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NW Loss of Load Probability James Gall Power Supply Analyst 509.495.2189.

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Presentation on theme: "NW Loss of Load Probability James Gall Power Supply Analyst 509.495.2189."— Presentation transcript:

1 NW Loss of Load Probability James Gall Power Supply Analyst james.gall@avistacorp.com 509.495.2189

2 LOLP Approach  Anchors on Avista’s 2005 Integrated Resource Plan  Uses AURORA XMP version 7.5.0.43 regional database and functionality  Studies 1 st and 3 rd week of January 2007  Simulates 2,000 iterations with variances in load, hydro, and thermal & transmission forced outages

3 Western Interconnect Topology Northwest Areas

4 Northwest Demand Distribution  All zones within AURORA XMP have a demand distribution  Each area is assigned a mean, co- variance (Stdev/mean) and a correlation to the Northwest  For modeling purpose each zone assumes a normal distribution  Co-variance and correlation statistics can be found in the 2005 Avista IRP, and are based on recent FERC 714 forms

5 Northwest Hydro Distribution 26%92%59%  Northwest, S. Idaho, Montana, and British Columbia each have a distribution of hydro energy  Mean and covariance statistics are based on the NWPP 2003-04 regulation hydro study (1928- 1988)  For modeling purposes hydro is assumed to be normally distributed based on the options available to be modeled within AURORA XMP Lowest Regional Year 1932: 37.7% Lowest Northwest Year 1945: 32.5% Highest Year 1974: Regional: 87.3%, Northwest: 83.1%

6 Northwest Thermal Distribution  Each thermal unit in the Western Interconnect has a forced outage rate (FOR) and mean time to repair (MTTR) assigned to it  AURORA XMP logic and assumptions are used to simulate when thermal outages occur

7 Northwest Transmission Outages Transmission Link Percent of Time at Full Capacity Percent Time between zero and full capacity Percent Chance of 100% outage Montana to Northwest 2,200 to NW; 1,350 to MT 85%14.9%0.01% BC to Northwest 3,150 to NW; 2,000 to BC 85%14.9%0.01% So. Idaho to Northwest 2,400 to NW; 1,200 to S. Idaho 85%14.9% 0.01% N. Nevada to Northwest 300 to NW; 300 to N. Nevada 85%14.9%0.01% COI 3,675 to NW; 4,136 to N. Cal (seasonal) 85%14.9%0.01% PCDI 3,100 to NW; 3,100 to S. Cal (seasonal) 99%0.5%  Transmission paths that are directly connected to the Northwest are assigned an availability factor  These availabilities are not based on any historical or predicted outages and should be refined

8 Energy Exports- Jan aMW  4,538 aMW are exported from the region  British Columbia and S. California are a majority importing areas  Few hours where there are no regional exports

9 Energy Imports - Jan aMW  1,781 aMW are imported to the region  Most of importing energy comes from Wyoming (Jim Bridger Plant)  Montana imports are shown on the next slide

10 Internal Trading  Chart shows to & from area exchanges between the three northwest areas  Major exchange is from Montana to the Pacific Northwest

11 LOLP Results  5 Iterations had a loss of load; 0.25% of 2,000 iterations (1 in 400 Years)  103 hours had loss of load; 0.015% of 672,000 hours studied Worst Hour of Five Load Loss Iterations Analysis

12 Next Steps  Receive feedback from Technical Committee  More accurately model transmission outages and increase the quantity of lines with outages  Record more outputs on hourly basis  Add internal transmission paths to the Northwest  Evaluate available imports from other regions  Benchmark results to other models


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