The Impact of Distributed Generation and …...Network and system predictability and scalability...

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The Impact of Distributed Generation and MicroGrids on the Distribution Network

March 27, 2105 Ron Chebra Solution Architect

There are significant “drivers” today that are impacting the future of the electric grid

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Customers

Infrastructure

Utility of the

Future

Regulation

Prosumers /Self Reliant Entities (MicroGrid) Mobile Loads

Energy Conservation

Renewable Portfolio Standards State PUC’s (e.g. NY REV)

NERC CIP FERC 745

Grid Modernization Grid Resiliency/Hardening

Distributed Energy Resources Asset Optimization

Revenue Erosion KPI’s (CAIDI)

Aging Workforce Source: Schneider Electric

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

RPS Map

5 Source: www.dsireusa.org

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

Solar Growth

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

PV Trends

9 Source: DOE/NREL Photovoltaic System Pricing Trends 2014 Edition

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

CHP Data

11 Source: http://www.epa.gov/chp/basic/economics.html

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

Resiliency and Reliability

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Source: NOAA

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There are many drivers that are at the root of this ground swell, including: > Aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) > Rapid Growth of Solar Generation Capacity > Lower Cost of Installed PV Systems > Combined Heat and Power System Prices are becoming more Competitive > Demand for Greater Resiliency and Higher Reliability > Incentives for MicroGrid Deployments

The “Hot” topics today are in areas of Distributed Energy Resources and MicroGrids

Some State Incentive Programs include:

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NYSERDA – NY Prize

Connecticut – DEEP MicroGrid Grant/Loan

$18M awarded in 2013; $30M over

the next two years $40M competition to help communities create MicroGrid

Source: http://www.ct.gov/deep/

Source: http://www.nyserda.ny.gov/

Situation: As the number of Distributed Energy Resource (DER) and MicroGrid systems

grow, these customer-sided assets will impact the stability, reliability, and efficiency of power grid operations.

1. Generally, these are customer assets, as such, generally they would be located for

the convenience of the owner, not the utility. From the perspective of grid operator, these may located in less‐than‐optimal places or potentially on circuits that are challenged or at risk.

2. These systems will be of widely varying sizes, supply make-up (PV; Battery, BAS, etc.) and driven by customer needs such as resiliency, back-up, supply offset or peak load reduction. Operation of these may not be coincident with the needs of the distribution utility.

3. Without coordination with the distribution equipment on the grid, these systems could actually cause voltage oscillations, create reverse power flows on circuits not designed for two‐way flows, and cause other power system impacts that could actually increase the frequency and durations of outages.

Currently the standards address isolation (islanding) and safety, not grid augmentation and support

• IEEE’s 1547 interconnection standard requires that systems interconnected to the distribution grid automatically shut‐off in the event of even a brief power system anomaly.

– Effectively this would limit the ability of a MicroGrid or DER system from providing any type grid assistance during an “event.”

• Revised IEEE 1547a would permit such a system to actively regulate voltage at the point of common coupling under certain conditions.

– Permits the high and low limits of voltage and frequency to be extended for specific time periods so that voltage and frequency ride‐through by DER systems can occur

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Proposed Rule 21 Requirements for DER Frequency, Voltage Ride Through and Dynamic Volt/VAR

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Frequency Ride Through

Consume Reactive Power In response to increasing voltage and produce reactive power in response to decreasing voltage

Voltage Ride Through

Volt/VAR Response

Methods for detecting electrical islands should be

coordinated with voltage ride-through settings so

anti-islanding requirements are not

compromised

Source: SWIG Report 1/2014

Source: SWIG Report 1/2014

Source: Schneider Electric

Further, ARPA-E is looking to fund innovations to help mitigate high level penetrations of DER

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Seamless interconnection of information

More robust and pervasive networks

Greater levels of security

Device and subsystem interoperability

Network and system predictability and scalability

Over-the-air configuration and management

Network Operations Centers (NOC)

To deal with this the utility of the future will require:

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Utilities are adopting solutions that leverage the connectedness of “things” (IoT, or Grid of Things GoT)

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Smart Field Controllers Advanced Distribution Management Systems

PQ meters

Remote Terminal Units

Faulted Circuit Indicators Relclosers

Making greater use of intelligent end

devices (IED)

Leveraging more and greater field intelligence

Deploying communication networks that link devices to devices and to control systems

