer expectations,
engagement and participation in the energy sector and the consequent challenges,
opportunities and strategies for the industry.
This value-packed session is designed for all stakeholders in the electricity market who
want to deepen their knowledge of next generation battery technologies and want to
gain insights into the latest developments for making storing power more efficient and
less costly.
This engaging full day learning session will analyse the latest developments in electricity
storage technology and will give attendees insights into the current capabilities of
storage technology available in the market, the outlook for further development and
an examination of possible timeframes for battery storage to become viable for energy
storage.
This in-depth learning session will provide you with the opportunity to discuss the
emergence of the prosumer, the latest developments in a battery storage technologies,
the cost and value proposition for deployment and usage, the impact on energy economics
and the regulatory barriers for integration. Restructuring the charges for the use of
distribution networks, supporting documentation to provide greater choice and control in
how customers use the electricity networks and dealing with customers that send their
self-generated electricity back into the grid are the challenges of the future energy market.
This session will provide related practical scenario planning tools for key stakeholders.
From here, the session will focus on analysing how the development of distributed
storage will impact the length of the energy supply chain and what the new role of the
government needs to be in regulating this.
Key topics and take away skills/benefits:
• Examine the latest battery storage developments and how these might impact
existing players in the market
Key topics and take away skills/benefits:
• Develop strategies to meet changing consumer expectations by implementing a
more customer centric retail approach
• Analyse how quickly battery storage might become commercially viable for
residential or commercial use
• Discuss challenges and opportunities of the new prosumer trend
• Examine what sort of uptake battery storage could have among residential and/
or industrial users and how regulation would need to respond to properly integrate
this into the NEM
• Learn how to meet the new electricity customer expectations
• Highlight the implications of battery storage for the traditional value chain participants
• Develop better distribution approaches to achieve more transparent structural and
operational performances
• Identify opportunities battery storage creates for utilities as well as the threats it
may bring
• Analyse increased customer awareness of power use and price sensitivity and their
impact on the traditional utility businesses
• Gain insights into how solar cars and other battery based innovations may impact
the way in which the NEM functions
• Identify opportunities to transform business models to face the challenges of
changing consumer behavior
Facilitator:
Facilitator:
Anthony Vassallo
Delta Electricity Chair in Sustainable
Energy Development
The University of Sydney
Jim Snow
Executive Director
Oakley Greenwood
For details on your facilitator’s credentials please visit the speaker page on the event website www.questevents.com.au
Want to develop business at the event?
Speaking, sponsorship and exhibition opportunities available
The Electricity Storage Forum 2016 will bring together Australia’s leading energy sector
leaders with policy makers, peak representative bodies and respected analysts to work
towards satisfactory and sustainable outcomes for all concerned.
With a room full of key decision makers and buyers from the energy sector, you cannot
afford to miss out on these key sales prospects. Attendees will be actively seeking new
trends and technologies in electricity storage and other disruptive technologies to become
more efficient, productive and innovative. The Electricity Storage Future Forum 2016 is your
opportunity to place your technologies and solutions at the front of their mind. Maximise
your marketing return on investment and tailor a sponsorship package to suit your needs.
It’s where the industry will meet. Can you afford not to be there?
Register TODAY!
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
Potential sponsors please note:
In developing the program and inviting speakers to this event, we researched extensively with
stakeholders in the energy sector about the opportunities posed by the emergence of battery
storage and the challenges for integration and we have designed an agenda specifically for
them to discuss these at the event. By sponsoring this event you have a prime opportunity to
demonstrate that you have their solutions at a time and place where they are actively looking.
For speaking, sponsorship or exhibition opportunities at the Electricity Storage
Future Forum 2016, please contact Jon Treherne on +61(0)2 8188 7536 or
e-mail jont@questevents.com.au
Visit www.questevents.com.au to download the sponsorship prospectus
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
23-25 February 2016 I Powerhouse Museum Sydney I Australia
Storage technology, economics, policy and implications for Australian energy markets
The key benefits of attending:
Official Event Advisory Panel
Get a considered view of the outlook for storage from all key market stakeholders
Analyse the state of play for storage technologies, their emerging role in the
Australian electricity market and the outlook for storage
Examine how battery technologies are changing the generation mix and the
nature of consumer engagement and participation with the electricity market
Assess the value and cost effectiveness of storage and the implications for
energy economics
Keith Orchison
Director
Coolibah Pty Ltd
(Chair)
Jim Snow
Executive Director
Oakley Greenwood
Rainer Korte
Executive Manager
Asset Management,
Electranet
Gavin Dufty
Manager Policy and Research
St Vincent de Paul’s
Society
Explore the potential changes to the electricity business model for
generators, distributors, networks and retailers
Quest Events would like to take this opportunity to sincerely thank the official event advisory panel who contributed their valuable
time and expertise to ensure the agenda for this event is timely and relevant for all stakeholders in the Australian energy sector.
