Title: Implementation of Market
1Implementation of Market Operational Framework
for Wind Integration
- Stakeholder Information Session
- Monday, March 23, 2009
- Metropolitan Centre, Calgary
2Agenda
- Welcome and Purpose of Session
- Role of the AESO
- Challenges with Large Scale Wind Integration
- MOF Background
- Recommendation Paper
- WP Forecasting
- WP Management
- Supply Surplus
- Implementation and Key Initiatives
- Transmission Update
- Summary and Next Steps
-
3Purpose of todays session
- Provide stakeholders an opportunity to ask
questions, clarify information in order to submit
formal comments to MOF Implementation
Recommendation Paper by April 3 deadline - Review key recommendations in MOF Implementation
Paper - WP Forecasting
- WP Management
- Supply Surplus
- Provide a brief update on key initiatives related
to wind integration - Review next steps in process
4Stakeholder consultation principles
- The AESOs consultation process offers all
stakeholders an opportunity for meaningful input - All stakeholders have the right to comment on the
AESO's plans, decisions and actions - The experience and expertise offered by
stakeholders through the consultation process
improves the quality and implementation of
decisions - The AESO's consultation process and rationale for
decisions are transparent - All stakeholders have the right to be informed of
the AESOs direction, plans, the status of
issues, and decisions in a timely manner - The AESO measures the effectiveness of its
consultation process in order to improve future
performance
5Albertas electric industry
- 9,806 MW peak and 80 LF
- 12,159 MW total generation
- Over 280 generating units
- Wholesale market with about 200 market
participants - gt 21,000 km of transmission
- Interties BC (up to 780 MW) Sask. (up to 150 MW)
(Wind)497 MW
5,893 MW
(Other renewables)214 MW
4,686MW
869 MW
BC
Alta
Sask
Over 12,000 MW of Wind Power Interest
6AESO - Our core business
- Markets develop and operate Albertas real-time
wholesale energy market to facilitate fair,
efficient and open competition - Transmission System Development plan and develop
the transmission system to ensure continued
reliability and facilitate the competitive market
and investment in new supply - Transmission System Access provide system access
for both generation and load customers - System Operations direct the reliable operation
of Albertas power grid
7Grid and Market Operations Key functions
- Operate the AIES in a secure and reliable state
- Forecast and anticipate future operations (1-24
hours) - Manage and monitor AIES (flows/volts) within
limits and standards - Manage and dispatch transmission must run
requirements - Manage congestion on the system
- Manage interchange/transfers on interconnections
- Coordinate TFO operation coordinate maintenance
(GFO and TFO) - Integrate new transmission facilities to
interconnect generation and load - Manage and direct power system restoration and
emergency operations - Conduct short term adequacy assessments
- Operate the Alberta market according to AESO
Rules and FEOC - Use merit orders to meet the supply/demand
balance and ancillary services requirements - Comply with Rules for reliability and system
performance (spinning and operating reserves) - Consider constraints and characteristics of
individual units - Ensure fair, efficient and openly competitive
operation of the electricity markets
8Operational and market uncertainty
- Load varies by seconds, minutes, hours, by day
type, and with weather - Operators are experienced and familiar with load
patterns and it can be forecasted within
reasonable accuracy (within few percent) - Dispatchable generation can vary - typically
within 1 of dispatch order - Some uncertainty with conventional supply but
high capacity factors, outages are coordinated
and availability is known - Supply resources may not be available or limited
in capacity due to outages or de-rates - Pool price affects supply and demand (price
sensitive load) - Significant integration of wind generation can
alter familiar operational patterns - Semi-dispatchable resource (only when there is
fuel) - More challenging to forecast (may be out by
several hours and 100 magnitude) - Capacity factors vary by weather, season and time
of day - Operational plans are based on best available
forecasts of needs and available resources - There is always error and uncertainty in our
business - we are good at managing it!
