Road Map to Grid Modernization - ualberta.caapic/uploads/Forum/P3_forum2016.pdfCustomer result: Some...

Post on 25-May-2020

6 views 0 download

Transcript of Road Map to Grid Modernization - ualberta.caapic/uploads/Forum/P3_forum2016.pdfCustomer result: Some...

1

Road Map to Grid Modernization

APIC, University of Alberta May 5th, 2016

Presenter:

Chris Chapelsky, MSc., P.Eng.

Operations Engineer

2

About EPCOR

■ Water & Power

■ Transmission & Distribution in Edmonton

■ Edmonton Power Corporation -> EPCOR

■ Regulated & Non-Regulated businesses

3

About Me

■ MSc., University of Alberta

■ P.Eng.

■ Before EPCOR: Power Electronic Circuits, Circuit

Design, Machine Drives, Energy Storage, EM Coupling,

Grounding

■ EPCOR: RFI, Distribution Automation, ADMS,

Operations.

4

Electric

Facilities

■ 28 Substations

■ 284 Feeders

■ 370,000+

Customers

■ Dist. Service

Levels: 5kV, 15kV,

25kV

5

Today’s Topic – Grid Modernization

■ EPCOR 10 Years Ago Paper & CAD everything

Manual, as needed modeling

Ops based on estimations from circuit head SCADA

Fault Finding by surveying line / local indicators

SCADA limited to substations / feeder heads

Age or failure based Asset Management (lagging)

“Big Wires”

6

Today’s Topic – Grid Modernization

■ The Path we are on Electrically connected GIS

Automatic model export

Electrically validated switching plans

Optimized feeder configurations

Wide deployment of SCADA

“Life-Story” or conditional based asset management

Efficient deployment of field resources and capital

“Big Data”

■ EPCOR 10 Years Ago Paper & CAD everything

Manual, as needed modeling

Ops based on estimations from circuit head SCADA

Fault Finding by surveying line / local indicators

SCADA limited to substations / feeder heads

Age or failure based Asset Management (lagging)

“Big Wires”

7

What are we doing to get there?

8

Technologies - In the past 10 years

■ SA & IEEE 61850 Start: 2009

Integration with SCADA

61850: 2012 (Station Bus)

Common protocol for

monitoring, control, and

protection in Substations

12 Sites

Groundwork for expansion

into the grid

9

Technologies - In the past 10 years

■ Distribution Automation

(FLISR) Start: 2007

Peer-peer distributed intelligence

Integrated with SCADA

1.5 / 2.5 switch / feeder scheme

Ad-hoc build-out of RF comm.

mesh

30 Feeders, 7 subs – 11%

10

Technologies - In the past 10 years

■ Remote Fault Indicators False Start: 2008

Restart in 2011

Self-contained unit which clamps to

line, self-powered

SIM remote reporting to server

integrated with SCADA

600+ in deployment in over 200

locations

11

Technologies - In the past 10 years

■ Electrically

Connected GIS Launch: 2011

Fully connected asset

record of electric

system

Access from the field

Export to other

systems

12

Technologies - Now

■ ADMS DMS/OMS

Operations

Geographic + SLDs

2015-2017

Simulation + Training

SCADA Upgrade

Advanced Apps

13

Technologies - Now

■ AMI Smart Meters

MDMS

2015-2017

15 min / 1hr Load intervals

City-wide RF Network

14

Technologies – Some Things in the Plans

Integrations Advanced Tech

Enterprise System with ADMS Condition Based Asset Management

Huge Data Storage Requirements

Energy Storage & Dist. Energy PV & Electric Vehicles

Voltage Profile Optimization

AMI with ADMS Last Gasp & Meter Ping

Load Shaping in Model

Advanced Medium V. Tech. Solid Dialectric & Vacuum

Load Shaping in Model

More Remotes

AMI RF with SCADA Wide Coverage & Common

Infrastructure

Easier to Expand Remotes

Wide SA and DSCADA 61850 Process Bus in Progress

Downtown Network Relays

More Automated Control

15

■ Collaboration between EDTI and ECE “Assessment and Mitigation of the Impacts of

Distributed Generation on Urban Utilities”

■ Prof. Ing. Petr Musilek, Ph.D., PEng

■ Prof. Hao Liang, Ph.D.

■ Prof. John Salmon, Ph.D., PEng

Studying the Issue: Distributed Energy Systems

16

What does this mean?

Let’s look at the old way of doing things

17

Faulted Circuit (10 years ago)

■ Fuse Blow

■ Calls from customers

■ Line truck dispatched to mid-circuit area

■ Internal memo / email outage notification

■ Patrol / check fault indicators to locate damage

■ Switching to Isolate

■ Restoration / Repair, backup feeder maybe overloaded

■ Calls are still coming in

■ Customer result: Lots out ~45min, a handful for repair (1-2 hrs).

