Title: Upgrades to Electrical Infrastructure
1Upgrades to Electrical Infrastructure Straw Dog
Plan Presentation to CAE Energy Pathways
Workshop Series Three National Technology
Projects October 12, 2007 Richard Marceau,
UOIT Bob Griesbach, Hatch Ltd.
2Outline of the Presentation
- Background
- Overview of Current Activities
- National Technology Projects
- Action Plan
3Recommendation from Energy Pathways Final Report
on Upgrades to Electrical Infrastructure
- There are 3 challenges related to a national
electrical grid system - A national grid linking most or all of the
provinces with high voltage Transmission Lines
capable of transmitting relatively significant
amounts of power - Technology to allow more effective connection of
larger amounts of intermittent renewable-based
generation to the local grid without compromising
system operations - Technology to allow more cost effective storage
of the energy from electricity produced from
intermittent sources and off-peak base loads
4Objectives of the Energy Pathways Project
- To define the barriers preventing the efficient
production, conversion, delivery and end use of
adequate and sustainable supplies of energy that
are both economic and environmentally acceptable. - And then to identify technologies that can
overcome these barriers.
5Boundaries for this Presentation
- In the pathways leading from energy resource
exploitation to energy end uses, there are many
points where alternatives exist for increasing
the supply and deliverability of Economic,
Environmentally Acceptable and Sustainable
Sources of Electricity. These include - Energy resource exploitation
- Conversion processes and generation of
electricity - Energy Storage
- Transmission
- Distribution
- End Use
6Key Opportunities - Transmission
- Add new facilities to reliably move power from
provinces with the capability of economically
producing large amounts of low environmental
impact power to those that do not i.e. the
National Grid Concept - Expand/add grid and/or enabling facilities to
transmit generation from renewable sources to
major loads - Add new facilities to connect loads reliant on
fossil fuels (e.g. isolated communities) to
generation with lower emission characteristics - Make enhancements to existing systems to reduce
transmission losses and increase flexibility
7Key Opportunities - Distribution
- Enhancements/expansions to local distribution
grids to allow integration of more renewables
based distributed generation - Create smart distribution networks offering
real time pricing, seamless net metering, load
interruptions based on agreed criteria etc. - Facilitate community based networks based on
multiple types of small renewables based energy - Make enhancements to reduce distribution losses
8Key Opportunities Energy Storage
- Store energy produced in base load facilities
with zero or very low emissions levels (e.g.
nuclear) to allow reduced fossil fuel use at
times of system peak - Store energy produced by intermittent generation
(e.g. wind, solar, tidal) to use when load
requires and significantly reduce the undesirable
impacts of intermittent generation on power
system operations
9Overview of Current Activities
10Many Activities are Currently Underway
- A wide range of stakeholders are actively
addressing the issues - Electric utilities, provincial, municipal and
private - Project developers
- Federal government through NRCan, its CANMET
Energy Technology Center and other agencies - Provincial government energy ministries and
provincial planning agencies such as OPA - Funds such as Sustainable Development Technology
Canadas SD Tech Fund and Ontarios Community
Power Fund - Regulators and independent system operators
- University research
- Independent research institutes such as CERI
11Council of Premiers
- This group met in August and the result of the
session was publication of a document titled A
Shared Vision for Energy in Canada - Labeling Canada an energy superpower on the
world stage, a Seven Point Action Plan was
developed that has many linkages with the
recommendations of this study - Point 4 on enhancing transmission networks calls
for additional east-west transmission
infrastructure - Point 5 calls for improved timeliness and
certainty of regulatory approval - Point 6 calls for developing and implementing
startegies to meet energy sector human resource
requirements - The Appendix provides an impressive list of
activities going on in each province
12Transmission Enhancements for Clean Energy
- The electric utilities in each province are
looking at enhancements to their transmission
systems to allow greater use of renewable
resources. Three examples from across the
country - The BC governments Energy Plan released in 2007
is highly focused on clean energy and directs the
transmission company to advance build new
transmission to facilitate delivery and use of
clean energy e.g. current project planning for
287 kV line to northern BC - The significant emphasis on grid enhancements and
radial enabling lines included in the Ontario
Power Authoritys IPSP to deliver renewable
energy to load centers - The Nova Scotia governments Renewable Energy
Standards and the current study on integration of
significant amounts of wind power in the
provincial system
13More Details on OPA Plan
- Stage 1 (2010-2015) includes 7 transmission
