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Wind Generation: Contribution to Capacity Adequacy

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Title: Wind Generation: Contribution to Capacity Adequacy


1
Wind GenerationContribution to Capacity
Adequacy Reflecting Wind Integration Needs
  • Mary Johannis/Ben Kujala, BPA
  • PNW Resource Adequacy Forums
  • Technical Committee Meeting
  • October 16, 2009

2
Outline
  • Wind Capacitys Contribution to Resource Adequacy
  • Methods
  • Councils Annual Resource Adequacy Assessment
    possible change to 5 Placeholder Value
  • Need for Flexible Resources to integrate Variable
    Generation
  • Examples of increased need and/or changed
    operations
  • How to incorporate Need for Flexible Resources
    into Councils Annual Resource Adequacy
    Assessment?

3
Wind Forums
  • NERC Joint Integration of Variable Generation
    Task Force (IVGTF) Resources Issues
    Subcommittee (RIS) Task 1.2 (Capacity Value) and
    Task 1.4 (Flexible Resources to integrate
    Variable Generation) Teams
  • IVGTF Report http//www.nerc.com/docs/pc/ivgtf/IV
    GTF_Report_041609.pdf
  • WECC Variable Generation Subcommittee (VGS)
    Planning Work Group
  • Northwest PNW Resource Adequacy Forum/NW Wind
    Integration Forum

4
Wind Capacity Value Methods
  • Effective Load Carrying Capability (ELCC)
    approach
  • Evaluate effective wind capacity contribution
    based on LOLP studies with and without wind
    generation same target
  • Need sufficient wind generation data to simulate
    full range of generation under various
    conditions, especially if wind and loads
    correlated at times
  • Need realistic depiction of combined
    uncertainties
  • Contribution of variable generation to system
    capacity during high-risk hours using historical
    data
  • Investigate contribution of wind capacity during
    heat wave and cold snap events in PNW because of
    evidence of statistical relationship between lack
    of wind generation when it gets very hot or very
    cold
  • Correlation between resource contribution and the
    resource mix by system (e.g. what is appropriate
    for a hydro based system)
  • Wind may contribute more in energy-limited system
    if certain amount of wind generation can be
    counted upon during drought

5
Counting Wind toward Capacity Adequacy in the
Northwest
  • Current Capacity Value 5 Placeholder based on
    preliminary BPA analysis
  • Resource Adequacy Forums Efforts to Create
    Long-term Wind Generation Records for use in
    GENESYS
  • Backcasting (unsuccessful)
  • Synthetic Temperature-Correlated Wind Generation
    (presented at July Meeting)

6
Counting Wind toward Capacity Adequacy in the
Northwest
January 2009 Cold Snap
7
Simulated Wind Generation Historic Cold Snaps
8
Simulated Wind Generation Historic Heat Waves
9
Observed WindRegional Load Duration
  • Treating the wind as negative load changes the
    duration curve.
  • Minimum distance between the two curves is about
    1.6 of the nameplate.
  • 99.5 of the hours have a 6.8 of the nameplate
    or more contribution of wind toward reducing
    the load durations.

10
NW Wind Capacity Value using ELCC Approach
  • Difference between the percentiles of the load
    durations show us
  • Between the 10th and 90th percentiles the
    contribution of the wind fleet was fairly flat
    with a slight trend of more energy during the
    lower loads.
  • During the highest observed loads the difference
    is minimal.

11
NW Wind Capacity Value using High Risk Hours
Approach
  • Alternately looking at the differences between
    the six peak hours with and without wind yields
  • A minimum difference of zero.
  • 97 of the time we could count on roughly 3
    hundredths of one percent of the nameplate in
    aMW.
  • You have to go to 91 of the time before you get
    to a contribution of 1 of the nameplate in
    aMW.

12
Need for Flexible Resources
  • CALIFORNIA EXAMPLE 1/
  • 2007 CAISO 2007 Study concluded 20 RPS
    achievable without new flexible resources
  • Nexant Study? A minimum of 2,250 MW of new
    quick-start and load following resources required
    in the state to meet operating requirements at
    33 RPS
  • Morning and evening ramping needs increased
    significantly with higher levels of renewables (
    14,000 MW of wind and solar PV)

1/ From 9/24/09 Defining the Need for LA Basin
and Dispatchable Resources by Mark Minick, SCE
13
Need for Flexible Resources
  • BPA Rate Case Example
  • Significant Growth of Wind Reserves with High
    Penetration of Wind in BPA BA
  • Results in Changed Operation of Federal Hydro
    System

14
Need for Flexible Resources
BPA Rate Case Example Wind Reserves Regulating
Following Imbalance
15
Reflecting Flexible Resource Need in Adequacy
Assessments
  • Flexible Resource Sufficiency Metric
  • How to Model in Probabilistic Studies
  • Count miss in reserves requirements as a Loss of
    Load Event?
  • Allocate part of resource capacity for reserves?
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