Reference profile · Spain · Cold storage

The freezer is the second battery.

A 1.8 MWp rooftop PV + 4 MWh LFP system for a Madrid cold-storage facility uses the cold rooms themselves as thermal storage — pre-cooling against midday solar production by 1.5 °C, then coasting through evening peak-tariff hours without the compressors firing. Annual modelled yield ~2.7 GWh, RD 244/2019 self-consumption compliant.

Location  Madrid, Spain Topology  Grid-tied + LFP + thermal coupling Capacity  1.8 MWp PV · 4 MWh LFP · 40k m² cold Reference profile  v1 · 2026
0MWp
Rooftop PV
25° tilt · 28,000 m² insulated roof
0MWh
LFP storage
Evening peak-tariff arbitrage
0GWh / yr
Year-1 yield
~1,500 kWh/kWp · NASA POWER
0°C
Thermal-storage band
−25 to −26.5 °C cycling envelope
0%
Peak-tariff cost cut
Evening kWh shifted to solar/BESS
The challenge

A −25 °C facility is a 24/7 base load with a sharp evening tariff penalty.

The site is a 40,000 m² cold-storage facility running 24/7 at −25 °C across five insulated cold rooms. Compressor base load sits at ~720 kW continuous, climbing to ~1.2 MW during pallet-loading windows and ~1.4 MW during morning defrost cycles. The site is grid-only, on Spain's 6-tariff time-of-use rate with the peak P1 band running 10:00–14:00 and 18:00–22:00 weekdays — and a P6 valley overnight that's about 60% cheaper.

Two compounding problems: compressor load aligns with peak tariff (defrost cycles often land in the morning P1 band; product-loading often falls in the evening P1 band), and the cold rooms have substantial thermal mass that the existing controls don't exploit — the compressors cycle on a tight ±0.4 °C deadband around the set-point, ignoring any opportunity to pre-cool during cheap hours.

The brief: maximise PV self-consumption against the compressor load, use the cold rooms' own thermal mass as a second-tier energy buffer, shift evening P1-band kWh to a combination of solar, BESS, and pre-cooled thermal mass, and register the project under Spain's RD 244/2019 collective self-consumption framework.

Site & load baseline

  • Cold rooms: 5 × ~8,000 m² · −25 °C set-point
  • Compressor base: 720 kW continuous
  • Defrost peak: 1.4 MW (morning P1 band)
  • Loading peak: 1.2 MW (evening P1 band)
  • Existing controls: ±0.4 °C deadband
  • Latitude: 40.4° N · Madrid
  • GHI: ~1,830 kWh/m²/yr (NASA POWER)
  • Tariff: RD 244/2019 · 6-band TOU
The approach

Solar charges the BESS. The BESS charges the compressors. The cold rooms charge themselves.

Most PV-plus-storage retrofits in cold-storage treat the BESS as an electrical buffer only. The Madrid brief added a second buffer: the cold rooms themselves, treated as a thermal battery. By widening the compressor deadband from ±0.4 °C to −25 to −26.5 °C during cheap hours, the rooms can be pre-cooled into the floor of their food-safety envelope — then allowed to drift back toward the −25 °C ceiling during expensive hours without firing a single compressor.

Three engineering decisions diverge from a typical 1.8 MWp retrofit:

  1. 1Thermal pre-cool, food-safety-validated. Widening the deadband to 1.5 °C is a controls change. Doing it without violating product temperature compliance is a documentation exercise: data-logger validation across 26 SKU classes, signed-off cold-chain temperature traces, and a continuous monitoring overlay added to the BMS. The thermal-storage strategy delivers ~480 kWh/day of equivalent energy shift at no electrical-storage capex.
  2. 2BESS sized to the evening P1 band, not to the morning defrost. 4 MWh at the 1.2 MW evening loading peak gives ~3 hours of full coverage — comfortably spanning the 18:00–22:00 P1 band. Morning defrost is solved by the thermal-storage strategy, not the BESS: pre-cool overnight on cheap P6 valley electricity, drift through the morning, and let the compressors fire on solar from 11:00 onward.
  3. 3EMS arbitrates four state variables, not one. The energy management system isn't doing PV / BESS / grid dispatch. It is doing PV / BESS / grid / cold-room-temperature dispatch, with tariff window, weather forecast, and product compliance constraints layered on top. The IRR delta versus a pure-electrical hybrid is ~+220 basis points — and entirely attributable to controls intelligence, not hardware.
System architecture

Single-line view: PV / BESS / grid → compressors → thermal mass.

Electrical: PV, BESS and grid coupled at the LV main switchboard, feeding compressor switchgear. Thermal: the cold rooms act as the second-tier energy buffer with controlled deadband, governed by the EMS via the BMS interface — the architectural difference from a standard cold-storage retrofit.

Rooftop PV 1.8 MWp · 25° LFP BESS 4 MWh · 1.5 MW PCS Grid 6-band TOU · P1–P6 LV main switchboard · hybrid inverter / EMS Compressor plant 720 kW base · 1.4 MW defrost peak Variable-speed drives Thermal mass coupling Cold rooms · 40,000 m² Thermal storage: −25 ↔ −26.5 °C Cold room 1 Cold room 2 Room 3 Room 4 Room 5 BMS interface · EMS arbitration Tariff band · weather · SOC · product compliance
PV generation
LFP storage
Thermal mass (cold rooms)
Equipment
Bill of materials

Indicative equipment stack.

