Why VPPs can be the bridge to a more secure future


America’s power grid is aging. Much of the infrastructure that keeps the lights on today was built in the 1960s and 1970s, long before the digital and electronic demands of the 21st century. The results are increasingly visible: reliability issues, rising costs, and a growing need to modernize systems that were never designed for the challenges of climate volatility or the increased load from data centers and electric vehicles (EVs). According to analysts, the price tag for rebuilding or significantly upgrading the US grid could reach $2.5 trillion by 2035, which could rise due to inflation, supply constraints, and policy constraints. That figure not only represents the cost of steel, wire and concrete—it’s also a reflection of how deeply the United States depends on a centralized, one-way energy system, many of which are nearing the end of their lifespan.

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Meanwhile, a quieter and much more affordable alternative is emerging: virtual power plants (VPPs). Coordinated through distributed energy resource management systems (DERMS), which manage thousands of small, behind-the-meter assets—rooftop solar, home batteries, EV chargers, water heaters, smart thermostats—these digital systems can change and shape power demand in real time. Virtual power plants are cheaper than building new power plants. In fact, industry estimates suggest that the cost of developing a VPP is only 40% to 60% of that of building a comparable production facility. For utilities and regulators faced with capacity shortages and aging infrastructure, this is a number of serious concern.

Perhaps the most important change introduced by modern DERMS is the philosophy. Traditional demand response programs were designed to reduce load – temporarily reduce consumption to prevent overload. The most advanced grid-edge DERMS, in contrast, are built to shape demand—using predictive analytics and real-time control to optimize when and how energy is consumed or produced. For utilities, this means moving from a defensive to a proactive model. Instead of reacting to peaks, they can manage and regulate distributed resources to shape the load curve, reduce distribution constraints, and lower wholesale electricity costs. This means that utilities can overcome barriers that keep distribution operations, power purchasing, and other operational teams away from DERs and use VPPs just as they use their traditional generation fleets.

The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) recently downgraded the nation’s energy infrastructure from a C- to a D+. The reasons are complex but familiar: deferred maintenance, underinvestment, climate stress, and the rapid electrification of everything from cars to manufacturing. The reliability concern has become a national issue. Earlier this year, the Department of Energy (DOE) declared a national electricity emergency, citing capacity shortages and aging assets as serious risks to grid stability. In response, federal officials have delayed the retirement of many fossil-fuel plants to preserve reserve margins. While this may help with short-term reliability, it comes at a very high price: The analysis found that delays cost utilities and ratepayers about $29 million in just 38 days.

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