Title: GIC research in Finland and Europe
1GIC research in Finland and Europe Risto
Pirjola Finnish Meteorological Institute,
Helsinki, Finland Space Weather EU-FP7
Meeting Paris, January 23, 2007
2Ground Effects of Space Weather Geomagneticall
y Induced Currents (GIC)
in -electric power transmission systems -oil and
gas pipelines -telecommunication cables -railway
equipment -in principle all long conductors
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4Effects of GIC on power systems-depend much on
technological details of the grid, on transformer
types, etc-experiences in one country cannot
directly be extrapolated to another
- Possible GIC problems are due to saturation of
transformers, which may lead to - Production of harmonics
- Relay trippings
- Increased reactive power demands
- Voltage fluctuations
- Unbalanced network, even a collapse
- Magnetic stray fluxes in transformers
- Hot spots in transformers, even permanent damage
5- Québec blackout -- March 13, 1989
- Harmonics (created by transformer saturation due
to GIC) caused, by a domino effect, a collapse
of the whole system in about one and a half
minutes. - Six million people were without electricity for
several hours. - Total costs 13.2 MCAD
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- Malmö blackout -- October 30, 2003
- About 50000 customers were without electricity in
Malmö, southern Sweden, for 20-50 minutes. - The first (and so far only?) known power grid
blackout due to GIC in Europe - An overcurrent relay was too sensitive to the
third harmonic of 50 Hz. It has been replaced by
a less sensitive relay later.
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7- GIC research in Finland
- High-Voltage (400 220 kV) power system
- Collaboration between FMI and the Fingrid Oyj
power company - Started in 1976
- GIC recordings in earthing leads of 400 kV
transformer neutrals since 1977 (Fingrid, FMI) - At present at three sites
- Also a one-year campaign of GIC recordings in a
400 kV line in the 1990s - Theoretical modelling of geoelectric fields and
GIC (FMI) - Several statistical studies of GIC occurrence
based on model calculations, geomagnetic data and
GIC recordings (FMI) - Tests of the effects of dc currents injected into
transformers (Fingrid)
8- GIC research in Finland
- High-Voltage (400 220 kV) power system
(continues) - Conclusions
- GIC are a potential risk in Finland due to the
high-latitude location, so contacts between
Fingrid and FMI continue. - Largest measured GIC 201 A (March 24, 1991)
only 42 A on October 30, 2003 - Only one GIC disturbance so far A protective
relay caused an unwanted tripping in northern
Finland in January 2005 because the relay had
been configured erroneously. - The resistances provided by neutral point
reactors efficiently reduce GIC. - Series capacitors block the flow of GIC.
- The transformer structures and design
specifications efficiently prevent overheating
and gassing problems. - The Swedish high-voltage system is clearly more
sensitive to GIC, so FMI and IRF continue
research together with Swedish power industry.
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10- GIC research in Finland
- Natural gas pipeline
- Collaboration between FMI and the Gasum Oy
pipeline company - Started in 1981
- Theoretical modelling of geoelectric fields, GIC
and pipe-to-soil voltages (FMI) - Statistical studies of GIC occurrence based on
model calculations and geomagnetic data (FMI) - Pipe-to-soil voltage monitoring at several sites
(Gasum) - Recording of GIC at one site since 1998 (FMI)
- Web-based service GICNow! developed for Gasum
in the ESA Space Weather Applications Pilot
Project in 2003 to 2005 (FMI)
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12- Facts to be remembered in the estimation of GIC
risks in the European high-voltage power system - The society is more and more dependent on
reliable power supply. - Electric energy is much transported from one
country to another. - A local disturbance in the power grid may
propagate as a domino effect to other parts of
the network, possibly resulting in a collapse of
the whole system. - The blackout in central Europe in November 2006
was a good example though not caused by GIC. - On the other hand, GIC may also impact many sites
simultaneously. - Use of higher voltages implies smaller line
resistances and larger GIC. - Longer transmission lines imply larger induced
geovoltages. - GIC magnitudes do not only depend on the latitude
but power system configuration details also
affect. - Problems caused by GIC depend on transformer
types and other technological matters, so power
engineering expertise is needed. - The next sunspot maximum approaches.
13- EU FP6 STREP Pre-Proposal (GREPON) in 2004
- NEST INSIGHT area Call FP6-2003-NEST-B-3 closed
on September 15, 2004 - Title Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC)
Risk in the European Power Network (GREPON) - Duration 24 months (about July 2005 to June 2007)
- Budget 1600 kEuros (request from EU 800 kEuros)
- 8 consortium partners (with 150 man-months)
- FMI, Finland
- BGS-Edinburgh, UK
- LPCE/CNRS-Orleans, France
- DMI, Denmark
- IRF-Lund, Sweden
- Natural Resources Canada
- University of Sheffield, UK
- Power industry ANF Energy Solutions (Canada),
RTE/EDF (France)
14- GREPON evaluation on December 23, 2004
- Relevance to the objectives of the programme
4.0 (threshold 4) - Scientific and technological excellence 3.2
(threshold 4) - Potential impact 2.5 (threshold 3)
- The panel considers that GREPON addresses a true
risk to society which is relevant to INSIGHT but
of moderate novelty and impact. - The panel considers that the potential impact of
the proposed work is limited since the frequency
of GIC storms and the breakdowns of electrical
power networks is quite low. - More integrated power networks might not
increase the risk because a more integrated
network has also more connecting nodes that
receive energy from other plants. - The panel has therefore decided to recommend
that the proposal should not be retained for the
second stage evaluation.
15- EU FP6 STREP Pre-Proposal (GREPON-2) in 2005
- NEST INSIGHT area Call FP6-2004-NEST-C-1 closed
on April 13, 2005 - Title Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC)
Risk in the European Power Network (GREPON-2) - Duration 24 months (about July 2006 to June 2008)
- Budget 1860 kEuros (request from EU 960 kEuros)
- 8 consortium partners (with 186 man-months)
- FMI, Finland
- LPCE/CNRS-Orleans, France NRCan (Canada),
CETP (France) - IRF-Lund, Sweden
- DMI, Denmark
- BGS-Edinburgh, UK
- University of Sheffield, UK ANF Energy
Solutions (Canada) - RTE/EDF power company, France
- NGT power company, UK
16- GREPON-2 evaluation on July 18, 2005
- Relevance to the objectives of the programme
3.5 (threshold 4 GREPON 4.0) - Scientific and technological excellence 3.9
(threshold 4 GREPON 3.2) - Potential impact 3.0 (threshold 3 GREPON
2.5)) - The panel considers that the phenomenon
addressed is not really that new and does not
seem to be of such high concern with a relevant
potential for serious problems or risks to
European society. - The panel has therefore decided to recommend
that the proposal should not be retained for the
second stage of the evaluation. - 50 pre-proposals out of 330 were accepted for the
second stage.
17Evaluation summaries of SWEET and SW-RISK
- Relevance st- 4, sr- 2 (threshold 3/5)
- Potential impact st- 3, sr- 2 (threshold 3/5)
- S T excellence st- 3, sr- 3 (threshold 4/5)
- Quality of the consortium st- 2, sr- 3
(threshold 3/5) - Quality of the management st- 2, sr- 3
(threshold 3/5) - Mobilisation of the resources st- 3, sr- 2.5
(threshold 3/5) - --------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------- - gt total SWEET 17 (threshold 21/30)
- SW-RISK 15.5 (threshold 21/30)