Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

About Smart Grid

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 38

GE

Energy

Smart Grid Applications,


Standards Development
and Recent Deployments
John D. McDonald, P.E.
GE Energy T&D
GM, Marketing

POWERING POTENTIA L

IEEE PES Past President


IEEE Division VII Director
IEEE Fellow
1

Smart Grid Applications

POWERINGPOTENTIA L

How is a Smart Grid Created?


Not created all at once will evolve over many
years
Created through the incremental deployment and
integration of system intelligence
Intelligent systems deployed to meet specific
business and regulatory drivers
Each utility has
Different starting points
Different drivers
Different paths
Different deployment rates

Smart Grid View


The integration of electrical and information infrastructures, and the incorporation of
automation and information technologies with our existing electrical network.
Comprehensive solutions that:
Improve the utilitys power reliability, operational performance and overall
productivity
Deliver increases in energy efficiencies and decreases in carbon emissions
Empower consumers to manage their energy usage and save money without
compromising their lifestyle
Optimize renewable energy integration and enabling broader penetration
That deliver meaningful, measurable
and sustainable benefits to the utility,
the consumer, the economy and the

Electrical infrastructure

Environment.
More Focus on the Distribution System

Information infrastructure
4

Growing Complexity In Modern Grids

A Smarter Grid

Enabled
Utility Managers

New Applications enabled by Additional Infrastructure

Management
Applications
Applications
Economic
Dispatch

Energy
Optimization

Asset
Optimization

Demand
Delivery
Optimization Optimization

Enabled
Consumers

Control
How Power Flows
Flows
Gen & Trans
Mgt.

Transmission
Automation

Dist.
Mgt.

Sensors

Dist.
Automation

Heavy Metal
Generate & Deliver Power
Power

Thermal
Generation

Lines

Sub
Stations

Dist
Equipment

Old Grid

Voltage
Control

Renewable
Generation

Adv.Metering
System

Old Grid
Smart Grid Adds

Smart Grid

You call when the power goes out.

Utility knows power is out and usually restores it automatically.

Utility pays whatever it takes to meet peak demand.

Utility suppresses demand at peak. Lowers cost. Reduces CAPEX.

Difficult to manage high Wind and Solar penetration

No problem with higher wind and solar penetration.

Cannot manage distributed generation safely.

Can manage distributed generation safely.

~10% power loss in T&D

Power Loss reduced by 2+% lowers emissions & customer bills.

Smart Grid Framework


Smart Grid
Solutions

Engineering & Operational Systems

Electrical
Infrastructure

Workforce &
Demand
Distribution
Asset
Transmission
Engineering
Optimization Optimization Optimization Optimization
Optimization

Smart
Infrastructure

Utility Enterprise Applications

Communications Infrastructure
Smart Sensors, Controllers and Meters
T&D Infrastructure
Alternative Energy Sources, Storage & PHEVs
Energy Consumer Home Area Network
7

