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The draft ENTSO-E NC RfG and its potential im -pact on cost-effective grid support by wind power. Stephan Wachtel, GE Representing the EWEA Working Group Grid Code Regulations. EWEA 2012 Annual Event. The EWEA Working Group Grid Code Regulation (WG GCR).
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The draft ENTSO-E NC RfG and its potential im-pact on cost-effective grid support by wind power Stephan Wachtel, GE Representing the EWEA Working Group Grid Code Regulations EWEA 2012 Annual Event
The EWEA Working Group Grid Code Regulation (WG GCR) • Main objective: Harmonisation and Improvement of Grid Code Requirements for Wind Turbine Generators and Wind Power Plants in EU • The WG is formed as an internal EWEA working group with representatives from manufacturers, developers, operators, consultants and test & research institutes. • Established in 2006, 5.. 6 meetings p. y. typically in Brussels • Convenor: Frans van Hulle, Technical Expert for EWEA • Representing EWEA at ENTSO-E level with regard to Network Codes including User Group meetings and consultations • 400 individual comments & proposal to the public NC RfG consultation were collected by WG, 70 provided to ENTSO-E as official EWEA response. For further information please contact: Paul Wilczek, EWEA: pwi@ewea.org
(Hi)Story of a decade of Grid Code developments in the EU • Highly diverse and detailed codes appear constantly • Inadequate formulations and definitions • Codes change frequently (“moving target”) • Lots of interpretations & discussions arise constantly for individual projects • Lack of justification e.g. by cost-benefit analyses Consequence: • Lack of common best practice (routine & consolidation) • All involved stakeholders face high, exceeding costs for products and projects • Deficits in Grid Codes endanger long term system security (and this the real BIG money)
EWEA Generic Grid Code Format The proposed improved way forward • Wind related complete document. • A sequential and structural commonly agreed best practice • Sharp and clearspecifications • Reference to POC And the desired pathway... • Constructive engineering dialogue with ENTSO-E • National codes could be adopted gradually over a relative long time period (wind part) • Revision or changes would have been relative easy • Technical numbers could be adopted/changed gradually
Grey Zones: Cross-check ENTSO-E draft NC RfG vs. GGCF Legend: Meets GGCF Slight mismatch Strong mismatch or even not addressed at all by ENTSO-E not addressed at all by ENTSO-E, but not critical General Items Steady State Performance Dynamic Performance
Further thoughts on the NC RfG • The NC RfGis not yet a sharp and clear specification in all respects • It results from ENTSO-E deliberations rather than dialogue with relevant stakeholders and this is a weakness. Incomplete TSO understanding of generator issues (and vice versa) leads to sub-optimal proposals and encourages conflict (confrontational ENTSO-E/stakeholder meetings and over 6000 comments on the draft NC) • Mechanism for revision are subject to procedures of EU Laws. • Technical numbers are hard coded into the NC ( inflexible) or left for determination by Relevant TSOs (possibly not transparent and unfair) • National Codes must be adapted over a specified and relatively short period which may affect the quality of the outcome and will impact on the resources of all stakeholders.
Key principles for a Grid Code: complete, unambiguous, open On the other hand: Openness is necessary to enable the development of more cost-effective technologies On the one hand: Lack of completeness and ambiguous language leads non-cost effective solutions The right balance must be found. Complete, well defined, explicit Enables cost-effectiveness Within a “solid precise frame”: Maximum space for the development of cost-effective technologies and solutions Gaps Costs!!
Developing cost-effective solutions need ALL relevant information Connection Requirements and Processes Connection requirements determine key conditions for the development of cost-effective grid-support by wind power. But further information, determined in other Networks Codes need to be known, too! Based on this an overall and fully transparent cost-benefit- analyses could be support. System Operation Ancillary Services & Remuneration System Planning
Ongoing tasks for EWEA: Next steps ENTSO-E / ACER / EC 3-year workprogramfor NC-drafting • The NC “RfG” is just one important Code among 15 further ones • EWEA will participate atfur-ther stakeholder consultations • The EWEA GGCF will be developed and promoted as a template and best practice for implementation of enforced NCs on national level.
Summary & Conclusions • The wind industry proved: Wind power successfully supports power system security (even under existing EU grid codes and their deficits) • Proposals by EWEA to improve the draft NC RfG and to overcome identified critical deficits are available. • At the end the entire set of NCs will answer this: Will the Network Codes enable or block the development of cost-effective grid support by wind power? • EWEA will continue to constructively participate in the stakeholder consultation during the whole developing & drafting process and national implementation.