■ Paper record of repair -> drawing backlog

■ Queue for outage report

18

Faulted Circuit (potential future) ■ Fuse Blow

■ AMI last gasp reports all outaged customers to OMS

■ OMS issues alert to system operator and internal pool of recipients

■ DA and RFI report passage of fault to DMS and operators through

SCADA

■ DMS pinpoints fault location to correct circuit branch, and within

200m

■ DMS possibly uses DA devices for FLISR through SCADA,

restoring 50-75% of circuit in less than 120 min.

■ DMS issues recommended switching plan to further isolate

damaged equipment

■ Control sends trouble directly to site to confirm damage & begin

local isolation

■ Calls are starting to come in

■ DMS suggests feeder re-organization to balance load on remaining

feeders, executed through SCADA remote switching by operators

■ Field Repair proceeds

■ DMS suggests optimal switching for feeder return to normal

■ Customer result: Some out for <60sec, some out for ~20min, and a

some out for repair (1-2 hrs).

■ Outage report, statistics, and logging all automatically captured.

Fault scenario can be replayed for analysis, training, or audit.

■ Stressed components are captured by asset management system

integrated with ADMS, and follow action can be taken to mitigate

future potential outages

19

But wait….

■ Technology isn’t everything.

You have to build your organization to succeed.

Technology changes go hand-in-hand with business and organization changes.

20

Business Transformation

■ You need operational

excellence. Silos don’t work

Define and follow our

processes

Skills and training

Fully utilize the benefits of

these technologies

■ You need different skills

than 10 years ago. Ex: GIS modelers

More than Civil / Electrical

Engineers

SCADA, Comms, and analyst

skills can be a big gap.

21

Transformations at EPCOR

■ Some Challenges Knowledge transfer

Training: new staff and

transfer of existing staff

Identifying and acquiring new

skills

Integrating processes and

technologies for maximum

benefit

Keeping everything else rolling

■ Many business units

have been rebuilt

■ New leadership focused

on Operations

■ Skills assessment

■ Procedures

22

What is the Future?

■ Modified image. Original figure courtesy of BC Hydro

Future

A Culture of Safety & Excellence

IT Infrastructure

Enterprise

Circuit Topology

Distribution

Automation

Substation

Automation

AMI

And Smart

Meters

Optimal

Asset

Mgmt

Cust.

Value

High

Performance

SCADA

Telecoms

Sensors

GIS

DMS

OMS

Energy

Storage EVs Dist.

Generation

Wide

SCADA

Foundation

of a utility SCADA

AMI

And MDMS

Sensors

23

What is the Future?

■ Modified image. Original figure courtesy of BC Hydro

Future

A Culture of Safety & Excellence

IT Infrastructure

Enterprise

Circuit Topology

Distribution

Automation

Substation

Automation

Optimal

Asset

Mgmt

Cust.

Value

High

Performance

GIS

DMS

OMS

Energy

Storage EVs Dist.

Generation

Wide

SCADA

Foundation

of a utility

Foundation

of Smart Grid

Enabled Outcomes

Continual Drive

Sig

nif

ican

t T

ran

sfo

rma

tio

n

SCADA

AMI

And MDMS

Sensors

24

What is the Future?

■ Modified image. Original figure courtesy of BC Hydro

Future

A Culture of Safety & Excellence

IT Infrastructure

Enterprise

Circuit Topology

Distribution

Automation

Substation

Automation

Optimal

Asset

Mgmt

Cust.

Value

High

Performance

GIS

DMS

OMS

Energy

Storage EVs Dist.

Generation

Wide

SCADA

Foundation

of a utility

Foundation

of Smart Grid

Advanced Applications

Sig

nif

ican

t T

ran

sfo

rma

tio

n

SCADA

AMI

And MDMS

Sensors

25

What is the Future?

■ Modified image. Original figure courtesy of BC Hydro

Future

A Culture of Safety & Excellence

IT Infrastructure

Enterprise

Circuit Topology

Distribution

Automation

Substation

Automation

Optimal

Asset

Mgmt

Customer

Value

High

Performance

GIS

DMS

OMS

Energy

Storage EVs Dist.

Generation

Wide

SCADA

Foundation

of a utility

Foundation

of Smart Grid

Advanced Applications

Enabled Outcomes

Sig

nif

ican

t T

ran

sfo

rma

tio

n

SCADA

AMI

And MDMS

Sensors

26

What is the Future?

■ Modified image. Original figure courtesy of BC Hydro

Future

A Culture of Safety & Excellence

IT Infrastructure

Enterprise

Circuit Topology SCADA

Distribution

Automation

Substation

Automation

AMI

MDMS

Optimal

Asset

Mgmt

Customer

Value

High

Performance

Sensors GIS

DMS

OMS

Energy

Storage EVs Dist.

Generation

Wide

SCADA

Foundation

of a utility

Foundation

of Smart Grid

Advanced Applications

Enabled Outcomes

Continual Drive

Sig

nif

ican

t T

ran

sfo

rma

tio

n

27

Thanks for Listening

■ Questions?