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Planning For Wind

Planning For Wind. Eric Laverty November 8-9th, 2010. Topics. Prioritizing wind sources Why this is different Planning for the integration of wind Incremental vs. Aggregate Methodologies Results Cost allocation. Process. Physics. Policy. 3 P’s. Success rests on 3 P’s

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Planning For Wind

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  1. Planning For Wind Eric Laverty November 8-9th, 2010

  2. Topics • Prioritizing wind sources • Why this is different • Planning for the integration of wind • Incremental vs. Aggregate • Methodologies • Results • Cost allocation

  3. Process Physics Policy 3 P’s • Success rests on 3 P’s • Process: Planning process must ask and answer appropriate questions on an appropriate timeline • Physics: Regional Generation Outlet Study is the first step in using alternative planning methods to identify network upgrades to support interconnection of large quantities of generation in remote areas • Policy: Filed methodology for cost sharing and recovery

  4. Physics—Where The Generators Are

  5. Location, Location, Location • Generator sites need • Land • Fuel • Transmission • Water (steam, hydro) • Pre-Open Access • Integrated resource planning • Gas turbine boom • Big gas lines crossed big transmission lines • Locations were typically near load • Wind boom • Renewable resources are not easily transported • Fuel location primary driver

  6. Challenges We Face Now • Aligning the “physics” with “policy” • Unbounded supply fighting for rights to finite capacity to meet a finite demand • How and how far to expand the transmission capacity • Who pays and how do they recover • Melding wind resources into the Energy Market

  7. The Physics Question Incremental Planning Aggregate Planning Develop expected demand Determine likely sources Determine the transmission needed to deliver the energy • Study each wind generator as they are proposed • Develop the transmission build-out on a generator by generator basis • This was the bulk of our pre-queue reform process

  8. Planning Model Evolution In order to achieve its planning objectives , the Midwest ISO has transformed its transmission expansion planning model; this process will continue to mature as experience is gained • Reliability-Based Model • Focused primarily on grid reliability • Typically considers a short time horizon • Seeks to minimize transmission build Value-Based Model Focused on value while maintaining reliability Reflects appropriate project time scales Seeks to identify transmission infrastructure that maximizes value Identifies the comprehensive value of projects

  9. Methodology—Step 1 • Pick multiple sets of “wind zones” • Utilize available wind, land data • Create “indicative” transmission plans to move energy from the zones to load • “Wall Analysis” • Discuss the indicative plans with broader study stakeholders • Especially those that asked you to do the study • Weed out obvious “no” conditions • Select options for rigorous study • Then proceed to step 2

  10. The Transmission Solution • In 2009 and 2010 undertook the Regional Generation Outlet Study to meet current Midwest ISO Renewable Portfolio Standards of ~15% Balancing Generation and Transmission Investment Goal Higher transmission cost lower capacity cost High capacity cost low transmission Minimum Total Cost:, energy, capacity and transmission Total Cost ($) Capacity cost H L Transmission cost L H

  11. The best fit solution appears to be a transmission overlay premised on a combination of wind zones in all Midwest ISO states 345 kV and 765 kV scenarios are under consideration Transmission costs are similar between the two scenarios with current estimates of $13 to $14 billion Regional Generation Outlet Study Cost To Achieve Local Generation Regional Generation Local and Regional Generation Mix

  12. Regional Generation Outlet Study Renewable Energy Zones

  13. Methodology Step 2 • Use your rigorous tools • Production cost simulations • Load flow analyses • Stability studies • Short circuit studies • Formulate your questions • Plan your rigorous analysis to answer the question

  14. Step 2 applied • Question: • “How do we reliably deliver energy from renewable sources, in the selected zones, to meet the Renewable Portfolio Standard laws?” • Measures of success: • MWhr delivered • NERC planning standards met

  15. Step 2 Techniques * Or until time limit, or solution tolerance, is met • Start with indicative plans • Run production cost analyses • More/fewer lines needed to deliver energy? • Take results, run power flow? • More lines needed for reliability? • Iterate until both success measures met* • Stability/short circuit • More lines? New breakers?

  16. Results • Complete tie • Scenarios meeting success measures were furthered measured on cost parameters • Construction/operation • Land use • River crossings • Etc • 3 tested scenarios were within rounding error on all measures • Now what?

  17. No - we can delay decision – for a bit - by making a set of investments with relatively low risk/reward ratio Candidate MVP Portfolio would meet criteria such as the following: Support renewable integration at a level likely to still be required under future policy shifts Retain the flexibility to support the choice of 345 kV or 765 kV as the overall strategy Provide sufficient value to be in the public interest on a stand alone basis Should We Wait to Build Until Consensus on Voltage Strategy is Achieved? Candidate MVP Portfolio 765 kV 345 kV

  18. Candidate Multi Value Project Portfolio Map

  19. Next Steps • Business case around the first portfolio wave • Determine optimal selection of about $5B in investment • Work with sponsoring entities to provide information for the permitting processes • Monitor energy policy • Review the plans for compatibility with the changes in energy policy • Higher RPS? • Carbon restrictions? • Other?

  20. Construction and Funding

  21. Thank You! • Questions? • Contact Info: • Eric Laverty • Director, Transmission Access Planning • elaverty@midwestiso.org

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