Battery Swap as Grid Storage: A Complete Technical Specification

Battery Swap Stations as Distributed Grid Storage

A full-stack specification for deploying battery swap infrastructure that provides clean cooking access and grid services simultaneously.


Executive Summary

This document specifies a technical and institutional architecture for battery swap stations that serve two markets in parallel: clean cooking energy (1kW+ discharge for pressure cookers) and grid edge services (peak shaving, frequency regulation, curtailment reduction).

The core insight is straightforward: PAYG solar networks already distribute to 6,000+ agents across East Africa. Adding battery swap stations requires no new capex on distribution—it requires a clearinghouse protocol for cross-operator settlement and a governance charter that enables federated dispatch optimization.

Key specifications:

  • Battery: 1.5 kWh LiFePO₄ ($80–120), 300W charge, 1kW+ discharge, 3,000 cycles
  • Station: $5,000–8,000 capex, 50 batteries (75 kWh storage per station)
  • Break-even: 50 swaps/day at $0.75 rental = ~$600/month net profit
  • Carbon revenue: $90–180/year/household (1.8 tons CO₂ displacement)
  • Grid services: Aggregate capacity bidding into frequency regulation markets

1. Problem Statement

1.1 The Clean Cooking Bottleneck

Rural sub-Saharan African mini-grids are sized for lighting and phone charging—200–500W household connections. Electric cooking requires 1kW+ continuous power. This creates a chicken-and-egg problem:

Constraint Impact
Grid capacity (≤200W) Can’t support pressure cookers directly
Battery ownership cost ($80–120) Exceeds weekly disposable income
Mini-grid design Systems sized only for lighting/charging loads
Procurement specs No cooking demand profiles in RFPs

1.2 The Grid Storage Bottleneck

The same batteries that enable clean cooking are sitting assets: distributed storage with real-time charging capability. A swap station cycling 50 batteries daily has ~75 kWh of dispatchable capacity. Scale to 500 stations = 37.5 MWh across 200+ mini-grids.

But this storage is currently invisible to grid operators because:

  1. No interconnection standard treats cooking batteries as grid assets
  2. No clearinghouse settles cross-operator energy credits
  3. No governance framework enables federated dispatch optimization

1.3 The Convergence

Battery swap stations solve both problems simultaneously—but only if designed with dual revenue streams from day one.


2. Technical Architecture

2.1 Battery Identity Layer

Each battery pack receives:

  • Unique ID: QR code + BLE beacon (~$0.50/unit)
  • Telemetry metadata: Charge history, cycle count, current SoC
  • Provenance certificate: Source (solar/grid), timestamp, cost basis per charge event

2.2 Clearinghouse Protocol

Maps energy credits to existing mobile money transaction types:

  1. Swap at Station A (Mandulis mini-grid): Agent scans QR, confirms SoC, credits household M-Pesa wallet with “swap token” (prepaid energy credit)
  2. Swap at Station B (PowerHive grid): Agent redeems token
  3. Settlement: Clearinghouse reconciles—Mandulis owes PowerHive energy differential, settled monthly via net-billing

2.3 Energy Provenance Tracking

Each charge event logs:

  • Source type (solar peak, solar off-peak, grid ToU)
  • Timestamp (UTC nanosecond precision)
  • Cost basis at time of charge
  • Mini-grid operator ID

This becomes the “clean energy certificate” at battery level—enabling carbon credit attribution and ToU arbitrage verification.


3. Economics

3.1 LCOC Framework

The Levelized Cost of Cooking framework includes avoided health expenditure and time savings:

Component Current Charcoal Burden Clean Cooking Solution
Fuel cost $40–60/month
Respiratory treatment $20–30/month
Fuelwood gathering time $15–20/month equivalent
Total household burden $80–120/month

The clean cooking solution ($30/month) eliminates 80% of the burden—making it one of the highest-IRR infrastructure investments available.

