1 / 14

DOE Smart Grid Activities

Defining and implementing Smart Grid with modern technologies for optimized operations, customer empowerment, and resilience against disruptions. Workshop insights, metrics development, and stakeholder engagement highlighted.

lverdi
Download Presentation

DOE Smart Grid Activities

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. DOE Smart Grid Activities PSERC 2008 Summer Planning Workshop August 4, 2008 South Lake Tahoe, CA Phil Overholt Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE)

  2. OE Requirements on Implementing Title XIII Smart Grid Requirements • Establish a Smart Grid Advisory Committee • Establish a Federal Smart Grid Task Force • Submit to Congress a report concerning the status of Smart Grid system deployments • Submit to Congress a study of private wire laws on the development on combined heat and power facilities • Submit to Congress a quantitative assessment concerning the security implications of Smart Grid system deployments • Carry out a program to research, develop, and demonstrate Smart Grid technologies • Smart Grid interoperability framework • Establish a Smart Grid regional demonstration initiative showcasing advanced technologies • Establish a federal matching funds program

  3. Smart Grid Activity • Smart Grid Implementation Workshop held June 19-20 • NARUC-FERC Smart Grid Collaborative meeting, July 20-23 • Federal Smart Grid Task Force Meeting July 28 • Smart Grid Subcommittee operating within the Electricity Advisory Committee • NIST interoperability framework development • Reports to Congress mandated under Title XIII

  4. Smart Grid Implementation Workshop • Conducted June 19-20, 2008, in DC, with broad stakeholder engagement to define Smart Grid functionalities and develop key metrics: • Workshop limited to 150 attendees • Seven principal functionalities reaffirmed/sharpened • Metrics for each functionality were developed • Majority of attendees interested in a follow-on Smart Grid Work Shop to define R&D paths • Work Shop report at: www.oe.energy.gov/smartgrid.htm

  5. Defining Smart Grid Modernizing the electricity delivery infrastructure using advanced digital/information technologies to deliver key defining functions Enables Informed Participation by Customers Accommodate All Generation and Storage Options Enable New Products, Services, and Markets Provide Power Quality for the Digital Economy Optimize Asset Utilization and Operate Efficiently Addresses Disturbances through Automated Prevention, Containment, and Restoration Operate Resiliently Against Attacks and Natural Disasters 7 smart grid characteristics reaffirmed through the Smart Grid Implementation Workshop held June 2008 5

  6. Developing Smart Grid Metrics Values Principal Characteristics Key Technology Areas Value Metrics Build Metrics Research Metrics National Workshop (June 2008) Area of focus Future Work Regional Meetings (2005-07) Area of focus 6

  7. Communications and Outreach for Public Awareness • Smart Grid E-Forum, Two Held - May 19 and June 16 • Planned and co-sponsored with EEI • Objective is to share industry views on what constitutes a Smart Grid • Next E-Forum – register at www.eei.org/DOESmartGrid2 • GridWeek 2008, September 23-25, 2008 in DC Seewww.gridweek.comfor details • Smart Grid Book, a non-technical Smart Grid Primer, to be released at GridWeek • DOE Smart Grid Websitewww.oe.energy.gov/smartgrid.htm

  8. Backup

  9. Stakeholder Communicationsand Outreach Smart Grid: An Introduction An illustrative document on: What is at risk for the grid as it stands What is the smart grid What is the value How does technology fit in Scheduled for completion in September Lead Contractor: Litos Advertising & Design GridWeek 2008, September 23-25, 2008 in DC GridWise Alliance and OE as co-chairs Becoming the national event on smart grid Enabling energy efficiency Smart Grid in a carbon economy Future of Energy Utility operational efficiencies New business models • Interoperability of a Smart Grid • Securing the Smart Grid • Implementing EISA 2007 • Smart Grid Success Areas • International Smart Grid Summit in conjunction with GridWeek on September 22 www.gridweek.com 9

  10. Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy ReliabilityElectricity Advisory Committee • Advise on reliability, security and policy issues • Review programs and initiatives • Advise on current and future supply adequacy • Identify emerging issues related to capacity, production, delivery, reliability, security and regulation • Advise on coordination between DOE, State, regional officials, and the private sector on supply, demand, and reliability • Advise on coordination between Federal, State, and utility industry in the event of disruption or emergency http://www.oe.energy.gov/eac.htm

  11. Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy ReliabilityElectricity Advisory Committee • Initial Meeting May 20 in Washington, DC • Linda Stuntz - Stuntz, Davis and Staffier, Chair • Yakout Mansour - CAISO, Vice Chair • Two Subcommittees formed • Smart Grid Subcmte, Guido Bartels - IBM, Chair • Storage Subcmte, Brad Roberts – S&C, Chair • Ad hoc working group formed to focus on Electricity Supply Adequacy • Next Meeting September 25, 2008

  12. NIST EISA Domain Experts Working Groups (DEWGs) To support NIST within individual technical domains to: • draft the standards interoperability roadmap • organize domain breakout sessions at Grid-Interop • provide guidance in refining the roadmap,leading work within standards groups on implementing needed standards development and harmonization • Four DEWGs initially: • Building to Grid (B2G) • Industrial to Grid (I2G) • Home to Grid (H2G) • Transmission and Distribution (T&D)

  13. Domain Expert Working Groups B2G I2G H2G Cross-cut T&D Domain Interface NIST EISA Organization Chart DOE Smart Grid Task Force Wider EISA interaction NIST Executive NIST Smart Grid Working Group NIST Smart Grid Interoperability Framework Stakeholders Group GWAC, IEEE, NEMA, FERC, EPRI, DOE, etc. Outside contractor support (KB and meetings facilitators)

  14. NIST EISA Work Plan schematic • Work with stakeholders: • Roadmap design • GridWeek and workshop planning • Landscape Map prep 2008 DEWGs input on draft standards interoperability roadmap SG Knowledge Base development Meetings with NIST Stakeholders Ongoing Standards coordination March 08 June Aug Sept 23-25, DC GridWeek Nov. 11 Atlanta GridInterop NIST SG Workshop December 08 progress report December 2007 EISA enactment DEWGs setup Website setup Present SG Knowledge Base and Landscape Map at GridWeek Roadmap presentation and review in domain breakouts • December 2008 progress report will include: • Introduction with EISA directions and scope • Summary of completed work efforts • Standards Landscape Map and overview of Smart Grid KB. • Smart Grid Standards Roadmap version 1.0 • Summary of stakeholder input • Future year plans http://www.nist.gov/smartgrid/

More Related