Title: Mark de Laeter
1Mid West Resources Forum
SUSTAINING GROWTH
- Mark de Laeter
- Dean Frost
Geraldton
Wednesday 25 July 2007
2What is Western Power?
From
To
1st April 2006
Transmission Distribution
1st July 2006 Market Regulator Independent Market
Operator
A fully integrated - Generation - Transmission
distribution - Retail organisation
3Organisational Structure
4Western Powers Strategic Themes
5Economic Regulatory Framework
State Government
Parliament
Economic Regulation Authority
Minister for Energy
Treasury
Office of Energy
Other Codes and Legislation
Operating Licences
Access Arrangement
Access Code
Western Power
6Regulatory Requirements
- Western Power must justify its projects to the
ERA via two tests otherwise there is no return on
the investment - Technical Test
- WP must demonstrate that it has considered a
range of options and selected the best overall
solution (incl DSM and embedded generation) - Economic Test
- WP must satisfy the ERA on one of three paths
- Commercial
- Common benefit
- Reliability and quality of supply / safety for
existing customers
7Mid West Transmission Network
Mid West Transmission Network in 2007
- Infrastructure built in the 1970s
- Mungarra power station was added in the late 80s
and early 90s - Designed for the needs of a predominantly rural
community - The 132 kV Pinjar to Eneabba line was
commissioned in 2004 - Walkaway and Emu Downs wind farms connected
recently - The opportunity exists to meet the needs of a
modern economy - Capacity will be reached before 2011
8Mid West Load Growth
200
New reinforcement needed.
190
180
170
160
Firm Capacity
150
140
Peak load in MW
130
120
- Block loads
- Geraldton Port Authority
- Industrial
- Large residential/commercial subdivisions
110
100
90
80
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
Year
9Potential Connections
- Potential customers in excess of the forecast
are - 300 MW of new block loads
- (twice the load of the existing Mid West
network) - 1,000 MW of new generation
- 650 MW of conventional generation (gas, coal)
- 350 MW of wind farms
- Western Power needs to reinforce the network to
accommodate these connections and economic
development in the region
10Summary of Budget Allocation by Region
11Preferred Option 330 kV Reinforcement
12 Expected Benefits of 330 kV Reinforcement
- Accommodate load growth in the region
- Ability to support industrial and mining
developments - Ability to connect customers new loads and new
generation - Ability to connect new wind farms, that can
reduce CO2 emission - Improved reliability of power supply
- Aid the entry of lower cost generation in the
region
13330 kV Line TimetableSubject to ERA and EPA
approvals.
14Low Voltage (LV) Challenges
- Increasing growth in coastal towns (eg. Jurien
Bay, Dongara, Kalbarri) - New land development in outlying areas and
fringes of the grid - Large industrial users
- Difficulty in finding new power line routes
- Increasing material and construction costs
15Low Voltage (LV) Solutions
- Increase capacity of voltage constrained feeders
(ie. voltage regulators, cap bank) - Increase capacity of current constrained feeders
(ie. reconductor, split distribution feeders) - Reconfigure existing networks to balance loads
and open up 'bottlenecks' - Stagger augmentation to optimise the asset and
meet the demand for capacity - Invest in alternative solutions (eg. DSM,
embedded generations)
16Selection of LV Projects in the Mid West
- 33kV feeder extension for Northampton to Port
Gregory - Second 33kV feeder to Kalbarri
- Additional 11kV feeders from CPN substation
- 11kV feeders from new RAN substation
- Second 33kV feeder with voltage regulators for
Dongara - Voltage regulator on 33kV feeder to Morawa
- Voltage regulator on 33kV feeder to Mullewa
- Voltage regulators on 33kV feeders from Eneabba
- 33kV feeder extension work from Eneabba to Jurien
Bay
17 Rural Power Improvement Program (round 3)
- North Country
- Activities reinforcement, replacement,
automation and augmentation projects. - 28 projects in North Country, worth more than
10M (over 2 years)
18Edge of Grid Towns
- Towns at the edge of the electricity grid are
nearing capacity limits - Technical solutions have been identified for some
time questions of timing and funding - The big question Who pays?
- The current approach is inequitable gt impasse
- New (draft) policy has been developed to
- Eliminate the impasse
- Provide certainty
- Provide equity
- Satisfy WPs regulatory requirements
19 Draft Distribution Headworks Charge Policy
- Distribution headworks charge is based on
- Customers capacity requirements
- Distance from the nearest zone substation
- Capacity at the connection point (22 kV or 33 kV)
- Spreads capital contributions across all future
users - Reduces risk for developers
- Satisfies regulatory requirements (up front)
- Relatively easy to calculate
- Reflects true costs of supply
- Creates transparent information for decision
making - Developers/Industry
- Government
- Western Power