Author_Institution :
Bonneville Power Adm., Portland, OR, USA
Abstract :
On July 2, 1996, a short circuit on a 345-kV line in Wyoming, USA, started a chain of events leading to a breakup of the Western North American power system. Five islands formed with controlled and uncontrolled load shedding, uncontrolled generation tripping, and with a blackout in Southern Idaho. The Western power system is operated by power companies belonging to the Western Systems Coordinating Council, which had a peak 1996 summer load of around 118,000 MW. July 2 was the third and, until the August 10 large-scale power failure, the most disruptive of a series of Western system breakups. The first was caused by the January 17, 1994, Northridge California earthquake. The second breakup occurred in the early morning hours of December 14, 1994, and, like July 2, originated in Southern Idaho and Wyoming. Modern computer and communication technologies greatly facilitated dissemination of information, analysis, report writing and event simulation for the July 2 cascading outage. This article analyzes the breakup, relying heavily on recordings from portable power system monitors which are installed at key locations and serve as primary components of a wide-area measurement system project
Keywords :
computerised monitoring; electrical faults; microcomputer applications; power system analysis computing; power system measurement; 118000 MW; 345 kV; AD 02 06 1996; Western USA power system; blackout; cascading outage; generation tripping; islanding; load shedding; portable power system monitors; power companies; short circuit; wide-area measurement system; Adders; Circuits; Communications technology; Councils; Earthquakes; Information analysis; Large-scale systems; Power system analysis computing; Power system simulation; Power systems;