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Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle Impact Study for the Progress Energy Carolinas Territory. Mike Waters November 2, 2007. Agenda. Utility Background Market Model Results Impact on Progress Energy Load Curves Generation Mix Cost Emissions Summary. Utility Background.
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Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle Impact Study for the Progress Energy Carolinas Territory Mike Waters November 2, 2007
Agenda • Utility Background • Market Model Results • Impact on Progress Energy • Load Curves • Generation Mix • Cost • Emissions • Summary
Progress Energy Territory • Fortune 250 Energy Company • Headquarters in Raleigh, NC • Serves 3.1 million customers in FL and NC/SC
Progress Energy Territory • 21,000 MW total generation capacity • 36 sites through the Carolinas, FL, and GA
Sales percentage of PHEVs achieves ~26% by 2030, resulting in 330k vehicles on the road
Three different charging scenarios were evaluated for the incremental load • Investigated three charging scenarios • Uncontrolled • Delayed (after 10 PM) • Off-peak optimization • Assumptions: • Similar to NREL Xcel study • PHEV20: Performance modeled from ADVISOR • Fleet average 5.3 kWh/day providing 40% miles • 120V 20A circuit (charging rate ~ 1.4 kW) • 5% T&D loss
Case 2: Delayed charging helps push the demand later into the shoulder peak region
Case 3: Optimized off-peak charging is the most ideal case in terms of cost and timing
As greater control is placed on managing the load timing, the percentage of coal/nuclear increases
Focusing PHEV load off-peak reduces incremental generation costs up to 60%
Wholesale electricity cost in “gasoline equivalent” terms ranges from $0.44 to $1.16 per gallon
Rates are considerably cheaper than gas in all cases, but incremental profit depends on rate scheduling Standard Residential Rate ~ 9 cents/kWh Profit Loss! TOU Rate ~ 4.5 cents/kWh * Based on 670 GWh/329k vehicles
Charging technology must advance between different charging scenarios
Despite increase in coal mix, SO2 and NOx emission rates decrease while CO2 increases slightly off-peak
Net PHEV SO2 emissions are much greater, although cap system will ensure no new emissions overall
Net PHEV NOx emissions are equal to or slightly greater than a standard hybrid Note: NREL/Xcel study assumed no reduction in HEV tailpipe emissions, estimating total HEV rate at 4.6 and providing a more favorable PHEV comparison. This study assumes HEV reduction due to improved mileage.
Net PHEV CO2 emissions are slightly lower than a standard hybrid in all cases
Result Summary • Incremental load <1% of capacity • No additional capacity required if delayed/off-peak • Effective fuel costs much less than gasoline • Coal use doubles moving towards off-peak • NOx/SOx emissions decrease while CO2 increases moving towards off-peak optimization • Mixed results for vehicle emission comparison • Must take cap system into account • CO2 reduced for all comparisons
Recommendation Summary • PHEV technology is a viable and preferred technology alternative • Engage in active promotion of technology and adoption • Develop internal, cross-functional teams • Develop external network/alliance • Provide customer incentives • Push for legislation • Education (customers and employees) • Tie to reduced carbon technology