Assessment and Methods for Supply-Following Loads in Modern Electricity Grids with Deep Renewables Penetration

Abstract

We study three electricity grids: the state of California, the province of Ontario, and the country of Germany. To understand the effects of increasing renewables, we develop a methodology to scale renewables penetration. Analyzing these grids yields key insights about rigid limits to renewables penetration and their implications in meeting long-term emissions targets. We argue that to achieve deep penetration of renewables, the operational model of the grid must be inverted, changing the paradigm from load-following supplies to supply-following loads. To alleviate the challenge of supply-demand matching on deeply renewable grids, we first examine well-known techniques, including altering management of existing supply resources, employing utility-scale energy storage, targeting energy efficiency improvements, and exercising basic demand-side management. Then, we create several instantiations of supply-following loads - including refrigerators, heating and cooling systems, and laptop computers - by employing a combination of sensor networks, advanced control techniques, and enhanced energy storage. We examine the capacity of each load for supply-following and study the behaviors of populations of these loads, assessing their potential at various levels of deployment throughout the California electricity grid. Using combinations of supply-following strategies, we can reduce peak natural gas generation by 19% on a model of the California grid with 60% renewables. We then assess remaining variability on this deeply renewable grid incorporating supply-following loads, characterizing additional capabilities needed to ensure supply-demand matching in future sustainable electricity grids.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 18, 2013
Accession Number
ADA624235

Entities

People

  • Jayant K. Taneja

Organizations

  • University of California, Berkeley

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Climate Change
  • Computational Science
  • Control Systems
  • Electric Power
  • Electric Power Production
  • Electrical Grids
  • Energy
  • Energy Consumption
  • Energy Production
  • Energy Storage
  • Energy Transfer
  • Greenhouse Effect
  • Heat Transfer
  • Lithium Ion Batteries
  • Load Monitoring
  • Wind Energy
  • Wind Turbines

Readers

  • Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Engineering.
  • Systems Analysis and Design