1 / 19

Large Disturbance in the European Power System on the 4th of November 2006

Large Disturbance in the European Power System on the 4th of November 2006. CAMS/RRPA Panel Session Mitigation and Prevention of Cascading Outages: Methodologies and Practical Applications PES General Meeting, Vancouver, Canada July 24, 2013

conroy
Download Presentation

Large Disturbance in the European Power System on the 4th of November 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Large Disturbance in the European Power System on the 4th of November 2006 CAMS/RRPA Panel Session Mitigation and Prevention of Cascading Outages: Methodologies and Practical Applications PES General Meeting, Vancouver, Canada July 24, 2013 Janusz Bialek (Durham), Vladimir Terzija (Manchester), Taiying Zheng (Manchester), Walter Sattinger (Swissgrid) janusz.bialek@durham.ac.uk

  2. Durham University • Site of two UNESCO Wold Heritage Sites • 3rd oldest university in England

  3. PMAPS 2014, Durham • International Conference on Probabilistic Methods Applied to Power Systems, 7-10 July 2014 • Paper submission deadline 30 Nov 2013 • www.dur.ac.uk/pmaps.2014, pmaps.admin@durham.ac.uk

  4. Source of data and diagrams: UCTE “Final Report System Disturbance on 4 November 2006” • 15M households affected, 16,724 MW lost • The worst disturbance in 50 years of UCTE/ENTSOE in terms of the number of TSOs affected and frequency deviations involved • Duration 1 hour and 35 minutes (22:10-23:45) but only 38 minutes three island operation

  5. Loading pre-disturbance Voltage phase angle differences in the UCTE system at 22:00 • East-West transfer • 15 GW of wind (5.5%) • High flows around Germany Source: UCTE Source: UCTE Abschlussbericht zur Systemstörung 4. Nov. 2006

  6. Note the difference between scheduled and actual flows (e.g. FR-D, FR-BE) due to loop flow phenomenon • Especially important D-NL, D-PL due to high wind Source: UCTE

  7. Timeline • 18 Sept: a shipyard request EON for a routine disconnection of double circuit 380 kV line in Northern Germany on 5 Nov • 3 Nov: the shipyard request to bring forward the disconnection by 3 hours • EON agrees provisionally but does not modify Day Ahead Congestion Forecast (DACF) distributed to all TSOs • 4 Nov, 7 pm: EON informs RWE and TenneT about new time for the line outage • 9.30 pm: EON concludes empirically, without updated (N-1) analysis, that the outage would be secure (it wasn’t!) Image: http://www.cruise-ship-report.com/News/110506.htm

  8. RWE does (N-1) analysis of its area which indicates high but secure loading • 9.38: EON disconnects the line • 9.39-41: warnings of high flows • EON assesses the situation empirically, without simulations, and decides to couple a busbar to reduce the current by 80 A • Result: the current increases by 67 A and the line trips • Cascading line tripping all over UCTE and separation into 3 regions with different frequencies Source: UCTE

  9. 10 GW surplus 51.4 Hz 8.9 GW deficit 49 Hz 0.8 GW deficit 49.7 Hz Source: UCTE

  10. Western Europe: 8.9 GW deficit • Drop of frequency halted by load shedding • But frequency drop caused tripping of 10.7 GW of generation (40% wind)

  11. North-Eastern Europe: 10 GW surplus • Initial rise of frequency halted by AGC and tripping of frequency-sensitive generation (mainly wind) • As frequency started to drop, windmills started to reconnect automatically worsening the situation • Situation stabilised by manual action of TSOs Source: UCTE

  12. South-Eastern Europe: modest 0.8 GW deficit • No load shedding activated, subsystem (N-1) secure Source: UCTE

  13. Resynchronisation • A number of uncoordinated unsuccessful attempts made without knowledge of the overall UCTE situation • Full resynchronisation after 38 minutes Source: UCTE

  14. UCTE root cause analysis • Main points: • (N-1) security rule, inadequate inter-TSO coordination • Lack of situational awareness • Other factors (wind farms, lack of coordination)

  15. Improvements since 2006: situational awareness • Web-based visibility of cross-border flows in Europe, ACE, generation • traffic light system to indicate security, control reserves and state of IT infrastructure • RAAS – real-time awareness and alarming system, EAS (ENTSO-E awareness) • all TSOs have the same view • the information maintenance is done on two central points with highly redundant infrastructure.

  16. Improvements since 2006: coordinated (N-1) security analysis • All national files are merged into one common CE load flow file • each TSO downloads the complete system and perform complete (n-1) calculation. • Evening phone/web/video conference of all the TSOs to coordinate remedial actions

  17. Further Measures: Synchronized Measurement Technology, WAMS WAMS HSE/PMU-SE Situational Awareness Dynamic Security Assessment Decision Making

  18. Data Records during 39 Minutes of the Islanding System Operation All measurements are synchronised by GPS signal Source: W.Sattinger, Swissgrid

  19. Large Disturbance in the European Power System on the 4th of November 2006 CAMS/RRPA Panel Session Mitigation and Prevention of Cascading Outages: Methodologies and Practical Applications PES General Meeting, Vancouver, Canada July 24, 2013 Janusz Bialek (Durham), Vladimir Terzija (Manchester), Taiying Zheng (Manchester), Walter Sattinger (Swissgrid) janusz.bialek@durham.ac.uk

More Related