The Future Home

Energy star
appliance

Photovoltaic
panels

Dimmable
fluorescent/CFL lighting
Utility demand
side mgt control

GE
ecoDashboard

Plug in hybrid
electric
vehicles

Utility

GE SmartMeter
8

Elements of Todays Smart Grid


Offerings

Customer Benefits

Future
Future
Enablers
Enablers

Grid-Friendly
Renewables

Controllability: Ramp, curtail Stronger tie with utility EMS


Reduced uncertainty: forecast Coordination with DER & loads

Grid Control
Systems

Operating efficiency
System reliability

Ever Green Service


Modular applications

Substation
Digitization

Modular/standard
Less cost, time, risk

IEC 61850 Compliant


Open architecture

Intelligent
Electronics

Performance monitoring
Control devices

Standards based
IEC 61850 compliant

Monitoring &
Diagnostics

Asset protection
Life extension

Progressive offering
Long term services

Communications
Infrastructure

Performance visibility
Remote control

Seamless NMS, Security


Multi-applications

Smart
Metering

Customer billing
Demand management

Software upgradeable

Smart Appliances
& Home Controls

Participation in DR programs
Utility bill savings

Standards based
Software upgradeable
9

Smart Grid Benefits


Operational Efficiency

Energy Efficiency

Integrate distributed
generation

Reduce system and line losses


Enable DSM offerings

Optimize network design

Improve load and VAR


management

Enable remote monitoring and


diagnostics
Improve asset and resource
utilization

Customer Satisfaction

Smart
Grid

Comply with state energy


efficiency policies

Green Agenda

Reduce outage frequency and


duration

Reduce GHG emission via DSM


and peak shaving

Improve power quality

Integrate renewable generating


assets

Enable customer self-service


Reduce customer energy costs

Comply with Carbon/GHG


legislation
Enable wide adoption of PHEV
10

Hurdles to Smart Grid Widespread Adoption


Lack of comprehensive, long-term and integrated Smart Grid strategies and
roadmaps tied to quantifiable benefits
Substantial capital investment required up front
Regulatory structures that do not fully recognize the benefits of smart grid
technologies (e.g., decoupled rates)
Utility business models that minimize risk and ties returns to electricity
revenue
Interoperability and the need for faster, more comprehensive development
of standards, including physical and cyber security
The need to move away from isolated pilots from testing to phased
deployments on a larger scale (city-scale)
Availability and capability of smart grid educational tools for policymakers,
regulators and consumers to change thinking and attitude to smart grid
technologies
11

Smart Grid Standards


Development

POWERINGPOTENTIA L

12

Who Makes Standards, Anyway?


International Standards ( ISO, IEC )
National Standards ( ANSI, NIST, IEEE )
Industry Standards - formalized practice
Industry Practice - informal practice
Proprietary Systems - vendor specific

13

But the Process is Not Trivial


Inertia of existing practices
Proprietary standards
De jure (by law) and de facto (in fact or
actually) standards
Defining a vision
Identifying existing standards to use as
building blocks
Gaining consensus
Hammering out details, details, details,
details, details..
14

NIST Conceptual Model

15

16

17

18

19

The NIST Role


Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) of 2007
Title XIII, Section 1305
Smart Grid Interoperability Framework

In cooperation with the DoE, NEMA, IEEE,


GWAC, and other stakeholders, NIST has
primary responsibility to coordinate
development of a framework that includes
protocols and model standards for
information management to achieve
interoperability of smart grid devices and
systems
20

20

What Interoperability Standards are Needed?


Standards are needed for each of the interfaces shown to support many different smart
grid applications. Standards are also needed for data networking and cyber security.
Electricity

Information

Data Communication

Wholesale Market
Operations

Back Office
Customer Operations

Wide Area Network

ring
e
t
e
M
ork
w
t
e
N
Metering

Bulk Power
Generation
Operations

Distributed
Energy Resources

Transmission
Operations

Distribution
Operations

Retail Delivery
Operations

Customer
LAN
Consumers
21

We Need A Standards Roadmap


Capabilities
Priorities
Architecture
Standards
Release Plan
Responsibilities
Governance
Conformity (including testing and
certification where appropriate)
22

22

NIST Plan was developed after


listening to key industry concerns
Open, participative process 80% of electric grid
is owned and operated by private sector
Utilities recognize need for speed, but want a
systematic, not ad hoc process
Standards should be developed by private sector
standards bodies, with NIST coordination
Standards are necessary but not sufficient
conformity regime (including testing and
certification where appropriate) is essential
23

23

NIST Three Phase Plan


PHASE 1
Recognize a set of
initial existing
consensus standards
and develop a roadmap
to fill gaps

PHASE 2
Establish public/private
Standards Panel to provide
ongoing recommendations
for new/revised standards to
be recognized by NIST

PHASE 3
Conformity
Framework
(including Testing and
Certification)

2009
March

2010
September

24

24

NIST- Recognized
Standards Release 1.0
Following the April 28-29
Smart Grid Interoperability
workshop, NIST deemed
that sufficient consensus
has been achieved on 16
initial standards
On May 8, NIST announced
intention to recognize
these standards following
30 day comment period
NISTs announcement
recognized that some of
these standards will
require further
development and many
additional standards will
be needed.
NIST will recognize
additional standards as
consensus is achieved