9Challenges to integrating large scale wind
- Supply-demand balancing is more challenging with
wind power wind can be unpredictable, increase
or decrease rapidly and patterns can be
correlated or counter to load - Limits to how much wind a system can accommodate
need access to flexible resources considering
physical limits (ramping and start up times) - Reliability issues gt 900 MW need mitigating
measures, resources and the scale/costs can
escalate - Market Impacts can increase variability and
uncertainty - Need Transmission upgrades in southern part of
the province and recognizing diversity
Supply
Demand
10Need dispatchable resources to accommodate wind
Amount of dispatchable generation varies
according to market conditions
Market Capability Above Baseload
Baseload Generation 0 Offers
11Wind power diversity and ramps
In Alberta there are times when there is
diversity amongst wind power facilities
There are times when there is little to no
diversity amongst wind power facilities
12Correlation between pool price and wind power
- Wind generation offers into the market at zero
dollars - Pool price tends to be lower when there is a
significant amount of wind generation - Three factors influencing wind project
development - Pool price
- Federal incentives
- Environmental attributes
2007 Data
13Wind power capacity factors
- Over 1,400 GWh of electric energy and annual
capacity factor of about 35 in 2007 - Capacity factors of wind power
- exceed 50 during some periods or
- minimal capacity on some days (summer and winter
peaks) due to prevailing weather conditions - AESO and Market participants
- Must become familiar with characteristics and
- Factor it into day-day operating practices,
decision making processes and offer strategies
Spain Wind Power Distribution(2001 2005)
14AESOs wind integration journey
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
AESO-CANWEA collaboration Initiate Wind Power
Forecasting Pilot
Phase 1 Study Study up to 2000 MW Confirms need
for Mitigating Measures
Implement MOF Recommendations Workgroup findings
incorporated into paper
Workgroups on Supply Surplus and Wind Power
Management Finalize Forecasting Pilot
Study 1200 MW of Wind Power
PH II Study and Temporary Threshold Confirm
effectiveness of Mitigating Measures
New Standard specific for Wind Power Facilities
Market and Operational Framework (MOF) introduced
CanWEA Award UWIG Award
15The AESOs commitment
Our ultimate objective is to refocus the
dialogue with industry to integrate as much wind
into the Alberta system as feasible without
compromising system reliability or the fair,
efficient, and openly competitive operation of
the market.
16How to add more wind?
- To integrate more wind the operator needs to
know what to do and have the necessary
resources/tools - Current resources/tools
- The energy merit order
- Regulating reserves
- New resources/tools
- Wind power forecasting
- Additional regulating reserves
- Supply / load following service, (i.e. the
service would accommodate pumped storage,
batteries, others) - Power and/or ramp-rate limiting of wind power
facilities
17Challenges and solutions
18Wind power development (2009-2010)
Additional Regulating Reserves
Wind Power Forecasting, Wind Power
Management Supply Surplus, DDST
19MOF Recommendation Paper
- Next major step in the implementation of the
Market and Operational Framework (MOF) - Represents the culmination of valuable work done
through industry work groups. - Provides an overview of the MOF
- Describes current system resources and mechanisms
used to manage variability and ramps (load and
supply) on the power system and challenges with
large scale integration - Provides a set of recommendations regarding
enhancements to rules, practices and procedures
and requirements needed to implement the MOF - Wind power forecasting requirements
- Wind power curtailment protocol
- Supply surplus protocol
20Wind Power Forecasting
21Wind Forecasting is a Foundation
- To integrate more wind the operator needs to
know what to do and have the necessary
resources/tools over all timeframes - An wind power forecast (including uncertainty)
enhances AESO ability to maintain system
reliability - In order to maintain reliability we must learn
how to deal with - Forecast errors timing and magnitude
- Forecast uncertainty
- Forecasting enables the efficient use of
resources
22Forecasting
- The biggest challenge to forecasting is to
predict when ramping starts and ends - The benefit, if done well, will allow us to make
efficient use of resources to manage the ramps
2 hour ahead forecast
23Ramp Statistics
- In the pilot project the AESO applied a 20 per
hour wind capacity criteria to define a wind
power ramping event - Pilot Project Results - 234 ramp up/down events
- This metric is not a concern at 545 MW of wind
generation - At higher levels of wind penetration (i.e. 2000
MW ) an event where 20 of installed wind
capacity/hour is ramping will become a
significant event depending on when it occurs - A 400 MW/hour in opposition to a typical load
ramp will be a significant event
24Wind forecasting
- Pilot project
- 3 vendors AWS Truewind (USA), WEPROG
(Denmark) and energy and meteo (Germany)
contracted to study wind characteristics and
develop methodologies that work for Alberta - Ramping how to detect large ramps
- Uncertainty how to determine level of
uncertainty in forecast - Facility Owner define requirements for wind
power facility operators - Regulating Reserves how to use forecasts to
support AS procurement - Information to Industry how to provide
forecasts to market participants - Plan to have wind power forecasting operational
by December 2009
25What we learned from the pilot Learning
Opportunity
- Alberta difficult to forecast wind with the
forecast errors higher than other jurisdictions - Mountains plus Pacific Ocean to west add
complexity and limit upwind data density - Complex weather Chinooks
- Forecasts need to be tuned for system operator
needs - Ramping events some significant ramp events
missed. Of missed events, the down ramps were the
most challenging
26Wind power forecasting recommendations
- Recommendation 1
- Centralized forecasting approach
- Recommendation 2
- RFP forecasting service provider should proceed
as soon as practicable - Recommendation 3
- Commence consultation on rules, procedures,
standards and technical requirements regarding
submission of wind generator forecast
data/information including - data requirement such as turbine availability and
on-site meteorological data as described above, - communication protocols, and
- data quality required from wind generation
facilities (or individual forecasters) to deliver
forecasts to the AESO
27Wind power forecasting recommendations (cont)
- Recommendation 4
- Determine the capability, resources, systems and
time required to perform the data management
function. - In parallel, the AESO will include data
management as an optional requirement in the wind
forecasting RFP - Recommendation 5
- Monitor forecasting, market and operational
results and develop measures of forecasting
accuracy. - The AESO intends to leverage available data and
forecasting resources toward this end - Recommendation 6
- Aggregate wind forecasts should be transparent
and made available to all market participants,
particularly near term to real time.
