DocumentCode
2271803
Title
Economic cost of non-supply
Author
Billinton, Roy
Author_Institution
Power Syst. Res. Group, Saskatchewan Univ., Saskatoon, Sask., Canada
Volume
2
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
959
Abstract
Considerable attention has been directed throughout the world to assessing the economic consequences to electric energy customers of failures in electricity supply. The primary thrust in these studies has been to obtain a quantitative appreciation of the worth of electric energy supply in order to create a balance between reliability cost and reliability worth. The cost of an interruption from the customer´s perspective is related to the nature of the degree to which the activities interrupted are dependent on electricity. In turn, this dependency is a function of both customer and interruption characteristics. The impact of an outage is also partially dependent on the attitude and preparedness of customers, which in turn are related to existing reliability levels. Issues that can be important include how widespread is the interruption; its cause; and its predictability.
Keywords
costing; electricity supply industry; power system economics; power system faults; power system reliability; customer characteristics; economic consequences; electric energy customers; electricity supply failures; interruption characteristics; interruption cost; nonsupply economic cost; reliability cost; reliability levels; reliability worth; Bibliographies; Cost function; Economic forecasting; Frequency estimation; Large-scale systems; Power generation economics; Power system analysis computing; Power system economics; Power system reliability; Power systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Engineering Society Winter Meeting, 2002. IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7322-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PESW.2002.985147
Filename
985147
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