DocumentCode
1596886
Title
The evolution of wind power integration studies: Past, present, and future
Author
Ela, Erik ; Milligan, Michael ; Parsons, Brian ; Lew, Debra ; Corbus, David
Author_Institution
Nat. Renewable Energy Lab., Golden, CO, USA
fYear
2009
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
8
Abstract
The rapid growth of wind power as a generation resource in the past decade has given many utilities and Regional Transmission Organizations (RTO) concerns due to its unconventional characteristics. Because of these concerns, many of these entities have initiated studies that evaluate the feasibility of large amounts of wind power onto their system and the operational impacts present. This paper will discuss some of the past major studies, mostly focusing on the United States, and the basic methodologies that were used during these studies. The paper will also review many of the different results and conclusions of the studies and discuss how they have helped the power industry as a whole. Lastly, the authors will attempt to share their ideas on some of the limitations of the current and past integration studies, and some insight on how these may be evolving in the future.
Keywords
power grids; power system interconnection; power system management; wind power plants; operational impact; power system economics; power system operations; power system planning; regional transmission organizations; wind power integration; Costs; Energy consumption; ISO; Power system economics; Power system planning; Power system reliability; US Department of Energy; Wind energy; Wind energy generation; Wind power generation; Power system economics; and wind power generation; power system operations; power system planning; power system reliability; power systems; wind energy;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power & Energy Society General Meeting, 2009. PES '09. IEEE
Conference_Location
Calgary, AB
ISSN
1944-9925
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-4241-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PES.2009.5275981
Filename
5275981
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