Component selection is illustrative — final BoM in any binding TPC delivery is calibrated to roof structural survey, BMS retrofit scope, RD 244/2019 self-consumption framework, and the supplier list current at quote time. Primary equipment ships factory-direct; structural and controls scope is procured locally.

ComponentSpecificationQtySource
PV moduleN-Type TOPCon bifacial · 580 W · 144-cell · IEC 61215 / 61730 · low-temp coefficient3,103Factory-direct
Rooftop mountingAluminium 6005-T5, 25° tilt, ballast-engineered, EN 1991 wind region~1.8 MWpFactory-direct
Hybrid string inverter1500 V DC · 200 kW · integrated PV + BESS PCS · IP669Factory-direct
LFP battery containers20-ft outdoor LFP · 2 MWh per container · liquid-cooled · UL 9540A · IEC 626192Factory-direct
Energy management systemEMS with 4-state arbitration (PV / BESS / grid / cold-room temp) · TOU optimiser · weather feed1Factory-direct
BMS retrofit (building management)Cold-room temperature deadband retune, food-safety monitoring overlay, EMS API integration1 lotSite-procured
Food-safety logger validation26 SKU-class temperature trace logs, signed-off cold-chain compliance documentation1 packageTPC engineering
LV switchboard retrofitMain switchboard PV+BESS feeder add, anti-export limit, RD 244/2019 metering1 retrofitSite-procured
DC combiner / SPDs1500 V Type II surge arresters, fused string combiners26Factory-direct
Cabling & earthing1500 V DC PV cable, LV armoured, IEC 60502~2.6 kmSite-procured
RD 244/2019 registrationSelf-consumption registration, single-line and metering documentation, distributor approval pack1 packageTPC engineering
Commissioning & performance testFAT + SAT + 30-day load profile validation + thermal-storage controller tuning1 packageTPC engineering
Year-1 generation

Modelled monthly yield, calibrated to NASA POWER Madrid data.

Monthly generation is computed from public NASA POWER irradiance for ~40°N Madrid, applied to the as-designed 1.8 MWp rooftop at PR 0.78 — note the strong continental seasonal swing typical of central Spain at this latitude. Hover any bar for the underlying figure.

Monthly PV generation — Year 1 (modelled)

Annual total: 2.7 GWh · ~1,500 kWh/kWp · PR 0.78
Jan · 131 MWh
Feb · 153 MWh
Mar · 226 MWh
Apr · 240 MWh
May · 283 MWh
Jun · 312 MWh
Jul · 339 MWh
Aug · 305 MWh
Sep · 236 MWh
Oct · 183 MWh
Nov · 131 MWh
Dec · 113 MWh
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

The strong May–August plateau aligns with the highest compressor load of the year (summer ambient drives defrost frequency up). Annual cost saving comes from two stacked effects: ~50% of the cold-storage kWh is now PV or BESS, and the thermal-storage strategy shifts another ~14% of grid kWh out of P1 into P5/P6. Combined evening P1 cost drops 38%.

Lessons learned

Three engineering insights worth carrying forward.

01 / THERMAL STORAGE

The freezer is bigger than the battery — use it.

At 40,000 m² of insulated mass at −25 °C, the 1.5 °C deadband widening provides roughly the same daily energy-shift as a hypothetical 1.6 MWh additional electrical battery — at zero capex. The food-safety validation cost is the only line item that exists in that comparison, and it's a five-figure desktop study against a seven-figure storage capex.

02 / EMS COMPLEXITY

4-state arbitration earns its tuning time.

Adding cold-room temperature as a fourth dispatch variable next to PV / BESS / grid took 6 weeks of post-commissioning tuning to reach the +220 bps IRR figure — most of it spent finding edge cases in the BMS API and reconciling the EMS's tariff-window awareness with the BMS's product-compliance constraints. The hardware is generic; the tuning is the asset.

03 / REGULATION

RD 244/2019 is a paperwork project, plan for it.

Spain's self-consumption framework is favourable but documentation-heavy. The collective self-consumption registration, the distributor approval pack, and the metering single-line all have prescribed forms and review windows that don't compress easily. Treating it as a Phase 1 deliverable (alongside structural survey) — not as a closing checklist — was the difference between a 9-month and a 14-month schedule.

The cold rooms had been thought of as a load for thirty years. The moment we let them act as storage instead, the entire commercial model of the project changed. The battery you can see on the slab is half the storage. The other half is the building itself.
Hybrid plant controls lead · cold-chain engagements · TPC engineering

Quote is illustrative of the engineering posture TPC brings to cold-chain hybrid engagements. This reference profile is not tied to a named or contracted client; site-specific testimonials are released only with the operator's signed consent under the engagement NDA.

Reference profile. This page describes a typical engagement scope, equipment stack and modelled outcome representative of TPC's cold-chain PV-plus-storage delivery — not a specific contracted client project. Generation figures are computed from public NASA POWER solar irradiance data for the Madrid / 40°N zone applied to the equipment specification above. Final pricing, system size, thermal-storage strategy validation, and delivered yield in any binding TPC engagement depend on roof structural survey, cold-room food-safety compliance scope, RD 244/2019 framework requirements, and the supplier list current at quote time.

Working on a similar engagement?

Cold-chain or industrial-thermal PV+storage retrofit, time-of-use tariff optimisation, or thermal-mass coupling for energy-shift — TPC's engineering team will scope the same equipment envelope for your project under a one-business-day SLA.