28Recommendation for centralized forecasting
Centralized meaning one wind power forecasting
service provider for all WPFs
Wind Power Forecast data and information to the
AESO
Data from Numerical Weather Prediction models
(i.e. from Environment Canada)
Wind Power Forecast Service Provider
WPF
AESO
Meteorological data, MW output and turbine
availability from each WPF
WPF
WPF
WPF
WPF
29WPF forecast data and information
- Options discussed for WPF data are
- WPF data to Third Party then to Forecaster then
to AESO - WPF data to AESO then to Forecaster
- WPF data to Forecaster then to AESO
- Preferred options are 2) and 3)
Power Curve for each WPF
30Possible cost and allocation to WPF owners
- Based on cost experience during the wind power
forecasting pilot project, provision of a
forecasting services and data management could be
less than 500k annually. - Costs borne at a WPF for met towers, data loggers
and communication are not considered in this
cost. - With 1000 MW of wind power this would be less
than 0.20 per MWh of wind power generators
31Wind Power Management
32The operational issues
- There may be times that the system cannot absorb
all the wind generation - The AESO would first consider the forecast
demand, the wind power conditions, forecast wind
power and what is available in the energy market
for dispatch before resorting to wind power
management - To help the system controllers recognize and
manage these situations, the AESO is developing a
Dispatch Decision Support Tool - The following conditions could trigger the use of
wind power management - Forecast loss of wind and insufficient ancillary
services or ramping services - Supply surplus conditions
- Insufficient ancillary services
- Unforeseen (i.e. not forecasted) wind conditions
- Disturbance and emergency conditions
- During over frequency conditions wind power
facilities will need to participate in frequency
control
33Wind power managementSystem Operation
There may be times when wind power is forecast to
ramp down and dispatching EMMO up may require
pre-curtailment of wind generation to ensure
supply-demand balance
There may be times when wind power is forecast or
is ramping up and limiting wind generation may be
required until such time the EMMO can catch up
34The operational issue
System Operator would determine how much wind MW
the system can accommodate. Then issue a power
limit
Unforeseen Wind Power Event
Actual MW Forecast MW
2 hour ahead forecast miss the event
Day ahead forecasts miss the event
35WPM recommendations
- Pro-rata allocation of system wide wind
curtailments - Use of Potential MW Capability to allocate wind
power curtailments and, - Curtailments should be re-assessed and
re-allocated - every 20 minutes if the limit for any one WPF has
changed by greater than 5 MW
36Description of potential MW capability
Measured wind speed and direction
Local computer calculates Potential MW from the
turbine
Utility SCADA system sends data to the AESO
WPF SCADA System collects and sums the Potential
MW from all turbines at the WPF
37Illustrative Example of WPM
Start of System Wind Limit event WPF limits
based on current wind power conditions at the
time limit is issued
End of System Wind Limit event
WPF limits re-allocated as Potential MW
Capability changes
Potential MW Capability
Wind Power generated
38Supply and Surplus
- Anita Lee, P. Eng.