projects to facilitate and enable the development
of 2,720 MW of renewable energy - Stage 2 (2016-2019) includes 4 transmission
projects to facilitate and enable the development
of an additional 1,500 MW of renewable energy - Stage 3 (2020 and beyond) includes 3 transmission
projects to facilitate and enable an additional
2,280 MW of renewable energy - It is intended that enabling projects would be
pre-built and this will require regulatory and
policy changes on which the OPA recommends that
work start now
14National Technology Projects
15The National Grid Concept
- The possible benefits of a national grid have
traditionally been considered to include - To bring power from a province with a power
surplus or with resources that could readily be
developed at reasonable cost to provinces short
of supply or suitable options to increase supply - To allow for development of larger unit sizes
than would otherwise be the case - To provide backup power to maintain reliability
targets at minimum cost - To benefit from time of day and seasonal
diversity between when peak loads occur in
different provinces - Studies carried out to date have not indicated
compelling economics for such a project
16Major Interconnections
17Electricity Generation by Province
18Peak Demand by Province
19Intra-Provincial Trade in Electricity
20Comparisons Across the Country
21Times Have Changed
- There is a realization that climate change is
real and we must reduce GHG emissions - Given this, generation will almost certainly, in
one way or another, need to pay for the impact of
its GHG emissions - Costs for all major capital projects have
escalated drastically - Operating costs for thermal generating plants
have increased and even more troublesome, skilled
operating labor is in short supply - With high employment rates in many provinces one
of the original benefits of in-province
generation is reduced - Prices for oil and other alternative fuels may
remain higher than once thought possible
22Distribution Sector Smart Grid
- The essence of a smart grid is digital control
of the power delivery network providing
capability for automated load control, automated
distribution equipment operation and automated
outage restoration - This allows real time global reconfiguration of
the distribution system and control of its
variable equipment - Estimated that automation at the system feeder
level is currently only 15-20 and is less than
75 even at the substation level - Benefits include
- better use of distributed generation/storage
technologies - enhanced reliability
- better quality of supply
- reduction in distribution system redundancy
requirements - seasonal optimization of system losses
- better use of distributed generation/storage
technologies - Improved energy management at the utilization end
- real-time demand-side management
23A Vision of the Distribution System of the Future
- Fully enabling a range of distributed energy
functions optimized at the community level
including - Small wind and solar power generation
- Energy storage functionality be it batteries or
other new technologies and bore-hole thermal
storage - District heating and cooling capabilities
- Utility rental of solar water heating equipment
- Full suite of end user energy management
functions - Automated load control of larger equipment
- Smart charging of plug-in vehicles
24Energy Storage
- Two aspects serve peak loads more economically
and better utilize intermittent energy resources - Pumped storage is the most widespread energy
storage system in use today, approximately 90,000
MW around the world - In systems with storage hydro an intermittent
resource like wind power can in effect be stored
in the reservoir - Use of wind power to store energy in the form of
hydrogen or some other energy form has been
suggested -
25Energy Storage contd
- Many energy storage devices have been invented
and tested at some scale - These include various types of batteries, flow
batteries, compressed air systems, super
capacitors, flywheels etc. - In some cases prototypes have been in operation
for a number of years but generally have not been
replicated - Commercial readiness of systems that can store
significant amounts of power for long enough
periods at economical costs has not been achieved
technology development needed and then tested
in combination with an intermittent resource such
as wind power
26Action Plan
27Action Plan for National Grid
- Convince Federal government authorities of the
potential benefit to Canada - Convince the Provincial government authorities in
each province of the potential benefit to their
provinces - Establish a national Federal-Provincial high
level task force with the mandate to proceed with
definitive studies to establish the
costs/benefits, financing needs, business
structure and regulatory requirements for such a
project - Federal government to provide suitable funding
for this so that these steps proceed quickly
28Conclusion
- Thank you for your attention and comments
- For further information please contact
- Richard J. Marceau, Eng., M.Sc.A., Ph.D.,
F.C.A.E. - Provost, University of Ontario Institute of
Technology - 905.721.3147
- richard.marceau_at_uoit.ca
- Robert C. Griesbach, P. Eng., CMC
- Director, Business Consulting Power
- Hatch Ltd.
- 905.469.3422
- rgriesbach_at_hatchenergy.com