Electricity 101
4 Key Sectors Physical Sectors:
generation, transmission, distribution, consumption
Value of FTR=
(Sink - Source)
Why do residential customers typically pay more for electricity than other consumer groups?
1) Distribution system required to serve residential customers is more expensive because services are delivered in small quantities and at lower voltages 2) Tend to have low load factors 3) Customer service costs are often much higher for residential customers
Current
=force(volts)/resistance
Reactive Power
A portion of the electric current that a generator and electrical system must provide does no work and is not recorded by a meter
Load factor
Actual annual usage (kWh)/peak demand(kW) x 8760
Load Curve
Aggregate demand of all customers in a specific region
Installed Capacity
Also called ICAP, the total wattage of all generators able to be scheduled to serve a given service or control area.
Unconstrained Capacity
Also called UCAP, the total wattage of all generators that actually deliver power to serve a given service or control area. UCAP may be determined through a derating process that corrects for loss of capacity due to high air temperatures (which may reduce capacity of combustion turbines), past failure probabilities for specific generators, or other means
Types of A/S
Automatic Generation Control (ACG), Spinning Reserves, Non-spinning reserves, supplemental reserves, voltage support, black start
Wholesale marketer
Buy power and resell it to utilities, other marketers and very large industrial customers.
Retail marketer
Buy power, but focus solely on resale to end use customers.
Intermediate Capacity
Capacity intended to operate fewer hours per year than baseload capacity but more than peaking capacity. Typically, such generating units have a capacity factor of 20% to 60%.
Firm Capacity
Capacity that is as firm as the seller's native load unless modified by contract. Associated energy may or may not be taken at option of purchaser. Supporting reserve is carried by the seller.
Baseload Capacity
Capacity used to serve an essentially constant level of customer demand. Generating units typically operate whenever they are available, and they generally have a capacity factor that is above 60%.
Peaking Capacity
Capacity used to serve peak demand. Generating units operate a limited number of hours per year, and their capacity factor is normally less than 20%.
Various Generation Sources
Coal, nuclear, natural gas, fuel oil, hydro, and various forms of renewable energy
bus
Common term used for a point in the system where electricity is delivered off of the transmission system onto the distribution system, or delivered onto the transmission system from generation.
Generation
Creation of flowing electrons
Voluntary Load Response
Customers are offered a payment for curtailing blocks of load, usually in the day ahead.
Curtailable capacity call
Customers are paid a capacity payment to give the utility or marketer the right to curtail blocks of load under certain conditions.
Automatic load response
Customers are paid a capacity payment to give the utility or marketer the right to remotely and automatically curtail blocks of load.
Real-time pricing
Customers pay hourly prices that reflect same day or day ahead market conditions
Mechanisms for end-use demand reduction during peak times.
Demand Response
EDR
Economic Demand Response
Automatic generation control
Equipment that allows the system operator to increase or decrease generation output automatically from a power plant in response to changing system conditions.
Electricity
Flow of electrons through a conductor
Baseload
Generation run all 24 hours of the day
Peak Load
Generation run during the peak hours (6:00 am- 10:00 PM)
Intermediate Load
Generation run from mid-morning until the evening
Distributed generation
Generation that is located at an end-use consumer's site.
Operating reserves
Generation that is not running, but which can be brought on line within a specified timeframe, such as within 10 minutes or 30 minutes of being called on.
Spinning reserves
Generation that is not supplying power, but can be brought "on-line" instantly if needed.
Low load factors results in:
Greater per kWh cost because customers are generally spread over fewer kilowatt- hours.
Peak demand
Greatest amount of energy required at a given moment
Circuit
Includes a source of electrons (battery or generator), an energy consuming device (light bulb), and conductors (wire) that transmit electrons to and from the bulb
Generation
Is the sector in which power is created, usually by large centralized power plants but also by smaller decentralized plants located at or near customer facilities. Can be owned by vertically integrated utilities, power authorities, independent power producers (also called merchant generators or gencos) or by end users. And, in some limited cases, aggregated economic demand response can also participate in markets as a source of "generation."
System operations
Is the sector in which supply and demand are balanced and system reliability is maintained. This occurs through provision of ancillary services such as regulation, reserves, voltage support, and black start as well as real-time balancing of supply and demand. May be provided by a vertically integrated utility, a power authority, a transmission owner (TO), or an ISO.
Economic Dispatch
Low-cost "baseload" plants are dispatched first, followed by higher-cost resources, according to need, and independent of whether the resources are used to serve local or more distant needs.