- Manager, Operating Policies and Procedures
39Supply and surplus
- Wind generators and co-generation are currently
exempt from OPP 103 (Dispatching Multiple 0
Offers) for managing supply surplus conditions - The MOF clearly indicated that, with higher
levels of wind generation, the existing supply
surplus management protocol needed to be reviewed
40Supply and surplus
- WG recommendation Market be first given an
opportunity to take voluntary actions when 0 SMP
is anticipated or is occurring - Required changes
- Provide market indication of potential supply
surplus conditions, similar to Short Term
Adequacy (STA) assessments for supply shortfall
41Supply and surplus
- WG recommendation all supply facilities should
participate in reducing MW generation during
supply surplus conditions subject to a new
Minimum Operating Level (MOL) - Required changes
- Define MOL as
- A physical, not an economic constraint, and is
- The lowest generation level for a generator as
limited by the following requirements
legal/regulatory, environmental, health and
safety, equipment reliability, operating level
required to serve dispatched ancillary services,
or operating level required to prevent damages to
third party equipment
42Supply and surplus
- Required changes (cont)
- Define a mechanism/process for pool participants
to declare and submit the MOL - Revise the "inflexible block" current definition
to permit partial dispatch of a 0 inflexible
offer - Wind generators MOL 0 MW and is flexible
43Supply and surplus
- WG recommendation 0 SMP Management Protocol
- 1. Curtail import transactions
- 2. Considering transmission system operating and
reliability constraints (area TMR requirements,
etc), apply the following, if effective - Curtail flexible 0 blocks, by pro-rata
- Curtail one or more inflexible 0 blocks to the
assets MOL - 3. Curtail one or more assets to 0 MW (go off
line), considering the assets minimum off time
44Supply and surplus
- Consideration for effectiveness
- If curtailment allocation by pro-rata results in
small volumes of curtailment to a large number of
generating assets, it may not be effective. - This issue will be explored in the development of
the related OPP.
45Supply and surplus
- Consideration for fairness
- Flexible blocks and inflexible blocks should be
used in the protocol in a fair manner (i.e. one
type should not be treated preferentially than
the other)
46Supply and surplus
- Consideration for impact to a co-gens DTS
contract - If the generation at a co-gen facility is
curtailed (e.g. to its MOL), the co-gen facility
may have to import more supply from the AIES
causing ratcheting of its contracted DTS level - This requires further evaluation and if there are
inappropriate consequences, the AESO may consider
amendments to the AESO tariff
47Technical Requirements/Standards
48Technical requirement standards
- Interconnection Standards
- In Nov 2004, AESO developed and implemented an
interconnection standard specific for wind power
facilities - Standard includes voltage ride through (low and
high voltage), static and dynamic reactive power
and voltage regulation - Standards will be updated to include
- Wind Power Management (ramp rate limiting, power
limiting and over frequency governing) - SCADA and Communication requirements for Wind
Power Management - Requirements for Wind Power Forecasting
49Over frequency control
- Over frequency conditions can occur in Alberta
when - Our interconnections trip during a heavy export
- Disturbances within WECC
- Arresting the over frequency condition requires
governor control systems on the generator units - To ensure that wind power facilities contribute
to arresting an over frequency condition, a
virtual governor (over frequency control) is to
be added to the wind power facilities. - Significant over frequency conditions (greater
than 60.1 Hz) can occur a couple times per year - This requirement was identified in the 2004
standard
50Over frequency control
- Reduce the MW output to over frequency
conditions
51Over frequency control
- System frequency can momentarily go above 60.036
Hz - 2008 data suggests
- 5 probability between 60.036 Hz and 60.1 Hz
- 0.01 above 60.1 Hz
- Based on the proposed droop characteristic for
WPFs this would have been less than 0.02
production in 2008.
52System Operator Tools
53Supply-demand balancing inputWhat is changing?
How good is the load forecast today?
What are the Interconnection schedules?
What is the load forecast change? What is the
ramp rate?
What generators are still ramping from the last
dispatch? How much energy is still to come?
Is the merit order changing?
How good is the wind power forecast today?
What is the wind power forecast? What is the ramp
rate?
Net Change Ramp rate requirement
54Supply-demand balancingDispatch decision
What is the ramp rate capability in the merit
order over the next 10, 20, 30 minutes?
What are the Regulating Reserve units doing?
How much capacity to dispatch to get the required
ramp rate?
Do I need to dispatch more ancillary services?
Will I need to activate any Wind Power Management
procedures?
Will I need to activate Supply Surplus /
Shortfall procedures?
