[ESS·VPP·DR] Episode 4ESS and Frequency Regulation (FR) Services
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[ESS·VPP·DR] Episode 4ESS and Frequency Regulation (FR) Services

by 라파엘0929 2026. 6. 24.

🟢 ESS·VPP·DR Series · Episode 4

ESS and Frequency
Regulation (FR) Services

Holding 60Hz steady — why Korea pays operators 1/10 of US/EU rates for the same service

📅 June 24, 2026 ✍️ Raphael0929 📖 ~2,800 words 🏷️ ESS / Frequency Regulation / FR Ancillary Service / Compensation Structure
🟢 ESS·VPP·DR Masterclass — Series Progress
Episode 4 of 20 — ESS and Frequency Regulation (FR) Services
 
4 / 20 complete (20%)
Intro

60Hz — The Heartbeat of the Grid

Episode 3 explained why SMP arbitrage struggles to be profitable in Korea.
Today covers ESS's second core revenue model: Frequency Regulation (FR) ancillary services.
Korea's power grid runs at 60Hz. Drift just 0.2Hz from that target and generator protection relays can trip, triggering cascading outages.
ESS acts as the grid's "shock absorber" — responding in milliseconds to keep frequency locked at 60Hz.

But there's a problem. The FR compensation structure for the 376MW system KEPCO built starting in 2014 pays operators roughly 1/10 of what US or European markets pay for the same service. Today we'll fully dissect why — and what a fix would look like.

Mechanism

What Is Frequency Regulation?

Core Concept
Frequency Regulation (FR) means detecting instant supply-demand imbalances and having ESS charge (when generation exceeds load) or discharge (when load exceeds generation) to keep frequency at exactly 60Hz.
📌 Generation > Load → ESS charges (suppresses frequency rise) / Generation < Load → ESS discharges (suppresses frequency drop)

※ Source: Electric Journal (keaj.kr) — "Frequency regulation means maintaining a constant 60Hz electrical frequency by balancing supply and demand — ESS charges when there is excess generation and discharges when generation is insufficient" / Industry News (Oct 22, 2018) — FR-ESS deployment overview

Solar/wind output spikes
or a generator suddenly trips
Instant supply-demand imbalance
→ frequency deviates
Conventional generator response
tens of seconds to minutes
vs ESS response time
tens of milliseconds — 100x faster
💡 Analogy
Think of grid frequency as a car's speedometer, with 60Hz as the legal speed limit. Just as cruise control constantly adjusts the throttle and brakes to hold speed, ESS acts as the grid's "automatic cruise control" — holding frequency near 60Hz. Traditional generators take minutes to respond to speed changes by shifting gears; ESS responds in milliseconds.
FR mechanism — imbalance event → ESS instant charge/discharge → 60Hz restored flowchart
Korea Status

KEPCO's 376MW — Korea's FR-ESS Deployment

📢 Key Statistics · Source
2014 pilot launch → KEPCO-built FR-ESS total: 376MW
Expected annual power purchase cost savings of ~₩62B + ₩1.2T in overseas exports achieved over 4 years
Source: Industry News (Oct 22, 2018) — citing KEPCO FR-ESS deployment data
376MW
KEPCO-built FR-ESS
capacity (2018 basis)
₩62B
Annual power purchase
cost savings (expected)
1.6x
Battery charge/discharge
speed improvement (4-year)

※ Source: Industry News (Oct 22, 2018) — KEPCO 376MW FR-ESS commercial operation, ~₩62B/year purchase cost savings expected, 4-year charge/discharge speed improvement 1.6x, overseas exports (US/Europe/Asia) ~₩1.2T achieved / Mirae Asset Securities — annual ₩150–200B power cost savings (efficiency gains + SMP reduction combined)

The Problem

Why Korea's FR Compensation Is 1/10 of the US/EU Level

📢 Expert Diagnosis · Source
"The compensation paid to providers of frequency regulation services in Korea is approximately one-tenth the level of the US or Europe."
Source: Electric Journal (keaj.kr), "KEPCO's FR-ESS Business Impact and Effects on the Industry"

The root cause is structural. In Korea, FR-ESS investment costs are not recovered through market-based ancillary service payments to operators — instead, KEPCO recovers costs internally by improving baseload utilization, reducing power purchase expenses. In other words, the economic value of FR-ESS is handled as "KEPCO's cost savings," not as "ancillary service market revenue."