Integrating self-healing distribution networks

Providing layers of information interchange at the control room and in the field

Intelligence, Communication and Control are essential elements of the solution to provide the service required

Let’s explore the issues of Microgrid Integration

Challenges

Focus Areas

Integrated Solutions

Devices and Tools 22 Source: Schneider Electric

One Approach is A Hierarchical “Systems of Systems”

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Battery Equipment

PV Equipment

Diesel Generator

EV Equipment

Meter and PCC

Circuit Breaker

Facility Loads

Battery Charge

Controller

PV Controller

Diesel Controller

EV DER Controller

Load Controller

Facility DER Management

System

Facility Load Management

System

Transmission Bus Load Model

Geographic Information System (GIS)

Meter Data Management System MDMS

DER Management

System (DERMS)DER “SCADA”

Advanced Distribution

Management System ADMS)

Demand Response

System (DRMS)

Level 4 Distribution Utility

Level 5 REP or DER Aggregator

Level 3Utility and REP

ICT

Level 2 Facilities DER EMS

Level 1 DER System

Demand Response SystemDRMS

DER and Load Management System

Energy Management System (EMS)

ISO/RTO Balancing Authority

Transmission Market

Clearinghouse

Distribution Market Clearinghouse

Retail Energy Market Clearinghouse

Facility DER and Load Management System

ESB

Control Bus BAS Bus

Source: Adapted from CPUC Smart Inverter Working Group (SWIG)

DNP 3 Modbus PLC

BacNet Metasys LonWorks

OpenADR SEP 2

IEC 61850 DNP 3 SEP 2

Ent

erpr

ise

Bus

Fiel

d C

omm

unic

atio

ns

Net

wor

k

Source: Schneider Electric

Which places stringent latency requirements on the Field Communications Network

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Data Congestion Visualization

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However, there is an emerging trend in the IoT space for Peer-to-Peer interaction (publish/subscribe)

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Source: RTI presentation on DDS

Conceptual Outline of DDS

27 Source: http://www.omgwiki.org/dds/sites/default/files/DDS_Architectural_Overview.pdf

This approach could enable greater levels of autonomy and faster reaction/response times

Ent

erpr

ise

Bus

28

Ope

n Fi

eld

Mes

sage

B

us (O

FMB

)

Source: Schneider Electric

This is the concept that Duke Energy is exploring in their Coalition of the Willing Phase II (COW II)

29 Source: Duke Energy

OPEN APIMESSAGE BUS

Use-Case App(s)

OT System or Device

Analytics

Messaging

Translation

IT

Publi

sh

Subs

cribe

Publi

sh

DNP Modbus

SmartMeter

CapBank

Intelligent Switch

FCI lineSensor

Subs

cribe

OT

Compression

Security

Publi

sh

Subs

cribe

Other

Publi

sh

Subs

cribe

Transformer TelcoRouter

Battery/PVInverters

DMS PiSandbox

Head-End

Publi

sh

Subs

cribe DDS, MQTT

CIM 61850

Duke COW II Participants

30 Source: Duke Energy Presentation Distributech 2015

Duke MicroGrid Overview

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PMU

AMI Smart Meters

Protection & Control Distributed Energy Resources

IP Router Virtual

Software

Corporate Private Network

MDM

SCADA

Head end

Higher Tier Central Office

(Utility Datacenter)

Application OS Core OS Legend

Middle Tier Nodes

(e.g. substation)

Lower Tier Nodes

(e.g. grid)

End Points Devices

IP Router

Virtual Software

IP Router

Virtual Software

Field Area Network

(FAN)

Wide Area Network (WAN)

Local Area Network

(LAN)

Local Area Network

(LAN) Physical Transport Virtual Telemetry

Tier 5 DIP Node

Firewall

Virtual Firewall

DMS

>15 min

~1min

<5 min

<50 ms

No model

No model

No model

model

model

model

model

Polling

model

IoT Reference Architecture: Hybrid Multi-level Hierarchy

Copyright © 2015 Duke Energy All rights reserved. 3/27/2015 page 33

Duke Energy Test MicroGrid Lab: Mount Holly, NC

PV Installations

Islanding Switch, Transformer, and Battery

Behind the meter and low voltage power electronic equipment Grid Equipment

Copyright © 2015 Duke Energy All rights reserved. page 34