Options
Factors Influencing Wind Energy Curtailment
Author(s)
Date Issued
2011-04
Date Available
2013-10-11T15:52:57Z
Abstract
Nonphysically firm wind generation connections (i.e., those to which curtailment can apply) may be necessary for significant wind integration to congested transmission networks. A study of factors influencing this associated wind energy curtailment is, therefore, of timely importance. In this paper, the wind curtailment estimation effects of natural inter-yearly wind profile variability, system demand-profile/fuel-price parameter uncertainty, and minimum system inertial constraints are studied in detail. Results indicate that curtailment estimation error can be reduced by appropriate wind data year-length and sampling-rate choice, though a pragmatic consideration of system parameter uncertainty should be maintained. Congestion-related wind energy curtailment risk due to such parameter uncertainty exhibits appreciable interlocational dependency, suggesting there may be scope for effective curtailment risk management. The coincidence of wind energy curtailment estimated due to network thermal congestion and system-wide inertial-stability issues also has commercial significance for systems with very high wind energy penetration targets, suggesting there may be appreciable interaction between different sources of curtailment in reality.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Energy
Volume
2
Issue
2
Start Page
185
End Page
193
Copyright (Published Version)
2011 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
Burke factors_influencing_wind_energy curtailment.pdf
Size
266.65 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
988ed7ae8aa041a571e1e4e0d5fbaba4
Owning collection
Mapped collections