Item Korea US (PJM etc.) UK (National Grid)
Compensation party KEPCO (indirect via cost savings) RTO/ISO (market settlement) National Grid (contracted payment)
Compensation level ~1/10 of US/EU Fast-response resources up to 3x premium Separate capacity + energy payment
Private investment incentive Essentially none — only KEPCO can invest Activated by FERC Order 755 Mandated + market combined
Response speed value Not reflected Benefit Factor up to 3x for fast resources Speed/accuracy-based compensation

※ Source: Electric Journal (keaj.kr) — Korea FR compensation ~1/10 of US/EU, effectively no private investment possible / FERC Order 755: ESS Benefit Factor max 3x vs. conventional generators, PJM FR reserve reduced from 1% to 0.7% of peak demand / KEEI Policy Issue Paper 18-11 — US/UK separate capacity+energy compensation model

⚠️ Structural Flaw: Korea's current FR compensation system makes no distinction for ESS's millisecond-level response speed. According to KEEI Policy Issue Paper 18-11, Korea needs to follow the US/UK model of separating capacity (MW) and energy (MWh) payments, and introducing performance/speed-based differential compensation.
Korea vs US/UK FR compensation structure — reward level, market structure, private investment incentive comparison
Global Benchmark

What US PJM Proved About ESS FR

US FERC Order 755, effective in 2011, became the global benchmark for ESS FR markets. Its core principle is performance-based compensation.

US FERC Order 755 Content Effect
Fast-response resources (ESS etc.) get Benefit Factor up to 3x Dramatically improved ESS competitiveness in FR markets
Performance-based pay → better responders earn more Investment incentive created for ESS, pumped storage, etc.
Capacity (MW) + Energy (MWh) separated in settlement ESS earns compensation for "standing ready" even without dispatching

※ Source: Electric Journal (keaj.kr) — FERC Order 755: RTOs/ISOs can apply Benefit Factor up to 3x for fast-response resources / PJM reduced FR reserves from 1% to 0.7% of peak demand while maintaining stability / NYISO classifies ESS as LESR (Limited Energy Storage Resource) with separate compensation / ERCOT designing Fast Responding Regulation Service program

Key Takeaway: PJM's experience showed that introducing FR-ESS allowed the FR reserve requirement to fall from 1% to 0.7% of peak demand without any degradation in grid stability — proving ESS achieves equivalent stabilization with far less capacity than conventional generators.
Korea FR ancillary service reform direction and global comparison roadmap
Q & A

Reader FAQs

Q How far can frequency deviate before it becomes dangerous?
Under Korea's Power Market Operation Rules, the normal operating range is 59.8–60.2Hz. Below 59.7Hz, Under-Frequency Load Shedding (UFLS) relays begin automatically shedding load. Below 59.3Hz, generator protection systems can automatically trip generators to protect equipment. Conversely, above 60.5Hz the same risks apply in reverse. Keeping frequency within this narrow band is the entire point of frequency regulation.

Q Can private operators (not KEPCO) run FR-ESS in Korea?
Not in any practical sense right now. While the 2015 Power Market Operation Rules revision created a legal basis for ESS participation in frequency regulation, experts quoted in Electric Journal (keaj.kr) say "given current ancillary service compensation levels, private operators cannot recover their investment — making it effectively KEPCO-only." Ancillary service market reform and compensation level normalization must come first before private FR-ESS investment can meaningfully scale.

Q Why does more renewable energy mean higher demand for FR-ESS?
Solar and wind output changes dramatically with weather. A cloud suddenly covering the sun or a wind gust changing speed can cause hundreds of MW to appear or disappear in seconds. Conventional generators take minutes to respond to such swings; ESS responds in milliseconds. KEEI's late-2024 report shows that curtailment events in Jeju — where renewables are concentrated — already hit 125 times in 2022, up 2.7x from 2019, illustrating the structural pressure building across the Korean grid.
📋 Key Summary
Item Content
FR-ESS role Hold grid at 60Hz — absorb supply-demand imbalances with millisecond charge/discharge
Korea deployment KEPCO 376MW (2018 basis), ~₩62B/year power purchase cost savings
Compensation comparison Korea vs. US/Europe ≈ 1:10 (expert diagnosis in Electric Journal)
Structural cause Korea uses "KEPCO internal savings" model, not "ancillary service market settlement" → no private investment possible
US benchmark FERC Order 755 — fast-response Benefit Factor up to 3x, performance-based pay
Reform needed Compensation normalization + private market access + speed/performance-based differential pay
Investment

