Title :
Power System Blackouts - Minimizing Their Impact on Industrial Co-Generation Facilities
Author :
Mozina, Charles J.
Author_Institution :
Consultant-Beckwith Electr. 6190-118th Avenue North Largo, Largo
Abstract :
Abstract -Investigations of recent blackouts indicate that the root cause of almost all major power system disturbances is voltage collapse rather than the underfrequency conditions prevalent in the blackouts of the 1960s and 70s. This paper explores the nature of recent power system blackouts (2003 east coast, 1996 California and others) and explains why voltage is the leading edge indicator of impending power system collapse. The paper discusses the need to use voltage-as well as frequency-to decide when to separate from the utility system and transfer industrial system load to internal plant co-generation. Voltage relays have been used by industrial customers to determine that the utility circuit that supplies them has tripped. However, voltage relays at industrial sites have generally not been used to determine that the utility system lacks security and may collapse. This paper discusses the causes of voltage collapse as well as the design and security requirements for an undervoltage separation scheme. The paper addresses the current level of voltage load shedding on utilities´ systems, NERC (North Electric Reliability Council) requirements and coordination of industrial undervoltage separation with utility undervoltage load shedding.
Keywords :
cogeneration; load shedding; power system faults; power system security; relay protection; North Electric Reliability Council; industrial plant co-generation; power system blackouts; power system collapse; power system security; voltage collapse; voltage load shedding; voltage relays; Frequency; Industrial power systems; Power generation; Power system protection; Power system relaying; Power transmission lines; Propagation losses; Reactive power; Security; Voltage; blackouts, NERC, voltage collapse, frequency collapse, AVR, UVLS, UFLS, special protection schemes;
Conference_Titel :
Pulp and Paper Industry Technical Conference, 2007. Conference Record of Annual
Conference_Location :
Williamsburg, VA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-1192-0
Electronic_ISBN :
0190-2172
DOI :
10.1109/PAPCON.2007.4286284