DocumentCode :
1188590
Title :
Economic and Technical Determinants of Power System Development
Author :
Yu, Oliver S.
Author_Institution :
Electric Power Research Institute
Issue :
5
fYear :
1980
Firstpage :
1975
Lastpage :
1983
Abstract :
This paper examines the major economic and technical determinants in the development of electric power systems. It first studies the fundamental motivations for centralization in the systems, i.e., increasing size of equipment and degree of interconnection. It then quantitatively analyzes the interrelationships among the average size of generating units, the degree of interconnection, and the level of system peak load. The analysis indicates that although the economic advantages of centralization have been much exploited in existing systems, additional benefits, particularly from scale economies of generating equipment may still be achieved. Moreover, for low load factor end users, such as residential customers, electricity production by small generators with low degrees of interconnection would not only be more expensive, but more capital-intensive than production by centralized systems.
Keywords :
Environmental economics; Power generation; Power generation economics; Power industry; Power system economics; Power system interconnection; Power system planning; Power system reliability; Power systems; Production systems;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power Apparatus and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9510
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPAS.1980.319824
Filename :
4114024
Link To Document :
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