Title: Kristina M' Johnson
1A Vision for Our Energy Future
- Kristina M. Johnson
- Under Secretary for Energy
- Denver, Colorado
- October 20, 2009
2U.S. Clean Energy Economy The Industrial
Revolution of Our Time
Create sustainable jobs Provide Energy
Security Preserve the planet
The nation that leads the world in creating a
new clean energy economy will be the nation that
leads the 21st century global economy. --
President Obama
3Sustainable Energy Goals
- Develop an energy portfolio strategy to
- Reduce our dependence on oil imports
- (2/3 of our 21 Mb/day consumption)
- Reduce green house gas emissions
- (7 tonnes of CO2 per year)
- Create and sustain careers in clean energy
- (3-5 jobs per MW nameplate electricity)
- Keep energy affordable
4Energy Portfolio Goals for 2030
- Keep Energy Growth lt1 (.5)
- Reduce Fossil Fuel-based Electricity lt35
- Increase Renewable Energy to gt36 (Wind, Solar,
and Biomass) - Restart, Upgrade and Increase Clean Energy
Baseload Electricity to gt33 (Nuclear, Hydro,
Geothermal)
5Recovery Act will double non-hydroelectric
renewable generation
Billions of kilowatt hours
Source EIA -- An Updated Annual Energy Outlook
2009 Reference Case
6Solar energy sources are highly variable
Output from an 8MW solar PV panel in Colorado on
9/4/08
81 drop in 5 minutes
High variability due to clouds
Xcel Energy Alamosa System
7U.S. is falling behind in the solar power race
U.S.
Worldwide shipments of Solar Photovoltaics in
Megawatts
8Wind requires substantial balancing reserves
9Seven Percent of the U.S. Population Lives in
the Top Ten States for Wind
Blue - high wind potential Red - large demand
centers Green - little wind and smaller demand
centers. Result Renewables development
requires transmission expansion
NERC, April 2009
10To meet our energy challenge and create a 21st
century energy economy, we need a 21st century
electric grid
Think about it. The grid that powers the tools
of modern life -- computers, appliances, even
BlackBerries -- looks largely the same as it did
half a century ago.
We'll fund a better, smarter electricity grid
and train workers to build it -- a grid that will
help us ship wind and solar power from one end of
this country to another. --President
Barack Obama
11The Smart Grid What is it?
- Dynamic optimization of grid operations and
resources - Incorporation of demand response and consumer
participation
Measurement
Visualization
Automation
12Smart Grid is a key enabler to Grid Modernization
Renewable Integration Addressing variability of
large-scale wind and solar generation
Energy Storage Providing regulation and load
shaping
Load Management Making consumer demand an
active tool in reducing the peak
System Transparency Seeing and operating the
grid as a national system in real-time
Cyber Security and Physical Security Securing
the physical infrastructure and two-way
communication and data exchange
13Variable Generation Affects Grid Operations
No wind
11 renewables
23 renewables
35 renewables
14Smart Grid is a key enabler to Grid
Modernization
Renewable Integration Addressing variability
and intermittence of large-scale wind generation
Energy Storage Providing regulation and load
shaping
Load Management Making consumer demand an
active tool in reducing the peak
System Transparency Seeing and operating the
grid as a national system in real-time
Cyber Security and Physical Security Securing
the physical infrastructure and two-way
communication and data exchange
15Energy Storage is critical to grid operations
16Energy Storage is Critical to Grid Operations
17Pumped Storage
- Pumped Storage can provide
- Rapid response in pump-up and generating modes
to offset wind generation variability - Store wind energy during lower value periods
- Prevent wind curtailment and avoid new
transmission investments
Grand Coulee Dam
- Additional capital and operating costs have to
be compared to the cost of spinning reserves - Energy losses (20) related to storage
18Smart Grid is a key enabler to Grid
Modernization
Renewable Integration Addressing variability
and intermittence of large-scale wind generation
Energy Storage Providing regulation and load
shaping
Load Management Making consumer demand an
active tool in reducing the peak
System Transparency Seeing and operating the
grid as a national system in real-time
Cyber Security and Physical Security Securing
the physical infrastructure and two-way
communication and data exchange
19Peak Reduction is Paramount
Hourly Loads as Fraction of Peak, Sorted from
Highest to Lowest
90
Generation
75
Distribution
gt25 of distribution and gt10 of generation
assets are needed less than 5 of the time (100s
of billions of investments)
20Achieving peak demand reduction requires a Smart
Grid and dynamic pricing
Light blue reductions through dynamic pricing
alone Dark blue reductions through dynamic
pricing and Smart Grid technology
Universal advanced metering and dynamic pricing
All Demand Response tools (e.g. direct load
control) fully deployed
Expanded current best practices
Business as usual
Source FERC, June 2009 National Assessment of
Demand Response Potential
21Empowering the Consumer
Every consumer must be served, from committed
energy savers to the terminally uninterested.