Dispatch Decision
55Repeat when necessary
56System operator tools
- Dispatch Decision Support Tool (NEW)
- Provide visibility of capacity and ramping
capability of the energy market - Incorporate wind power forecasting
- Provide hourly and 6 hour outlook on market
conditions (including wind) - Prototyping/testing with operators
- Wind Power Forecasting Tool (NEW)
- Incorporate requirements from the wind power
forecasting pilot project - Wind Power Management Tool (NEW)
- Automate the wind power management protocol and
procedures (limits or ramp rate limiting) - Supply Surplus Tool (update existing tools)
- Automate the supply surplus protocol and
procedures - Short Term Adequacy Tool (update existing tools)
57 Functionality of DDST
- Resources
- Energy Market Merit Order
- Generator ramping characteristics
- Regulating reserve merit order
- Load Supply Following (future)
- Wind Power Management (new)
- What Is Going to Change
- System Change
- Load forecast
- Actual and forecast Interchange Schedules
- 3 Modes for Wind power forecast
- Input External Wind Power Forecast
- Persistence Forecast
- Persistence Ramp Forecast
- System Considerations
- ATC Limits
- Uncertainty Analysis
- Where We Are At
- System Status
- What supply has been dispatched
- What is the Actual generator output
Heart of DDST Provide 1 hr forecast of
supply demand balance and a 6 hr outlook
What If? System Control can toggle up and down
the merit order to see the impact of the dispatch
on the forecast imbalance
58Update on Key Initiatives and Next Steps
- Warren Frost, P. Eng.
- Vice President, Operations Reliability
59Transmission is a key enabler
- Transmission and intertie capacity are critical
enablers for the development of wind generation
resources in order to - Interconnect variable energy resources located in
remote regions of the province - Deliver ramping and ancillary services from
inside and outside Alberta to balance supply and
demand - Exchange any surplus energy with other
jurisdictions. - Direction is consistent with the PES (announced
in December 2008), which sets the context for
comprehensive upgrades to the transmission system
- Develop transmission to areas of renewable and
low-emission energy - Ddevelop additional interties to ensure access to
adequate electricity supply and to provide great
export opportunities for producers - AESO has advanced plans for the south region of
the province to accommodate the large scale
development of wind generation
60Wind capacity and generation scenarios
61Transmission development to interconnect wind
generation
- SW Facilities Application
- AUC approved AltaLinks application March 10
- 240 kV Pincher Creek to Lethbridge
- Interconnect 1000 MW of wind
- South NID
- AUC filed Notice of Hearing March 9
- 240 kV loop to interconnect up to 2,700 MW of
wind over next 10 years - East Central Alberta (Hanna area)
- Consultation on need underway (10 Open Houses
recently completed) - Interconnect 1,400 MW of wind
- Interconnection Queue Management
- Strong interest in wind development over 12,000
MW in the queue - Queue Management Business Practice and associated
project milestones ensure that projects are
progressing
62Summary and next steps
- Recommendation Paper Comment Matrix posted to
AESO website March 5 - Stakeholder Consultation Session March 23
- Deadline for stakeholder comments on the paper
April 3 - AESO publishes stakeholder comments received to
website April 17 - Final Recommendation Paper posted to AESO website
(includes stakeholder comments AESO responses)
Q2 2009 - First Phase of System Operator Tools Operational
Q2 2009 - Wind Power Forecasting RFP Issued 2Q 2009
- Consultation on proposed ISO and OPP Rule changes
indicated in the Final Recommendation Paper - Forecasting Obligations
- Wind Power Management
- Supply Surplus Protocol
- File with AUC, rules, operating policies and
procedures that govern the integration of wind
integration including wind power management,
forecasting obligations, and supply surplus
conditions Fall 2009
63Process
Comments on Recommendation paper
Post Draft rule/OPPs for review
Post comments
Post comments
Post final recommendations
Post final rule/OPPs
Develop Draft rule/OPPs
Approve and file with AUC
64Next steps
65Summary
- 543 MW on AIES without operational issues or
increase in AS - There has been no requirement to increase
Regulating Reserves volumes - System performance is good (CPS2 at 98 and no
OTC violations) - This is consistent with our study results from
2005 - Gaining experience (ISO and industry) and
learning from events - Collaborative relationship with CanWEA has been
invaluable - Weekly wind reports published and continuous
learning - NERC IVGTF
- Continued collaboration with UWIG
- We must be prepared for the large scale
integration of wind - This is the next major step in the implementation
of the Market and Operational Framework (MOF) - Need your input on the recommendations regarding
enhancements to rules, practices and procedures
and requirements needed to implement the MOF - Wind power forecasting requirements
- Wind power curtailment protocol
- Supply surplus protocol
66Questions