Title of article
SimWIND: A geospatial infrastructure model for optimizing wind power generation and transmission
Author/Authors
Benjamin R. Phillips، نويسنده , , Richard S. Middleton، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
12
From page
291
To page
302
Abstract
Wind is a clean, enduring energy resource with the capacity to satisfy 20% or more of U.S. electricity demand. Presently, wind potential is limited by a paucity of electrical transmission lines and/or capacity between promising wind resources and primary load centers. We present the model SimWIND to address this shortfall. SimWIND is an integrated optimization model for the geospatial arrangement and cost minimization of wind-power generation–transmission–delivery infrastructure. Given a set of possible wind-farm sites, the model simultaneously determines (1) where and how much power to generate and (2) where to build new transmission infrastructure and with what capacity in order to minimize the cost for delivering a targeted amount of power to load. Costs and routing of transmission lines consider geographic and social constraints as well as electricity losses. We apply our model to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) Interconnection, considering scenarios that deliver up to 20 GW of new wind power. We show that SimWIND could potentially reduce ERCOTʹs projected ∼$5B transmission network upgrade line length and associated costs by 50%. These results suggest that SimWINDʹs coupled generation–transmission–delivery modeling approach could play a critical role in enhancing planning efforts and reducing costs for wind energy integration.
Keywords
Wind power planning , Transmission losses , Infrastructure optimization
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
973780
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