Standard

Application

AMI-SEC System Security


Requirements

Advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) and Smart Grid end-to-end


security

ANSI C12.19/MC1219

Revenue metering information model

BACnet ANSI ASHRAE 135-2008/ISO


16484-5

Building automation

DNP3

Substation and feeder device automation

IEC 60870-6 / TASE.2

Inter-control center communications

IEC 61850

Substation automation and protection

IEC 61968/61970

Application level energy management system interfaces

IEC 62351 Parts 1-8

Information security for power system control operations

IEEE C37.118

Phasor measurement unit (PMU) communications

IEEE 1547

Physical and electrical interconnections between utility and


distributed generation (DG)

IEEE 1686-2007

Security for intelligent electronic devices (IEDs)

NERC CIP 002-009

Cyber security standards for the bulk power system

NIST Special Publication (SP) 80053, NIST SP 800-82

Cyber security standards and guidelines for federal information


systems, including those for the bulk power system

Open Automated Demand


Response (Open ADR)

Price responsive and direct load control

OpenHAN

Home Area Network device communication, measurement, and


control

ZigBee/HomePlug Smart Energy


Profile

Home Area Network (HAN) Device Communications and Information


Model
25
25

IEEE NTDC (New Technology Direction


Committee) Smart Grid Objectives
Organize, coordinate, leverage, and build upon the strength of
IEEE and its Societies for Smart Grid
Requires:

Awareness through public visibility efforts


Internal and external IEEE collaboration
Prompt action
Facilitate world-wide stakeholder interaction
Educate, coordinate and package existing products / activities
Provide new smart grid venues through web tools, conferences,
publications, education
Share best practices, understand regional differences

Results are to increase revenue, membership


26

NTDC
Smart Grid

Phase I
Incubation
Team

Leverage
existing
materials
Find quickhits

Volunteer Team Leaders


IEEE Leaders
Matt Loeb, Judy Gorman
Mary Ward-Callen, Bill Tonti
Pat Ryan
Visibility G. Barth, K.McCabe
Regulatory Russ Lefevre
Guidance Erich Gunther

Steering
Committee

Phase II
Publication
Team

Interaction
Team

Education
Team

M. Shahidehpour

S. Rahman

TBD

Create
SG journal
SG portal
Blog tools
Clearingho
use
Glossy
magazine

Facilitate the
use of journal,
portal, tools
Establish new
conferences
Promote
conferences,
web tools,
internally and
externally

Standards
T. Prevost
J. McDonald
C. Adams

Road map
Standards
developmt
External
coordinatn
Testing

critiera
Interop.
certification

Tutorials
Speakers
bureau
Plain Talk
Podcasts
Webinar

Technology
TCC
M. Begovic

Identify new
areas
Identify
groups of
mutual
interest
Highlight
developmts
Recommend
new areas
27

Smart Grid Recent


Deployments

POWERINGPOTENTIA L

28

AEP Smart Grid Project


Summary

American Electric Power is one of the largest electric utilities in the United States,
delivering electricity to more than 5 million customers in 11 states

36,000 MW of generating capacity; 39K miles of transmission lines, 208K miles of


distribution lines

Drivers

Enhanced Customer Experience (Customer control, tools to understand usage)

Operational Efficiencies (Reduce operational costs of the network)

Energy Efficiency

Utilize AMI infrastructure for Automation

Status

Partnership developed to work together toward developing, demonstrating, &


deploying Smart Grid solutions.

Implement Smart Grid solutions to over 5MM customers by 2015

First Smart Grid pilot complete in South Bend, IN. Next city-scale project in planning
phase.

GE and AEP working as partners to develop most effective Smart Grid


29

AEP Project Integrated System View


Dispatch

Integration with Business Applications

Adv Aps

HAN

Electric
Office

WAMS, IVVC, FDIR,


DPA, DR, DER . . .

