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While inverter-based resources include solar, wind and energy storage, NERC’s alert this week is specific to solar installations.
The alert followed NERC’s analysis of several large-scale disturbances with widespread loss of inverter-based resources that resulted in “abnormal performance” across several BES solar PV generating resources, NERC said. The recommendations may also be applicable to battery energy storage systems connected to the BES but do “not pertain to wind resources as the observed performance issues are different,” NERC said.
As the penetration of BES-connected inverter-based resources increases, “it is paramount that any performance deficiencies with existing and future generating resources be addressed in an effective and efficient manner,” NERC said.
“The inverter tripping challenge is really one of the most risky issues we have to deal with as an industry in order to ensure we can reliably interconnect the nearly 500 GW of solar we see coming online in the next 10 years,” NERC Director of Reliability Assessment and Performance Analysis John Moura said in May 2022.
NERC specifically pointed to a pair of disturbances in Odessa, Texas, in 2021 and 2022 that “resulted in abnormal performance.”
An analysis of the 2022 event concluded, “unexpected tripping of synchronous generation in addition to the abnormal reduction of power from many solar PV facilities poses a significant risk to [bulk power system] reliability.”
NERC’s recommendations call for ensuring protection settings at collector systems, and substation protection settings at generation facilties are “based on equipment ratings of the equipment they are intended to protect” and “eliminate or minimize the use of instantaneous voltage tripping.”
The recommendations also call for elimination or minimization of the use of instantaneous frequency tripping. “Frequency protection should operate on a frequency measurement over a time window,” NERC said.
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Utilities and grid operators are facing increasing threats from climate change as well as cyber and physical attacks, and are deploying a variety of responses to meet the rising challenges.
Bundling DR in wholesale markets could ease capacity shortfalls, reduce the chance of grid emergencies and help states lower carbon emissions, proponents say.
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Utilities and grid operators are facing increasing threats from climate change as well as cyber and physical attacks, and are deploying a variety of responses to meet the rising challenges.
Bundling DR in wholesale markets could ease capacity shortfalls, reduce the chance of grid emergencies and help states lower carbon emissions, proponents say.
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