Title: Reactive Power Supplied by Wind Energy Converters CostBenefitAnalysis
1Reactive Power Supplied by Wind Energy
ConvertersCost-Benefit-Analysis
- EWEC 2008, Brussels, Belgium
- 31 March 03 April 2008
- Martin Braun (ISET)
2FENIX project (2005-2009)EC FP6 (SES6 518272)
- Development of the Virtual Power Plant Concept
- Integration of Distributed Generation and Loads
in Electrical Power Systems - Demonstration of Participation in
- Power Exchange Markets
- Balancing Markets (e.g. Tertiary Reserve)
- Reactive Power Supply
- Voltage Control
- etc.
3Reactive Power Q An Introduction
- AC networks contain storage elements (inductors,
capacitors) - Reactive power oscillates between them
- Reactive power causes a phase shift between
voltage and current - Reactive power adds geometrically to active
power - Reactive power causes additional loading ?
reactive power control is necessary for proper
network operation - Wind Turbines can be used for reactive power
control
V
I
S
Q
P
4Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
5Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
6Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
WECsGrid-Coupling Converters
- Directly-coupled induction generator (IG)? Q
control only with capacitor banks? but
capacitors network elements - Directly-coupled synchronous generator (SG)? Q
control possible? little installation rates
7Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
WECsGrid-Coupling Converters
- Directly-coupled induction generator (IG)? Q
control only with capacitor banks? but
capacitors network elements - Directly-coupled synchronous generator (SG)? Q
control possible? little installation rates - Doubly-fed induction generator (DFIG)? Q control
possible - Inverter-coupled IG/SG? Q control possible
8Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
WECsGrid-Coupling Converters
- Directly-coupled induction generator (IG)? Q
control only with capacitor banks? but
capacitors network elements - Directly-coupled synchronous generator (SG)? Q
control possible? little installation rates - Doubly-fed induction generator (DFIG)? Q control
possible - Inverter-coupled IG/SG? Q control possible
9Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
Inverter-Coupled WECsReactive Power Capacity
- Fundamental LimitMaximum current transfer? max
apparent power Smax - Actual Limit Actual active power generation
Pact(t) - Actual reactive power capacity Qmax(t)
10Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
Inverter-Coupled WECsReactive Power Capacity
- Fundamental LimitMaximum current transfer? max
apparent power Smax - Actual Limit Actual active power generation
Pact(t) - Actual reactive power capacity Qmax(t)
- Loading capability chart
11Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
Inverter-Coupled WECsReactive Power Capacity
- Fundamental LimitMaximum current transfer? max
apparent power Smax - Actual Limit Actual active power generation
Pact(t) - Actual reactive power capacity Qmax(t)
- Loading capability chart
12Reactive Power Control Capabilities of
Inverter-Coupled WECsReactive Power Availability
- Enercon E-66 WEC
- Pnom 1300 kW
- ISET measurements
- 2001-2003
- Availability can beincreased by oversizing
- Guaranteed Q 0 kVar (1300 kVA)520 kVar (1400
kVA)748 kVar (1500 kVA)
13Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
14Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Investment Costs /kVArdue to over-sizing ?
