Title :
Operational adequacy studies of power systems with wind farms and energy storages
Author :
Peng Wang ; Zhiyong Gao ; Tjernberg, Lina Bertling
Author_Institution :
Power Eng. Div., Nanyang Technol. Univ., Singapore, Singapore
Abstract :
Summary form only given. In a power system with high renewable power penetration, uncertain and intermittent characteristics of renewable energy resources become major concerns of system planning and operation. In such a power system, conventional thermal or hydro units have to be dispatched, shut down or started up more frequently to incorporate load, renewable resource variation and system failures. Slow ramp up (or down) of conventional units may cause energy shortage (or surplus) in power systems with high wind power penetration or in isolated micro grids with limited dispatchable capacity. This paper proposes a technique to evaluate operational reliability and energy utilization efficiency of power systems with high wind power penetration. The ramp rate of a conventional generator and energy storage system (ESS) are considered in the proposed technique. The effect of slow ramp-up rate or fast reduction of wind speed on system reliability is measured by the expected energy not supplied. A new index designated as the expected energy not used is proposed and formulated to represent energy surplus due to fast increase of wind speed and slow ramp down of conventional units. The IEEE-RTS is used to illustrate the applications of the proposed method.
Keywords :
distributed power generation; energy storage; power generation dispatch; power generation reliability; wind power plants; ESS; IEEE-RTS; energy storage system; energy storages; high renewable power penetration; high wind power penetration; hydro units; isolated microgrids; operational adequacy study; operational reliability evaluation; power system operation; power system planning; power systems; renewable energy resources; renewable resource variation; slow ramp up; system failures; thermal units; wind farms; wind speed reduction; Energy storage; Power engineering; Power systems; Reliability; Wind farms; Wind power generation; Wind speed;
Conference_Titel :
Power and Energy Society General Meeting (PES), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
DOI :
10.1109/PESMG.2013.6672528