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A Methodology to Consider Combined Electrical Infrastructure and Real-Time Power-Flow Impact Costs in Planning Large-Scale Re...

Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
Conference Name
IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Expo, 2010
Conference Location
Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America
Conference Date
-

The U.S federal government's strategic vision encouraging renewable energy production has
motivated several new energy generation projects. Among them are large-scale renewable energy
farm building efforts, where one considers the renewable resource potential along with land,
equipment and installation costs. The goal in the planning phase of these efforts is to maximize
the return on investment as well as the utilization of resources. The challenge, however, that is
specific to integrating new generation is the need to include the operational (both construction as
well as run-time) cost of introducing power to the existing infrastructure. In this paper, we
propose a methodology to compute and include energy transmission line proximity (a
construction time cost) and thermal-overload, and voltage out-of-range (an infrastructure cost)
factors. Thus we consider both distance to infrastructure and the power-flow impacts when we
plan to “tap” into an existing infrastructure. We present results for a simulation study over
regions in Texas, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico and Oklahoma and discuss the observations.