Electrical Power Grid Simulators for NERC Compliance · q Web Based Technology/Demonstration 2. 3 KAFUE GORGE Grid Simulator. ... System Name Scope of Simulation Zambia Transmission

Post on 11-Feb-2020

1 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

Electrical Power Grid Simulators for NERC Compliance

2020 Power Plant Simulation ConferenceChattanooga, TN

Topics

q SOS and WSC Initial Project in Africa

q SOS Introduction – Andy Burch

q The Electrical Transmission Simulator

q The Electrical Distribution Simulator

q Web Based Technology/Demonstration

2

3

KAFUE GORGE Grid Simulator

Southern Africa Power Pool (SAPP)

4

Scope of System Simulation

5

System Name Scope of Simulation

Zambia Transmission Network 330kV to 66kV (FS),33kV (PS),11kV (SS)

Lusaka Distribution Network 33kV (FS),11kV (PS)

CEC Distribution Network 220kV to 66kV (FS),33kV (PS),11kV (SS)

Uganda Transmission Network 330kV to 66kV (FS),33kV (PS),11kV (SS)

Remaining SAPP Nations: Democratic Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Mozambique, and Namibia

SS

ZambiaTransmission

CECDistribution Lusaka

Distribution

UgandaTransmission

DRC

Zimbabwe

Namibia

Tanzania

Kenya

KAFUE GORGE Regional Training CenterGrid simulator

6

KAFUE GORGE REGIONAL TRAINING CENTERGRID SIMULATOR

7

About SOS

SOS is a leading provider of training and compliance solutions to the power industry. As all areas of electric utility operations come under increased scrutiny, SOS continues to rigorously track and interpret NERC Reliability Standards and the latest industry trends to expertly translate them into customized training and compliance programs.

Who is SOS?o Founded in 2002 by Rocky Sease

o Home office in Charlotte, NC

o 25-30 employees (local and remote)

o Approximately 300 utility companies as clients last year

o Currently have 3,160 active students

o Initially focused on transmission system

o Leader in NERC certification training

o Expanding into new areas (distribution, generation, gas)

What do we do?o NERC Certification Exam Preparation (online,

classroom, mentoring)

o NERC CEH Provider (online and classroom)

o Custom Training Development (online and classroom)

o Training Advisory Services o Training program development

o Job tasks analysis

o PER-005 compliance

o Compliance Advisory Services§ NERC 693

14

The ETS Transmission Simulator

ETS Overview

o East and West Transmission Areas

o 3 Balancing Areas

o Over 30 Substations Simulated

o Transmission Lines with voltages at 500, 345, 230, 138, 115 and 69kV

o Generation Capacity of Over 15,000 MWe

o With Generation Unitso Nuclear, Fossil, Combined Cycle

o Hydro, Solar and Wind

o Simulated Equipment such as:o Shunt and Series Capacitors and Reactors

o Transformers with and without LTC

o AGC

o Topology Span of 500x500 miles16

Why a Transmission Simulator?

17

Substation

18

Generation Summary

19

Interchange Summary

The Web Based Environment

Availability

Convenience

Validation of Learning

Upkeep

Cost

21

Why Online Simulation Training…?

22

The EDS Distribution Simulator

o National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA)

o Reinforce concepts covered in the online courses

o Currently no training simulator for Distribution Operators

o Future integration with grid and generation simulators

23

Why a Distribution Simulator?

o Generic - wide range of control room types

o Not based on a particular system. No system data available

o Determining what works best from a training perspective

o Graphics?

24

Challenges

25

Project Background

Capacitor Bank

26

27

Manual Switch

28

Manual Switch

29

Recloser

30

Simulator Demo

Demonstration

Topics

§ PER-006 – Specific Training for Personnel

31

October 1, 2020

Topics

§ PER-006 – Specific Training for Personnel

32

Topics

§ Operational Functionality

33

The phrase “operational functionality” focuses the training on how Protection Systems operate and prevent possible damage to Elements. It also addresses how RAS detects pre-determined BES conditions and automatically takes corrective actions.

Considerations for operational functionality may include, but are not limited to the following:

• Purpose of protective relays and RAS• Zones of protection• Protection communication systems (e.g., line current differential, direct transfer trip, etc.)• Voltage and current inputs• Station dc supply associated with protective functions• Resulting actions – tripping/closing of breakers; tripping of a generator step-up (GSU) transformer; or

generator ramping/tripping control functions

WSC Contact Information

34

Thank You!

top related