• DocumentCode
    3325040
  • Title

    Minitrack: Engineering and Economics Interactions

  • Author

    Oren, Shmuel S.

  • Author_Institution
    University of California at Berkeley
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    Jan. 2007
  • Firstpage
    121
  • Lastpage
    121
  • Abstract
    In this minitrack we address two important aspects characterizing the restructuring of the electric power industry in the US. The first is that reliability is now affected substantially by the fact that resources needed for grid operations are purchased from many independent participants in wholesale markets, each with its own profit motive. Thus the reliability obtained from the previous "command and control" system is degraded by a new dependence on market mechanisms that bring their own sources of unreliability and volatility. The effects are both short-term, as in day-ahead and real-time markets for energy, reserves, and congestion relief; and long-term, as in investments in transmission and generation capacity. The severity of these effects is heightened by the fact that in the U.S. the Transmission System Operator must adhere rigorously to the rules established in its tariff approved by FERC, thus eliminating much of the role for operators¿ judgment and discretion that was implicit in vertically integrated systems.
  • Keywords
    Command and control systems; Electrical equipment industry; Industrial economics; Industrial engineering; Operations research; Power engineering and energy; Power generation economics; Power system reliability; Power systems; Reliability engineering;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    System Sciences, 2007. HICSS 2007. 40th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Waikoloa, HI, USA
  • ISSN
    1530-1605
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1530-1605
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HICSS.2007.372
  • Filename
    4076614