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Distribution Efficiency Update

Distribution Efficiency Update. Distribution Efficiency – Quick Review. Tier 1 study (19 circuits) completed in 2011 Four circuits identified for pilot (Mill Creek, Clinton substations) Seven circuits had at least one unstudied adjacent circuit

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Distribution Efficiency Update

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  1. Distribution Efficiency Update

  2. Distribution Efficiency – Quick Review • Tier 1 study (19 circuits) completed in 2011 • Four circuits identified for pilot (Mill Creek, Clinton substations) • Seven circuits had at least one unstudied adjacent circuit • Identified influential circuit parameters for CVR • Simplified Measurement & Verification Protocol for pilot • 2012 savings target: 0 – 0.111 aMW (972 MWh) from pilot • Planned Tier 2 study, circuit prioritization

  3. PacifiCorp’s 2012 Activities • Engaged in industry research • DSTAR(www.dstar.org) Project P13-7 (still in progress) • Distribution Systems Testing Application and Research • NEETRAC(www.neetrac.gatech.edu) Project 11-136 (still in progress) • National Electric Energy Testing Research and Applications Center • Engaged in Regional Technical Forum (RTF) • Automated CVR Subcommittee & protocol development • Review of applicable PacifiCorp standards • Clinton and Mill Creek pilot projects • Tier 2 study in Washington

  4. DSTAR Findings • Demand :: Voltage relationship varies w/ feeder, time of day, season, and over the long term • Estimating circuit CVR factors from lab values (bottom up) cannot work (too little information) • Accurate long-term day on/ day off is extremely difficult • Increased frequency & severity of voltage sags • Software estimates may not suffice for M&V

  5. NEETRAC Findings • Statistical analysis performed on pilot by Palmetto Electric Cooperative (SE South Carolina) • Could not apply RTF’s Automated CVR Protocol #1 due to limited data • 13 interested utilities participating in project • Demand :: Voltage varies w/ temperature, humidity, demand on previous day, and demand on same day of previous week • Must be analyzed on circuit by circuit and day by day basis

  6. RTF Progress • Currently two custom CVR protocols exist • Simplified VO M&V Protocol (Approved 5/2010) • Automated CVR Protocol #1 (Approved 4/2004) • Both are under review for compliance w/ new (6/1/2011) RTF guidelines*, including: • A maximum error introduced by sampling • Sources stated for all assumptions • Results are reliable and sufficient to meet the needs of planners and “support regulatory processes related to the adoption and planning of energy efficiency initiatives.” *Guidelines are available at http://www.nwcouncil.org/Energy/RTF/Measures/Support/

  7. Questioning Protocol Assumption #1 • Loads do not have to be distributed evenly?

  8. Questioning Protocol Assumption #2 • End-of-line voltage varies linearly with load? • Example from “Robustness of Simplified VO M&V Protocol Measurement Period of 7 Days” by Utility Planning Solutions, PLLC • If end of line voltage can be estimated by load, then several calculations can be “simplified” • The chart shown was derived from software, not actual reads

  9. Questioning Protocol Assumption #2 • Actual pilot measurements show low linear correlation End of Line C phase voltage • 15-minute averages shown • Large (~ 2v) bandwidth for any given load • No model predicts this accurately Substation MVA

  10. Measurement & Verification Considerations • Physics of individual appliance (lab test) well understood • Physics of aggregate system not understood • Variables exist on every level, and they change over time • Substantial assumptions have to be made for M&V • Pre- and post-reduction average voltage must be estimated for all customer locations, all year long • Energy response to voltage reduction must be estimated for all customers, all year long (VO or CVR factor) • To date, no way to determine accuracy of estimates over time • Who can find a consistent, accurate, low cost method to determine energy savings from voltage reduction?

  11. Review of PacifiCorp Engineering Handbook • 1C.2.1 Voltage Level and Range June 2004 • High level look at ANSI service & utilization voltages • 1C.2.2 Steady State Voltage Level Nov. 1998 • Settings methodology (§ 4.1.3 and § A4) is CVR • 1C.3.1 Voltage Balance Nov. 1996 • Cites 3% maximum voltage unbalance as target • Accounts for economics, lowest total cost to customer and utility • 1E.3.1 Distribution System Planning Study Guide Feb. 2000; minor updates Feb. 2012 • Discusses current unbalance, voltage unbalance, LDC settings, and capacitor location & settings in § 7.4, 7.8 and 7.11, and economics in § 8.3 • Overall a good balance of economics and efficient system design • Simplified Protocol states that standards become “entrenched” after three years

  12. Clinton/ Mill Creek Pilot • Using two 7-day test periods for M&V yields energy savings of ±0.54 aMW, before improvements were initiated. • Example from 5Y610(VO factor 0.446): • Week of 6/25: average voltage = 122.8 • Week of 9/10: average voltage = 121.2 • How do we handle data issues? • One missing value affects all calculations • What if one of nine protocol thresholds is not met for a period of time? Is the circuit non-compliant? • At what point is the ‘cost-effective, reliable, feasible’ criterion of RCW 19.285 not met? VO energy change by Simplified Protocol: 0.14 aMW (Biennial target = 0.111 aMW)

  13. 2012 Tier 2 Study • Completed by SAIC, included 25 circuits • Confirmed Tier 1 VO factor was too high (~30%) • Reaffirmed Tier 1 finding that existing practices are very good • Company’s avoided cost updated to $86.74/MWh • Nine additional viable circuits identified • Other circuits failed to comply with ESUE* thresholds, or had too low a benefit/cost ratio (BCR) *ESUE = Energy Smart Utility Efficiency, a Bonneville Power Administration program that includes system operational metrics for efficiency, is used in the Simplified Protocol.

  14. Anticipated Tier 2 Projects • Six circuits from Orchard Substation (Yakima, WA) • Average cost $30k per circuit • 22 phase balancing locations • One line regulator bank • Lower substation base voltages from 121 to 120 & 119 • BCR = 1.15, saving estimated 0.10 aMW • Three circuits from Sunnyside Substation (Sunnyside, WA) • Average cost $68k per circuit • 4 phase balancing locations • One line regulator bank • Lower substation base voltage from 121 to 119 • BCR = 1.48, saving estimated 0.08 aMW • M&V alternatives are being discussed

  15. Washington DE Plan • 2013 • Stay engaged with the industry • RTF hopes to have new protocol usable by 2013 Q3 • Continue biennial pilot with Orchard T-3797 and T-5035 • Consider M&V by software • No further detailed circuit studies • 2014 • Implement Sunnyside T-3570

  16. Extra Slide

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