Nichicon Corporation (Chairman: Ippei Takeda) and Kyocera Corporation (President: Tetsuo Kuba) announced that the two companies have completed an agreement for Kyocera to begin domestic sales this summer of a new energy management system (EMS) which combines Kyocera’s highly reliable solar power generating systems with Nichicon’s long-lasting, high-capacity lithium-ion battery storage units. Designed for the Japan market, the new system responds to the growing demand for residential energy storage equipment following the March 11 disasters. Kyocera will begin sales in Japan this summer.
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Schematic of residential energy use flow using Kyocera’s solar power generating system & energy management system with Nichicon’s power storage unit |
Optimizing Energy Use with Kyocera’s Energy Management System (EMS) Through its long-term R&D strategy and proprietary technology in solar and energy-related fields, Kyocera has developed an EMS which makes effective use of energy.Using and regulating a solar power generating system with battery storage requires a power inverter and sophisticated energy-management technology. The EMS developed by Kyocera is thus effective in optimizing residential energy use from those systems and utility power from the electricity grid. By using Kyocera's high quality solar power generating systems - which hold the No.2 domestic market share*1 - and Nichicon's energy storage system which utilizes a lithium-ion battery manufactured by Samsung SDI Co., Ltd., the new energy system is able to more effectively control energy consumption. This new system combines the two vital themes of power generation and power storage using Kyocera's solar power generating system and Nichicon's energy storage unit. Kyocera will use its energy-management technology to launch this new comprehensive system for optimizing residential energy use, and thus make a real contribution to preventing climate change. |
Background While striving to realize a low-carbon society through use of renewable energy, and in the wake of the March disasters, there has been a rapidly increasing need in Japan to address electricity supply instability. This requires implementing energy demand peak-time cuts and peak-time shifts through on-site energy creation and energy storage to stabilize energy demand, as well as the increasingly popular concept of local energy self sufficiency. With the restart of the national subsidy program for residential solar power generating systems in January of 2009, and the feed-in tariff program which was also started in November of the same year, it is expected that up through the fiscal year ending March 31, 2012 more than one million homes in Japan will have installed solar power. Furthermore, it is expected that the number of installations will continue to increase annually by roughly 12% in the coming years*2. Moreover, the Japanese government also agreed on a maximum three-year subsidy program, worth 21 billion yen, for use of stationary lithium-ion battery energy storage systems starting this fiscal year. As this year is the starting point for the subsidies, it is expected that market growth will begin in earnest from here on. |
Features of the New System Combining the world class technology of Kyocera, Nichicon and Samsung SDI into the new system, Kyocera's EMS - which was developed through the company's original R&D - will be able to more efficiently control energy consumption: |
1. Long-lasting, high-capacity lithium-ion battery |
2. Various EMS modes to fit energy use patterns and needs |
3. System automatically switches to independent operation in the event of a natural disaster or electricity black-out Kyocera solar modules, power inverter (bottom-left) and energy storage unit (right) |
Sales Sales Structure 1.Complete system including EMS controlled solar power generating system and energy storage unit.
2.Energy storage unit with EMS for homes already equipped with a solar power generating system.
3.Sales of additional energy storage capacity (total of 14.2kWh). |
Sales Route |
Launch Date |
Sales Target |
*1 Based on research by Kyocera.
*2 Based on Kyocera calculations taken from data contained in a Fuji-Keizai market survey (residential solar installation forecasts: 253,000 in FY2012; 691,000 in FY2021)
*3 Based on calculations by Kyocera.
*4 Provisional specifications at time of announcement.
Kyocera Corporation (NYSE:KYO)(TOKYO:6971) (http://global.kyocera.com/), the parent and global headquarters of the Kyocera Group, was founded in 1959 as a producer of fine ceramics (also known as “advanced ceramics”). By combining these engineered materials with metals and plastics, and integrating them with other technologies, Kyocera has become a leading supplier of solar power generating systems, telecommunications equipment, printers, copiers, electronic components, semiconductor packages, cutting tools and industrial ceramics. During the year ended March 31, 2011, the company’s net sales totaled 1.27 trillion yen (approx. USD15.3 billion). The company is ranked #604 on Forbes magazine’s 2011 “Global 2000” listing of the world’s largest publicly traded companies. NICHICON CORPORATION (TOKYO:6996) (http://www.nichicon.com/), was founded in 1950 as a production and sales of various kinds of capacitors,circuit / module products, related devices and equipment. NICHICON has become a leading supplier of capacitors, and charger integrated DC-DC converters for electric vehicles. During the year ended March 31, 2011, the company’s net sales totaled 105,914 million yen. |