Title: Allan Miller
1Introduction toRenewable Energy and the Smart
GridGREEN Grid
- Allan Miller
- Director
- Electric Power Engineering Centre (EPECentre)
2Contents
- Background and overview of the project
- Project Team
- Electric Vehicle Research Scott Lemon
3Background
- 2012 MSI (now MBIE) Investment Round
- Energy and Minerals RFP (14 December 2011),
Targeted Research Questions - 4. What are the supply variability
characteristics of current and potentially
applicable renewable resources across all energy
markets, what are the challenges they present for
efficient and secure energy supply and how can
new technologies and practices for managing
variability help? - 5. What economic and technical models can be
utilised to evaluate the potential impact of
renewable energy feeding into our distribution
networks? - 6. What mechanisms can be used to investigate the
performance of low voltage networks, subject to
bi-directional power flows as a result of the
input of renewable energy? - Co-funding is expected
4Background
- Our proposal addressed these research questions
in two parts - Part 1
- Managing supply variability of renewable energy
in the network - (addresses Question 4)
- Part 2
- Cost-effective, functional and safe distribution
network - (addresses Questions 5 6)
5Overview of the Project
6Overview of the Project
- Essence of Part 1
- Perhaps supply variability can be managed through
demand variability - I.e. continuously and actively adjust demand to
somewhat match variable supply (perhaps through a
new ancillary service, or a combined ancillary
service) - Demand side management (short term and long term)
- Consumers may have loads, existing and new, that
are suitable to control at certain times - Fridges, heat pumps, heated towel rails,
lighting, electric vehicles (water heating) - Individually these are not a significant load
- Collectively they may make up a significant load
- Enable the demand side to participate more
actively in the electricity market
7Overview
- Questions arising from part one
- What are the characteristics of renewable energy
generation variability - How much load is likely to be controllable within
a home and collectively (i.e. size of
controllable loads and their diversity)? - What is in it for the consumer (i.e. is it
economic for them)? - What are the trends re. uptake of new
technologies (EVs, PV, home automation)? - What are the attitudes of the consumer to demand
side management? - How might demand be aggregated and, in
particular, used by the System Operator to manage
renewable energy generation variability
8Overview
- Part 1 Projects that fulfill the essence and
answer these questions - 1.1 Identification and management of supply
variability of renewable resources - 1.2 Identification and management of household
demand variability - 1.3 Balancing variable supply with demand side
management
9Overview
- Essence of Part 2
- Modelling methods for the following
- The economics of distributed generation fewer
large schemes or many small (roof-top) schemes? - Technical and economic implications of
distributed generation - Technical issues associated with residential
photovoltaic generation - The effect of new loads and distributed
generation on power quality in the low voltage
network - Focus on getting the right models, to be able to
update results as technology and the market
change
10Overview
- Target studies that address Part 2
- 2.1 Technical and economic study of large scale
distributed renewable generation connected to the
medium voltage distribution network - 2.2 Technical and economic impacts of different
scales of photovoltaic deployment and wind
generation on the low voltage network - 2.3 Smart methods and guidelines for protection
and automation in the low voltage network
experiencing bidirectional flows - 2.4 Customer service level and low voltage
network power quality
11Overview
- Variability of Renewables
- Business Household Demand
Distributed Renewable Generation
- Current and future profiles
- Demand management
- Practices, systems, value
- DM control
- TPs system
- Home networks
- Trials of new technology
- Electric vehicles
- Home networks, smart appliances
- DM resource
- 90 target by 2025
- Understand and model
- Balancing renewable resources (to smooth supply
variability) - Transmission loss implications
- New / combined ancillary service?
Small Scale (LV) Protection Safety Voltage
control Field trials New ancillary service
markets Guidelines, standards, policy PV
injection (new metering) LV network
monitoring Use of ICT infrastructure
Large Scale (MV) Economics Technical Power
flow EV implication Guidelines for distribution
companies on technical economic analysis
- Cyber Security
- Instrumented LV network
12Storage
Technology in transmission and distribution,
power quality, safety
Large scale Geographical and temporal variation
Geographical and temporal uptake of new
technology (EVs, PVs, DM, and home-automation)
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14GREEN Grid Project Structure
15GREEN Grid Project Structure
Client, MBIE
Direct Co-funders Transpower, EEA
EPECentre / ECE (University of Canterbury)
UC Project Board
Industry Advisory Panel
University of Otago CSAFE
Supporters EA, Vector, Orion, Unison, WEL
University of Auckland PSG
16GREEN Grid Core Project Team
- Dr Allan Miller, EPECentre Director and Director
of GREEN Grid - Dr Alan Wood, Senior Lecturer, ECE, University of
Canterbury, Leader of Part One, Co-Leader of Part
Two - Dr Nirmal Nair, Senior Lecturer, PSG, University
of Auckland, Co-Leader of Part Two - Dr Rebecca Ford, Post Doctoral Fellow, CSAFE,
University of Otago, Leader of 1.2 - Dr Janet Stephenson, Director of CSAFE,
University of Otago
17Project Team Responsibilities
Managing supply variability of renewable energy in the network Managing supply variability of renewable energy in the network
1.1 Identification and management of supply variability of renewable resources EPECentre
1.2 Identification and management of household demand variability CSAFE (Otago)
1.3 Balancing variable supply with demand side management EPECentre
Cost-effective, functional and safe distribution network Cost-effective, functional and safe distribution network
2.1 Technical and economic study of large scale distributed renewable generation connected to the medium voltage distribution network EPECentre
2.2 Technical and economic impacts of different scales of photovoltaic deployment and wind generation on the low voltage network PSG (Auckland)
2.3 Smart methods and guidelines for protection and automation in the low voltage network experiencing bidirectional flows PSG (Auckland)
2.4 Customer service level and low voltage network power quality EPECentre
18Industry Advisory Panel
19Industry Advisory Panel
- Representation
- Electricity Engineers Association
- Distribution
- System Operator
- Regulator
- General Energy Market
- Consumer Appliances ( Home Automation)
- Transmission Asset Owner
- Renewable Generation
- Retail
- Consumer
20Industry Advisory Panel
- Oversee the research being undertaken by the
GREEN Grid project - Within the MBIE agreed scope
- Ensure it is independent
- Relevant to and targeted at industry needs
- Respects academic freedom of the researchers
- Assist in transferring the findings of the
research to industry - Adoption of ideas / findings / research output
- Promotion of ideas / findings / research output
- Support research findings for adoption into
standards / policy (where relevant) - Assist researchers industry specific knowledge
data - Intellectual property team meetings
21Project Board
- Governance of the project
- Disciplined reporting on project schedule,
resourcing, and budget - Provides necessary decisions for project to
proceed
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