• DocumentCode
    2541532
  • Title

    Local DER driven grid support by coordinated operation of devices

  • Author

    Warmer, C.J. ; Hommelberg, M.P.F. ; Kok, J.K. ; Kamphuis, I.G.

  • Author_Institution
    Intell. Grids Program, Energy Res. Centre of the Netherlands, Petten
  • fYear
    2008
  • fDate
    20-24 July 2008
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    5
  • Abstract
    In the traditional operation of electricity networks the system operator has a number of ancillary services available for preservation of system balance. These services are called upon near real-time, after the planning phase. Ancillary services consist of regulating power, reserve capacity and emergency capacity, each with their own characteristics. Regulating power is deployed via load frequency control. Reserve capacity is used to release regulating power and can be called upon to maintain a balance or to counterbalance or resolve transmission restrictions. Both are traded at the Dutch energy market under an auction model with a single buyer (TenneT). Emergency capacity is rewarded on the basis of accessibility/availability within 15 minutes. In local electricity networks neither planning nor ancillary services exist. Planning is done by aggregation into large customer groups. For ancillary services one relies on the system operation as sketched above. In local electricity networks with a large share of distributed generation the costs of keeping the electricity system reliable and stable will increase further and technical problems may arise. The European SmartGrids initiative responds to these challenges in their strategic research agenda. One of the issues addressed in this agenda is the changing role of the distribution grid in which users get a more active role. One opportunity is the introduction of ancillary-type services at the distribution level, utilizing different types of producing and consuming devices in the local network, in order to make the total system more dependable. Distributed generation has a number of characteristics that are similar to characteristics of consumption. Part of it is intermittent / variable, although to a large extent predictable (PV, wind versus lighting, electronic devices). Another part is task-driven (micro-CHP versus electrical heating). Yet another part is controllable or shiftable in time. And storage can behave both - - ways. The main key words here are flexibility and variability. This flexibility provides a virtual storage capacity within the electricity grid that can be utilized for balancing services at the local grid. We will present how the PowerMatcher concept, developed by ECN, supports the setting up of local balancing markets in a flexible and logical way. The ICT is already available as an enabling technology. The concept has been demonstrated in several field tests.
  • Keywords
    distributed power generation; power grids; power markets; power system planning; Dutch energy market; European SmartGrids initiative; PowerMatcher concept; TenneT; ancillary services; auction model; coordinated device operation; distributed generation; electrical heating; electricity networks operation; electricity system reliability; emergency capacity; load frequency control; local DER driven grid support; micro-CHP; planning phase; regulating power; reserve capacity; Availability; Consumer electronics; Costs; Density estimation robust algorithm; Distributed control; Energy resolution; Frequency control; Power system modeling; Power system planning; Wind forecasting;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Power and Energy Society General Meeting - Conversion and Delivery of Electrical Energy in the 21st Century, 2008 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • ISSN
    1932-5517
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1905-0
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1932-5517
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PES.2008.4596644
  • Filename
    4596644