EMS

Consumers

DMS

OMS

FFA &
Mobile
Map

M&D

MDMS
NMS

AMI Access
Backhaul
Comms

Smart
Meter

G&S

Wireless
AMI

Residential

Wireless
Backhaul
Comms

LAN
Smart
Meter

Vehicles

Fiber
Backhaul
Comms

Substations
Local
HMI

Fiber
Backhaul
Comms

Wireless
Backhaul
Comms

Station
Controller
Station
IEDs & I/O
Transformer
Monitoring &
Diagnostics
Protection
Relays
PMU

G&S

Feeders
FDIR
CVVC

Station
Capacitor
Volt Reg
or LTC
Microgrid
Controller
Gen &
Storage

Substations
Backhaul
Comms
Substation
Devices

Distribution
Substations

Commercial
& Industrial

Backhaul
Comms

Backhaul
Comms

Smart
Recloser
& Switches

DNP Cap
Controller

Devices

Cap Banks

Gen &
Storage

Large
Distributed

Backhaul
Comms
DNP Volt
Regulator

Voltage Reg

30

AEP Project Solutions Delivered


Demand Optimization

Smart meters with AMI

Time of use pricing

Home Area Network

Smart Appliances

Delivery Optimization
Integrated Volt/Var Control
Analysis of theoretical and measured results
Analysis of financial benefits (MW, MWH, MVAR, and MVARH savings)
Smart meters linked to Outage Management System (OMS)

ENMAC DMS

Poweron OMS

Integration of DMS and OMS

Leverage AMI for Distribution Automation

Asset Optimization

Remote transformer monitoring of at-risk transformers.


31

Maui Smart Grid Project


Develop a Smart Grid controls and communication
architecture capable of coordinating DG, energy storage and
loads to:
Reduce peak load by 15% relative to loading on the distribution
circuit.
Mitigate the impacts of short-timescale wind and solar variability
on the grid

32

Maui - Functional Description


Demand Mgmt
Standard
Apps:

Home Response Estimation


Shed Capacity Aggregation
Operator Decision
Disaggregation to Nodes
Home Selection

Network
Mgmt

Trans. level grid support

FEP

A
C

SCADA
Outage
Mgmt
Network
Analysis

load-following
Intermittency management
Congestion reduction

Deferrable, sheddable
load, actual loads
deferred/shed
Historical data,,
amb temp, cost of
gas/elec, grid
status. Elec. price
forecast.

On/off

Cap-banks

Volt/Var Control
Minimize Losses and Control
Voltage profile
Operating constraints:
Vmin<Vbus<Vmax
Minimum number of
switching
Max tap jumping steps
Power Flow solver
Load Forecasting/Estimation

Tap Value

LTC/VR
Available generation,
load and forecasts,
energy price

Available generation, load, energy


price, forecasts of all the above

Operator

MECO EMS
Economic Dispatch
Unit commitment

Home Energy Manager


Optimal thermostat
Setpoints for all the
thermal zones
Optimal water tank
temperature setpoint;
Controlling and
managing loads;
Providing total
electricity and fuel
costs.

??

DER Manager
Optimal Dispatch

kWh, time
kW, kVAR,
time
Bulk
Substation
Forec
aste d
Storage
DGs
k
spee
d, ram W, wind
pr
curta
ilmen ate,
ts
Wind plant
Management

33

Maui - Project Timeline

34

Collaborations & alliances are critical


$200M smart grid initiative
~800-1,000 green collar jobs
Public/private alliance
GE
City of Miami
FPL
Cisco
Silver Spring Networks

~1MM customers involved


Smart Meters
Demand Management
Distribution Automation
Substation Intelligence
Distributed Generation
Enterprise Systems

Its time for action. With projects like Energy Smart Miami, we can stimulate the
economy today and build a brighter, cleaner tomorrow. Its truly a win-win.
Carol Browner
Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change

Energy smart cities


Miami proposes to lead the nation in energy
efficiency with $200 million smart grid initiative
Scope and revenue

Average city scope ~200k endpoints


Revenue pool ~$500/endpoint
~20 cities in wave 1 . New York, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, London, Lyons
Implementation over 2-3 yrs

Global growth + city scale expansion $1B/yr opportunity

36

DSM
DSM as percent of peak demand
1st Decile
1st Quartile
Average

25%

Bottom Quartile

Range
21.6% - 11.9%
21.6% - 6.0%
NA
NA

Average
16.5%
11.5%
3.7%
0%

20%
FPL

15%
10%

Huge
variance
in performance

5%
0%
82 utilities with peak demand >= 3000 MW
31 have 0%
Source: DOE EIA 2005

12

DSM (continued)

You might also like