Consumers can save more with less effort, with
substantial control over how these systems impact
their daily lives
Demand response programmability must be as easy
and automatic as possible.
22Automated Demand Response Saves Capacity and
Energy
Electric load profile for PGE participants on
8/30/2007
23Empowering Residential Distributed Energy
Consumer empowerment is about more than just
expanding dynamic rates and demand response.
Energy fed back to the grid can be measured at
the same frequency and accuracy as it is
delivered, making real progress towards energy
exchange rather than just energy consumption.
24Is the grid ready for Plug-In Hybrids?
- Plug-in Hybrid Vehicles
- 2009 Fisker Karma S 2010 Toyota
Plug-in Prius2010(?) BMW Mini E2010 Saturn
VUE2011 BYD F3DM 2012 Ford 2012
Volvo
- Battery Electric Vehicles
- 2010 Chevy Volt EREV2010 Chrysler
EV2010 Miles EV2010 Mitsubishi iMiEV
BEV2010 Nissan BEV2010 Ford Battery
Electric Van2010 Tesla Roadster Sport EV
Source Electric Drive Transportation Association
(Updated June 1, 2009)
25Recovery Act will set the stage for widespread
deployment of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles
Recently we made 2.4 billion investment in
advanced batteries the largest battery
investment in world history
Today, 99 percent of batteries for hybrids are
made in Japan
26Typical Charging Scenarios
(a) Optimal Charging???
Source Lemoine, Kammen, and Farrell 2008. An
Innovation and Policy Agenda for Commercially
Competitive Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicles
27Smart Grid is a key enabler to Grid
Modernization
Renewable Integration Addressing variability
and intermittenceof large-scale wind generation
Energy Storage Providing regulation and load
shaping
Load Management Making consumer demand an
active tool in reducing the peak
System Transparency Seeing and operating the
grid as a national system in real-time
Cyber Security and Physical Security Securing
the physical infrastructure and two-way
communication and data exchange
28Phasors could have prevented the Northeasts 2003
blackout
Phasors would have given grid operators 30-40
minutes warning that problems were developing in
Northern Ohio
Estimates of 2003 blackouts cost 6 10
billion (U.S. only)
29Goal sensor-based operations and dynamic modeling
Frequency and response to system events
Grid stress - Angle separation
30Challenges
- Interoperability Standards
- Transmission Planning and Development
- Phasor Data Sharing/Data Ownership
- Educated Workforce
31Progress on Smart Grid Interoperability
Standards is Critical
10 million in Recovery Act funding transferred
to NIST
Weve hosted two Smart Grid Interoperability
Standards workshops
32The Recovery Act invests in grid modernization
Grid Modernization- 4.5 billion for grid
planning, Smart Grid demonstrations, and
investment grants
WAPA and BPA total of 6.5 billion in borrowing
authority
750 million for transmission loan guarantees
33Strengthening the Work Force
100 million To train a new generation of
utility workers
44.2 million in awards to State Public Utility
Commissions To hire or retrain PUC staff as
utilities ramp up ARRA activities
34Questions?
35Smart Grid is a key enabler to Grid
Modernization
Renewable Integration Addressing variability
and intermittenceof large-scale wind generation
Energy Storage Providing regulation and load
shaping
Load Management Making consumer demand an
active tool in reducing the peak
System Transparency Seeing and operating the
grid as a national system in real-time
Cyber Security and Physical Security Securing
the physical infrastructure and two-way
communication and data exchange
36Energy portfolio goals for 2030
- Keep Energy Growth lt1 (.5)
- Reduce Fossil Fuel-based Electricity to lt35
- Increase Intermittent Renewable Energy to gt33
- Restart Clean Energy Baseload Electricity to gt33
- Nuclear increase from 19 to gt25
- Hydroelectric increase from 6.6 to gt13
- Geothermal increase to gt 40 GW (7)
- Biopower increase to 90GW (5)
- 38 Co-firing
- 36 Direct-firing
- 26 On-site CHP
37BPA is installing 14 anemometers for next-hour
wind forecasts to adjust generation and make more
efficient use of combined wind, hydro and other
resources. They are also working on Dynamic
Transfer to reliably let a power plant in one
balancing authority supply reserves to another
balancing authority.
38Control systems for critical applications must be
designed, operated and maintained to survive an
intentional assault with no loss of critical
function
- Advanced Tools/Technology
- Encryption
- Authentication
- Diagnostics
- Monitoring
- Forensic Analysis
39Reduce transmission congestion another grid
priority
Aug 2006 DOE Congestion Study
40Does the U.S. require an Extra High Voltage
Overlay?