Identify the barriers and challenges in the regulatory landscape for
integration of storage into the market
Who should attend:
Explore the latest developments in battery storage technologies and the
opportunities and threats this could create for current market participants
The Electricity Storage Future Forum will be attended by decision makers
from stakeholder groups across the energy sector with an interest in storage
technologies, distributed generation, new energy markets and other emerging
technologies and will include:
Federal and state governments and government departments
Energy sector investors
Electricity generators
Electricity transmission, distribution and retail
Large energy users
Energy market analysts and professional services firms
Energy technology and equipment vendors
Investment banks
Consumer organisations and experts
PLUS! The three pillars of any Quest event:
Meet: Australia’s leading policy makers, industry, peak representative bodies,
respected analysts and end users from right across the energy market
Learn: From 25+ high profile speakers over 3 days – delivering you premium
content and value that is second to none
Grow: Your professional network and create business development
opportunities through face to face interaction
It’s what our events are all about….
But don’t just take our word for it, hear what the speakers are saying about the event:
“The industry is actively seeking to innovate energy supply products including
the application of storage to the network and evolve business approaches to add
value for our customers as well as our business. The regulatory framework for such
innovation is a key part of the discussion and one I am looking forward to engaging
at the Electricity Storage Future Forum.”
“Emerging technologies, such as battery storage, electric vehicles, and fuel switching,
are providing consumers with greater choice in managing their energy needs than ever
before. We, as an industry, must establish in-depth knowledge of the developments in
this area, backed by evidence and data, so that we can understand the implications on
the reliability and security of energy supply for all Australians and adapt accordingly.
The Electricity Storage Future Forum, 2016, provides an excellent opportunity to build
on this knowledge, and hear first-hand of the opportunities and challenges associated
with emerging technologies.”
Tony Pfeiffer
General Manager, Effective Market Reform
Ergon Energy
Nicola Falcon
Group Manager Planning
Australian Energy Market Operator
“The energy market is moving incredibly fast with more products and services on
offer than ever before. I will be looking at the relevance and opportunities offered
by storage systems and technology in such engagement at the Electricity Storage
Future Forum.”
“It is very early in the evolution of storage as a major contributor to the way we manage
energy, but the revolution in solar that occurred over the last decade has demonstrated
how quickly a new technology can fundamentally change the shape of energy markets.
Will the combination of distributed solar and batteries be the next wave of change ? I
look forward to discussing this at the forum”
Gavin Dufty
Manager Policy and Research
St Vincent de Paul’s Society
Register TODAY!
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
Phil Mackey
General Manager Solar and Emerging Businesses
Origin Energy
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
23-25 February 2016
Powerhouse Museum Sydney I Australia
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Registration Items
Dates
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3 Day Package A
23-25 Feb
(2 day conference plus in-depth learning session A)
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25 Feb
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AUD $1,895 incl. GST
Save $100
AUD $1,995 incl. GST
Official Event Dinner**
AUD $195 incl. GST
AUD $195 incl. GST
AUD $195 incl. GST
23 Feb
Book and pay
after 23 December
Number of Total
delegates
Deduct your discount
*Group
Discounts apply for bookings made simultaneously and on one invoice only.
**The event
dinner is available to registered attendees of the conference only
TOTAL
STEP 3 - Register & pay
Credit Card:
5 EASY WAYS TO REGISTER
Note: No surcharge is applied
on credit cards
Card No.:
CVV Code:
ONLINE: www.questevents.com.au
Total Amount: $
PHONE: +61 (0)2 9977 0565
Expiry Date:
EMAIL: info@questevents.com.au
(last 3 digits on back of card)
Card holders name:
Signature:
Request an invoice:
Please email my invoice to Name:
Email:
FAX:
+61 (0)2 9977 0567
MAIL:
Quest Events
Level 2, 53-55 Sydney Rd,
Manly, NSW 2095
CANCELLATION POLICY: If you are unable to attend an event, a replacement delegate may be sent in your place at no extra charge. Quest Events does not provide refunds for cancellations made more than 7 days after your registration is received, therefore the invoiced fee remains payable in full. Should you wish
to cancel your registration within the 7 day cooling off period, we will refund your registration fee less an administration fee of $220 (GST inclusive) per delegate. Any cancellation must be made in writing and sent by email or fax. Quest Events will make available course documentation to any delegate who is unable
to attend and who has paid in full. Unfortunately some speakers request their papers are not distributed. Quest Events will endeavour to ensure that conference programs are correct at the time of the event. Unfortunately we may need to alter the program prior to or during the event and reserve the right to do so
without notice. We also reserve the right to postpone or cancel this event (when full refunds will be issued). Quest Events is not responsible for any loss or damage as a result of a substitution, alternation, postponement or cancellation of an event. See full terms and conditions on our website: www.questevents.com.
au/content/terms-and-conditions. To view our privacy policy, please visit http://www.questevents.com.au/content/privacy-policy. Please Note: On-site registration / payment: AU$220 surcharge will be collected and no discounts are available. Early bird rates are contingent upon payment being received within
7 days of the registration date. Group discounts are available for three or more bookings from the same company (or on the one invoice). All discounts can only be applied at the time of registration and discounts cannot be combined. In the event that more than one discount is applicable, delegates will receive the
discount with the highest value. All discounts are subject to approval. Please note the conference fee does not include travel or hotel accommodation costs.
From time to time we would like to provide you with relevant information from our sponsors for this event. If you would prefer not to receive this information please tick this box.
Register TODAY!
+61 (0) 2 9977 0565
+61 (0) 2 9977 0567
info@questevents.com.au
www.questevents.com.au
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