What

ARPA-E has funded GRACE to help solve two problems prevalent in current electrical power systems:

  • Reserve targets are sub-optimal:

To guarantee that conventional electric generating units have head and floor room to ramp power generation up and down as needed, operators set a target for reserves. The rules for setting these reserves do not consider updated power assets’ or current system’s conditions and seek to minimize the expected value of costs, but not risk.

  • Asset’s risk does not play a role in their scheduling:

Operator’s schedule assets (e.g., generators, storage systems)to minimize the expected value of the costs of the system, but these schedules are set without considering their role in exacerbating or reducing the system’s risk

See a brief introduction to the power system’s operational challenges that GRACE tackles. 

How

The GRACE approach has two pillars:

  • Rigorous characterization of the uncertainty on the performance of all power generating and energy storage assets
    • This characterization accounts for the intrinsic and external (weather-based) determinants of the performance of the power system’s assets
    • Characterization of uncertainty uses synthetic-time series to capture extremes in actual and forecast errors not represented in historical data
    • Assessments of intrinsic risk consider the impact of an asset’s characteristics and maintenance in its transition from one operating state to another
  • Development of a novel Energy Management System  that determines risk-aware reserve targets and schedules resources based on these targets and the resources risk profiles
    • The risk-aware reserve targets are those that minimize a function of both expected value and risk of costs
    • Risk-aware reserves are pre-calculated for a partition of the system’s conditions and updated as feasible and necessary. This creates libraries of risk-aware reserves.
    • Risk-aware reserves are inputs into the scheduling processes currently used by ISOs
    • Final schedules are obtained after adjusting all units’ commitment by considering current uncertainty on the system’s conditions and updated assets’ risk.

See a description of GRACE’s five components

Who

  • A team with expertise in electric power systems, large-scale optimization under uncertainty, risk valuation & risk management, control of dynamic systems, hydro-meteorological modeling, machine learning, and data science. In alphabetic order: Dartmouth College: Jim Smith; Duke University: David Brown, Ali Daraeepour, Mauricio Hernandez, Dalia Patino-Echeverri, Xiaodong Zhang; North Carolina State University: Jordan Kern, Luis Prieto, Henry Ssembatya; Ohio State University: Antonio Conejo, Gonzalo Flores; PJM: Hong Chen; PNNL: Veronica Adetola, Arnab Bhattacharya, Pavel Etingov, Laurie Miller, Xueqing Sun.  Advisory Board: Mark Oliver (Duke Energy); Eric Rohlfing (Duke University); Charles Rossmann (Southern Company).

Where

  • We will demonstrate the benefits of the GRACE approach with data from Duke Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Progress, which after merging in 2012, conform the largest vertically integrated electric utility in the United States
  • This region ranks second for its PV installed generation capacity and in 2019 accounted for 10% of the solar electricity generated in the country. Its climate goals allow testing the GRACE approach under multiple conditions: 56% of carbon-free electricity by 2021, 61% by 2035, and 100% net-zero by 2050.

 

Source: https://www.duke-energy.com/Our-Company/IRP

When

  • Before the summer of 2023, we will have demonstrated improvements in the costs, emissions, and reliability of Duke Energy’s system, assuming its current fleet and the one it expects to have in 2035
  • In 2023 we expect Duke Energy to pilot the adoption of the GRACE approach for its daily operations in the studied regions and, after successful demonstration of benefits, to begin exploring adoption in its other subsidiaries