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This report discusses the complexities of maintaining electric system reliability in the wake of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station's closure. Key topics include the implications of renewable energy sources, the necessity for dispatchable local generation, and the critical balance between generation output and demand. It examines the varying impacts on reliability from environmental factors and the need for updates in transmission infrastructure. With a projected shortfall of over 3000 MW, we must explore innovative approaches to meet future electricity needs while adhering to regulatory standards.
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Topics for Today • What is “The Grid?” • Things that affect reliability • Renewables and reliability • The Need for dispatchable Local Generation
Preliminary Points • Generation output must match demand • We operate at 60 Cycles PS. If demand causes a drop to 59.6, we drop load. • Impacts to any part of the system will affect our ability to deliver power • Some impacts can be anticipated, others can be hard to predict • Time for recovery following an event depends on the nature of the impact • Time of year/weather will play a part on what we do for recovery since demand varies
Generation • Hydro Generation • Old Steam Generation • Combined Cycle • Single Cycle Gas Turbines • Renewable • Small Hydro • Wind • Geothermal or biomass • Solar
Small Hydro Generation • RPS Standard Generally less than 30 MW • Many of these are run of the river: No reservoir
Natural Gas Fired Generation • Combined Cycle • Start with a gas turbine (think big jet engine) This spins one generator • Exhaust gases (which are real hot) are used to heat water into steam which in turn spins more generators • Not well suited for peaker power • Peakers • Single Cycle Gas Turbine • Spins a generator
Renewable • Wind • Wind must be within a certain range of velocity • Peak Wind Generation in SCE territory is midnight to 6:00 a.m. • Solar • Only works in sunlight • Requires large land area • Project 500 MW on 4500 acres • Geothermal • Small Hydro • Storage technology is needed to deal with the variable nature of renewable generation
Transmission • Transmitting large amounts of power over long distances • Different voltages • 500 KV • 230KV • 66KV • Some older systems • 115KV • 33KV
Substations • Grid Control • Outages • Reduce voltages from transmission levels down to distribution levels • Components: • Switch Yard • Transformers • Reactors or condensers • Capacitors
Distribution • Delivers power to customers • 12 KV • Original system design was for the power to flow in one direction
Why can’t we just have generation in the desert? • Loss of transmission will result in blackouts • Transmission lines are only capable of carrying a certain amount of power • Regulatory Restrictions • Physical Limitations • There must be balance in the system with a certain amount of generation in the load center
Impacts to Reliability • Impacts to Transmission • Fires • Floods • Wind • Impacts at Substations • Catastrophic Failures • Transformers • Collateral Damage • Long Term Reconstruction • Environmental damage • Capacitors • Potential PCB issue • Distribution • Wind and Fire
Renewables can create problems in reliability • Small Hydro=run of the river…not reliable when the streams are down • Geothermal: Not enough • Solar: Intermittent • Wind: Intermittent
What is a mother, or SCE, to do? SONGS is out. This can’t be fixed
When does 2200=500 • SONGS was about 2200 MW of generation Capacity • It was baseload generation which means it ran at near 100% capacity factor • But…for the near term, SCE is looking at a need for around 500 MWs of gas fired generation in Los Angeles area. This is a contingency back up to… • Preferred resources of Energy Efficiency, DR, Storage
Factors that resulted in the drop • Energy efficiency programs • Demand response • Transmission upgrades • There has been a substantial increase in renewable generation which is, to a certain extent, offsetting the need for fossil generation. But remember there are problems created by renewables • This only a near term forecast; long term we will need greater capacity • California Independent System Operator is looking at at a possible need for over 3000 MWs • So what?
There is still a need for new gas fired generation • This generation is dispatchable • It can fill in the “gaps” created by renewable generation • Also needed for voltage support • But we need some reform of the NSR Requirements • In the South Coast Air Basin we are in attainment for PM10 • Offsets are still required by SCAQMD Regulations • Cannot change that unless there is a change to SB 288 • This will require a programmatic approach that is achievable: attractive to the environmental groups • There are no easy solutions but it will require thoughtful ideas