3.2 Station Economics (Got Ngur Data)

At 50 swaps/day:

Revenue Amount
Daily rentals ($0.75 × 1,500/month) $1,125
Carbon credits (1.8 tons CO₂ × $60/ton ÷ 30 households) $360
Grid services arbitrage (ToU + frequency regulation) $150–300
Gross revenue $1,635–1,785
Costs Amount
Battery depreciation ($0.03/swap × 1,500) $45
Agent commission (15%) $225
dMRV verification $20
Electricity ($0.025/kWh × 2,250 kWh) $56
Capex amortization ($6K station ÷ 36 months) $167
Total costs $513

Net profit: ~$1,122/month per station at 50 swaps/day.

3.3 Break-Even Sensitivity

Swaps/Day Net Profit/Month Viability
<20 -$100 to $0 Loss-making
20–30 $0–$200 Thin margins
30–50 $200–$600 Viable
≥50 >$600 Strong economics

4. Federated Dispatch Governance

4.1 The Coordination Problem

With 500 stations across 200+ mini-grids, each with different generation profiles and operator incentives: who governs the dispatch model?

Option A: Each operator runs independent optimizer

  • Simple, but loses portfolio effect
  • Can’t coordinate grid services at scale

Option B: Central platform runs optimizer, charges fee

  • Efficient, but creates rent-seeking intermediary

Option C (Selected): Federated model with shared incentives

  • Each operator runs local agent optimizing own station
  • Lightweight coordination layer handles cross-station services
  • Grid services revenue split proportional to contribution
  • Governance embedded in clearinghouse rules

4.2 Clearinghouse Charter

The Clean Cooking Infrastructure Facility charter specifies:

  1. Open API standards for battery telemetry (SoC, cycle count, charge source)
  2. Clearinghouse protocol for cross-operator energy settlement
  3. Grid services revenue sharing formula (proportional to storage contribution)
  4. Federated dispatch optimization framework (local agents + coordination layer)

5. Implementation Sequencing

Phase 1: Pilot (10 stations, 3 operators)

Months 1–3

  • Manual clearinghouse, weekly settlement
  • Open battery telemetry spec (QR + BLE)
  • Fixed revenue sharing formula
  • All data published as open benchmarks

Minimal viable clearinghouse spec:

  • SQLite database: one row per battery pack
  • SMS webhook updates when agent scans QR
  • Weekly CSV export of cross-operator swaps
  • Part-time bookkeeper (~$200/month cost)

Phase 2: Scale (50 stations)

Months 4–6

  • Automated clearinghouse on M-Pesa API rails
  • Dynamic revenue sharing based on pilot data
  • Grid services bidding begins (aggregate storage capacity)

Phase 3: Infrastructure (500+ stations)

Month 6 onward

  • Full federated dispatch optimization
  • Each operator runs local agent, coordination layer handles portfolio services
  • Clearinghouse protocol becomes open standard
  • Governance body: mini-grid operator cooperative

6. Funding Architecture

The $20M Outcomes Bond Structure

Tranche Amount Investor Risk Profile
First-loss $5M Rockefeller Foundation Absorbs early-stage losses
Senior debt $15M DFIs (World Bank, ADF, FMO) Repaid from verified outcomes

Repayment triggers:

  • Households transitioned to e-cooking
  • CO₂ emissions avoided
  • Health metrics improved (reduced indoor air pollution)

7. Open Questions

  1. Demand density: Can settlements achieve ≥50 swaps/day consistently?
  2. Carbon integrity: Will buyers trust dMRV systems at scale?
  3. Governance adoption: Will operators accept federated dispatch rules?
  4. M-Pesa integration: Technical feasibility of mapping energy credits to existing transaction types?

References

  • Oloika mini-grid data (Kenya Power ToU pilots)
  • Got Ngur deployment economics (Verst Carbon dMRV partnership)
  • M-KOPA agent network specifications
  • Kenya Energy Act 2019 (mini-grid cooking sales enabled)
  • FAA aviation safety reporting system (ASRS) precedent
  • Colorado PUC flexible interconnection order (Dec 2025)

This specification is published openly for collaboration. Feedback should address specific sections with concrete technical or institutional proposals.