Investment Takeaways

  • Korean ancillary service market reform is the pivotal signal — opening private FR-ESS participation would directly benefit Korea's battery Big 3 (LG ES, Samsung SDI, SK On)
  • ✅ Renewable expansion → curtailment surge → FR-ESS demand explosion — Jeju's experience is the leading indicator for mainland policy direction
  • ✅ US FERC Order 755 model + Korea BESS Central Contract Market integration potential — watch whether FR services get incorporated into the Central Contract Market framework
  • ✅ Korea's 376MW build gave domestic firms ₩1.2T in overseas export wins — global FR-ESS market positioning is already established; domestic policy reform could unlock a second wave
Conclusion

Conclusion

💡 Core Message
"ESS's frequency regulation value lies in millisecond response speed —
but Korea's market still hasn't put a price on that speed."

Points to Watch

  • Korean power market ancillary service reform debate — direction on private FR-ESS access and compensation normalization
  • Jeju renewable curtailment frequency trend — leading indicator for mainland FR-ESS demand expansion
  • BESS Central Contract Market Round 2 results (540MW) + FR integration direction — shift from pure arbitrage to combined ancillary service revenue model
🔍 Raphael Insight · Power Market Expert Perspective

Looking at the FR-ESS compensation problem, you see a fundamental tension between Korea's "public utility, state enterprise-led" structure and a "market-based, privately-funded ancillary services" structure. KEPCO accounts for FR-ESS's economic value as an internal "cost savings" item. This is rational from KEPCO's perspective — but from the market's perspective, it means the value of ESS never gets expressed as a price signal.

What FERC Order 755 taught us is simple: put a real price on ESS's millisecond response capability, and private investment follows naturally. As Korea's renewable expansion accelerates frequency variability, the pressure for this structural reform keeps building. Episode 5 will look at ESS's third revenue stream — REC weighting for renewable-linked ESS — and why it's worth more than many operators realize.

📚 Sources & References
  1. Electric Journal (keaj.kr), "KEPCO's FR-ESS Business Impact and Effects on the Industry" — Korea FR compensation ~1/10 of US/EU, private investment structurally impossible, FERC Order 755 (up to 3x Benefit Factor for fast-response, performance-based pay), NYISO LESR classification, ERCOT Fast Responding Regulation Service design
  2. Industry News (Oct 22, 2018), "FR-ESS Leads Korea's Power Ancillary Services Market" — KEPCO 376MW FR-ESS commercial operation, ~₩62B/year power purchase cost savings, 4-year charge/discharge speed improvement 1.6x, US/Europe/Asia exports ~₩1.2T, Li-ion suitability (energy density, response speed, footprint)
  3. Korean Institute of Electrical Engineers Conference, "Comparative Analysis of FR-ESS Settlement Methods Abroad" — 2015 Power Market Operation Rules revision (legal basis for KEPCO ESS in FR), pumped storage response time (min. 2min, avg. 5min post-dispatch) vs. ESS tens of milliseconds
  4. Korea Energy Economics Institute (KEEI), "Policy Issue Paper 18-11: Directions for Operating Reserve System Reform Incorporating Energy Storage" — US/UK ancillary service compensation (separate capacity+energy, speed/accuracy-based differentiation), Korea's FR and standby reserve segmentation need, performance-based compensation introduction required
  5. Mirae Asset Securities Utilities Report — KEPCO 500MW FR-ESS from 2014, estimated annual ₩150–200B power cost savings (baseload efficiency + SMP reduction), 3–4 year payback on ₩700B investment
  6. Daishin Securities Research, "Small Cap ESS: Filling the Puzzle of the Energy Transition" (Aug 2023) — FR ancillary service (G/F Control, AGC), ESS revenue category classification (FR / SMP arbitrage / DR / congestion relief)
  7. M-Economy News (Feb 9, 2026), "[In-Depth] China Builds National ESS Infrastructure — Korea Still Stuck in Market Experiments" — KEEI late-2024 report: Jeju curtailment 125 times in 2022 (2.7x 2019 level), ESS as essential infrastructure, mismatch between FR market product and Jeju grid needs
  8. Korea Power Exchange Power Market Operation Rules, Annex 2 (Settlement Criteria) — central dispatch ESS FR service settlement on SMP basis, G/F Control·AGC classification, charge/discharge power settlement rules

※ The latest ancillary service compensation rates are available through the Korea Power Exchange (kpx.or.kr) power market public disclosures.