guaranteed reactive power - Operational Costs /kVArhdue to additional
losses - Additional Minor Cost Factors /kVArh
- Mechanical stress (electromagnetic forces)
- Thermal stress (higher temperatures)
- ? higher maintenance costs, equipment aging and
unavailability - ? mostly I²
- ? can be added to operational costs
15Costs of Reactive Power SupplyInvestment Costs
- Inverter investment costs 150 300 /kVA
- 12 oversizing leads to 50 guaranteed reactive
power capacity
16Costs of Reactive Power SupplyOperational Costs
- Energy losses due to self-consumptionof the
grid-side converter? efficiency
17Costs of Reactive Power SupplyOperational Costs
- Energy losses due to self-consumptionof the
grid-side converter? efficiency - Calculation of Additional Losses by Reactive
Power Supply
18Costs of Reactive Power SupplyOperational Costs
- Costs of energy losses 9 c/kWh
19Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
20Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
21Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Capacitor Banks
- Investment costs 15 /kVAr ( 20 /kVAr if
reactors in addition) - Compared with investment costs of WECs
22Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Capacitor Banks
- Investment costs 15 /kVAr ( 20 /kVAr if
reactors in addition) - Operational costs 1.5 W/kVAr ? 0.01 c/kVArh
- Compared with operational costs of WECs
23Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Static Compensators with Power Electronics (SVC,
STATCOM) - Investment costs 30-75 /kVAr
- Compared with investment costs of WECs
24Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Static Compensators with Power Electronics (SVC,
STATCOM) - Comparison of operational costs
- Only Q (STATCOM)
- Q and P (WEC with active power generation)
25Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Synchronous generators from conventional bulk
power plants - Synchronous generators one order of magnitude
cheaper than inverters - Losses are compensated at lower prices
- Normally operate at full load
- ? cheaper
- But WECs are distributed throughout the network
? more effective
26Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Synchronous generators from conventional bulk
power plants - Synchronous generators one order of magnitude
cheaper than inverters - Losses are compensated at lower prices
- Normally operate at full load
- ? cheaper
- But WECs are distributed throughout the network
? more effective - Additional issues to be considered
- Compensation of Harmonics
- Short-circuit and overload behaviour
- Q dependency on bus voltage
27Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with
conventional reactive power supply technologies
- Synchronous generators from conventional bulk
power plants - Synchronous generators one order of magnitude
cheaper than inverters - Losses are compensated at lower prices
- Normally operate at full load
- ? cheaper
- But WECs are distributed throughout the network
? more effective - Additional issues to be considered
- Compensation of Harmonics
- Short-circuit and overload behaviour
- Q dependency on bus voltage
- ? Conclusion
- Reactive power supply by WECs can often be
cheaper - than using conventional ways of reactive power
supply
28Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
29Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with network
purchase costs of reactive power
- German LV/MV network1.1 c/kVArh in average
(0-2.7 c/kVArh) if power factor is below 0.9 - German HV network1.0 c/kVArh in average (0-1.5
c/kVArh) - National Grid UK0.2 c/kVArh
- US TNOs PJM, NYISO and ISO-NE
- Annual payment 0.75-4.4 /kVAra
- sometimes loss compensation 0.2 c/kVArh
30Structure
- Reactive Power Control Capabilities
- Costs of Reactive Power Supply
- Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Comparison with conventional reactive power
supply technologies - Comparison with network purchase costs of
reactive power - Comparision with benefits for network operation
31Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with benefits
for network operation
- Voltage control? previous comparison showed
use of WECs can be cheaper
32Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with benefits
for network operation
- Voltage control? previous comparison showed
use of WECs can be cheaper - Reduction of grid losses
- P const
- Costs in c/kVArh
33Cost-Benefit-AnalysisComparison with benefits
for network operation
- Voltage control? previous comparison showed
use of WECs can be cheaper - Reduction of grid losses
- P const
- Costs in c/kVArh
- Reduction of congestions
- WECs are attractive to provide reactive power
control - BUT Presently, few congestions
34Conclusions ofReactive Power Supply by WECs
Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Costs of reactive power supply by WECs dependent
on - Oversizing ? requirements for guaranteed
reactive power supply - Operational point (P,Q) defines losses ?
operational costs ? variable - Benefits for network operation often higher than
the costs? WECs attractive reactive power
controllers -
-
-
-
35Conclusions ofReactive Power Supply by WECs
Cost-Benefit-Analysis
- Costs of reactive power supply by WECs dependent
on - Oversizing ? requirements for guaranteed
reactive power supply - Operational point (P,Q) defines losses ?
operational costs ? variable - Benefits for network operation often higher than
the costs? WECs attractive reactive power
controllers - Less than 1 of the overall costs of a
WECExample2-3 k/a for 1 MW WEC? 50 GW in
Europe 100- 150 M/a? significant cost factor
which should be minimized - FERC 2005 inadequate reactive power leading to
voltage collapse has been a causal factor in
major power outages worldwide