Load factor
Measure of how average usage relates to peak usage
Power factor
Measures the relationship of real power to apparent power
Electric Distribution
Movement of electricity from the interconnection with the transmission system through the end-use consumer's meter
Electric Marketers
Purchase electricity from generators and then resell it to utilities, end users, or other marketers.
Capacity
Reflects the instantaneous ability to provide energy required to do work
Demand
Reflects the instantaneous amount of work required to perform the function desired.
3 Consumers of Power
Residential, Industrial, Commercial
Planning reserve
The difference between a utility's or region's peak generating capability and its expected annual peak demand
Net Capacity
The maximum capacity (or effective rating), modified for ambient limitations, that a generating unit, power plant, or electric system can sustain over a specified period, less the capacity used to supply the demand of station service or auxiliary needs.
Electric Transmission
The movement of large amounts of electricity over long distances
current
The rate at which electrons flow through a conductor (measured by amps)
Capacity
The rated continuous load-carrying ability, expressed in megawatts (MW) or megavolt-amperes (MVA) of generation, transmission, or other electrical equipment.
Capacity Factor
The ratio of the total energy actually generated by a generating unit for a specified period to the maximum possible energy it could have generated if operated at the maximum capacity rating for the same specified period, expressed as a percent.
Ancillary Services
The services (other than energy) required by system operators to ensure safe and secure operation of the electric grid
Aggregate demand curve
Total demand for customers at all moments during the day
Spinning Reserves
Units that are already synchronized to the frequency of the system, and this can begin providing energy to the grid upon receiving a dispatch call.
Supplemental Reserves
Units that are available with a longer lead time, often thirty minutes from notification
Non-spinning reserves
Units that are not synchronized to the frequency of the system, but can be available within 10 minute of notification
Black Start
Units that can start independently without electricity from the grid.
Automatic Generation Control
Used to manage the minute by minute fluctuations in system loads.
From a system operator's perspective, how is demand forecast?
Using models developed from historical demands given forecasted weather patterns and business activities.
4 Basic Market Structures
Vertically integrated monopoly utility, single buyer with competitive generation, wholesale/industrial competition, complete retail competition
Regulation
a service that corrects for short-term changes in electricity use that might affect the stability of the power system.
Wholesale Markets
are where power is bought and sold between generators and entities that resell power to end users. These markets can depend on bilateral contracts (private contracts between two parties) or can depend on organized markets, which are run by a central authority such as a Power Exchange (PX), an Independent System Operator (ISO), or a mix of both.
Black Start Services
designated generators that are able to restore electricity to the grid without using an outside electrical supply.
Capacity Market
ensures long-term grid reliability by securing the appropriate amount of power supply resources needed to meet predicted energy demand in the future.
Ancillary services
help balance the transmission system as it moves electricity from generating sources to ultimate consumers.
Transmission
is the high-voltage network that moves power long distances from generators to distribution systems. May be owned by vertically integrated utilities, power authorities or stand-alone transmission companies (transcos). May provide transmission services directly or services may be provided by the ISO with payment going back to the TO from the ISO.
Distribution
is the low-voltage network that moves power from the transmission system to the consumer. May be provided by a vertically integrated utility or by a stand-alone utility distribution company (UDC).
Retail Supply
is the provision of electricity supply to an end-use customer. Provided by the distribution company as a service bundled into distribution services. In other cases, end-use customers have the option of buying supply directly from a non-utility retail marketer.
Disturbances travel very quickly and are hard to contain
key property of electric delivery system
Electricity cannot be easily stored
key property of electric delivery system
Outages and significant voltage or frequency fluctuations are not acceptable
key property of electric delivery system
The path of electrical flow is difficult to control
key property of electric delivery system
DA Market
like a commodities futures market that allows buyers and sellers to hedge their transactions.
Power factor
real power/ (reactive power+real power)
Unforced capacity
represents the amount of installed capacity that is actually available at any given time after discounting for time that the facility is unavailable due to outages such as repairs.
Installed Capacity
represents the maximum generating capacity of a given facility.
Intermediate generation
tends to be gas- and oil-fired combustion turbines or combined cycle plants.
Baseload generating plants
tends to be nuclear and coal plants, have the lowest fuel cost and run virtually at all times.
Price Responsive Demand
the predictable change (a reduction when prices rise or an increase when prices fall) in electricity consumption (also known as demand) in response to changing wholesale electricity prices.
Peaking units
typically small combustion turbines, or even diesel engines.
Congestion
when the lowest-priced energy is prevented from flowing freely to a specific area on the grid because heavy electricity use is causing parts of the grid to operate near their limits.