http://blog.ucsusa.org/peter-oconnor/what-is-smart-charging-a-look-at-how-electric-vehicles-fit-in
What Is Smart Charging? A Look at How Electric Vehicles Fit In
JANUARY 7, 2016  Peter O’Connor

[images  
http://blog.ucsusa.org/wp-content/uploads/Dispatch.bmp
In this graphic, “Nuclear,” “Coal,” and “Geothermal” are baseload plants,
“Hydro” and “Gas CC” are load-following plants, and “Gas CT” represents
peaking units. The other resources do not fit neatly into those traditional
classifications. Source: The Western Wind and Solar Integration Study Phase
2 (
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy13osti/55588.pdf
), National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 2013.

http://blog.ucsusa.org/wp-content/uploads/PV.bmp
Source: “Implications of Wide-Area Geographic Diversity for Short-Term
Variability of Solar Power (
http://eetd.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/publications/report-lbnl-3884e.pdf
),” A. Mills and R. Wiser, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2010.
]

Can electric vehicles allow the grid to accommodate greater levels of
variable renewable energy? That’s what I’m looking to find out.

The grid of the past

The power grid has traditionally operated under the assumption that
electricity demand simply happens, and that supply must be ready on command
to meet it. This requires developing a system with several layers of
electricity supply resources:

 - “Baseload” plants of high capital cost and low operating cost run as
often as possible

 - Flexible “load-following” generators ramp up and down to match hourly
swings in demand

 - “Peaking” units, cheap to build but expensive to operate, run for
relatively few hours per year

Systems have target voltages and frequencies, but there is some tolerance
for short-term mismatches of supply and demand. (See “How the Electricity
Grid Works [
http://www.ucsusa.org/clean-energy/how-electricity-grid-works
]” for more details.)

As a 2013 paper [
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378775312014759
] notes:

“The operating principle of fossil generation is ‘burn when needed,’ a
principle simple enough that it could be followed without computers, digital
high-speed communications, or weather forecasting—precisely the conditions
when today’s electric system was created, early in the 20th century.”

The grid of the future

Now, though, we do have computers, digital high-speed communications, and
weather forecasting. We also have flexible loads such as air conditioners,
electric water heaters, and electric vehicles chargers, alongside those that
basically need power on demand, such as light bulbs and computers. These
flexible loads can shift the times in which they draw power by a few minutes
(or even hours in some cases) with no adverse impact on the quality of
energy services delivered.

We’ve also developed technologies that, although cleaner than fossil fuels
and cost-competitive, cannot be dispatched on command.

We have also greatly improved battery technology, and developed other
options for energy storage. Storage can make renewable electricity available
whenever needed, and can help baseload resources supply varying demand. 
Even as costs of storage come down, it may be more economical to first use
price signals and automatic controls to align flexible demand with supply as
much as possible, and then use storage to help meet the remaining inflexible
demands.

Diversity of loads and supply

Individual loads can be highly variable. Small appliances are turned on and
off frequently (a microwave, for example, uses large amounts of power for a
minute or two at a time). Air conditioners automatically cycle on and off to
maintain the proper temperature, at times resulting in very large swings in
power demanded.

But when you aggregate many individually variable loads, the variability
diminishes considerably. This is the same effect seen with solar power,
aggregated across a wide area. Isolated clouds passing over one photovoltaic
(PV) array will take a few minutes to impact the production of another array
a few miles away.

We can mitigate some of the short-term variability of PV systems just by
having many of them spread out.

Time of use rates and smart charging

On the timescale of hours, variations in solar power output occur from large
cloud systems and from Earth’s rotation. The second source of variation is
entirely predictable—we know when the sun will rise and set. PV systems
reach peak output around noon, with variations depending on the angle of the
panels, the location within a time zone, and Daylight Savings Time.


Since peak power demand is generally mid-to-late afternoon or early evening,
we’d want to shift some loads to run when abundant solar power is feeding in
to the grid. One way to do this using PV and EVs is with a rate structure
that offers low-cost electricity in the middle of the day. Electric
companies in Hawaii have proposed this [
http://www.hawaiianelectric.com/vcmcontent/StaticFiles/pdf/20151113_TOU_Rates_Release.pdf
]. Using “time of use rates” in this way has several benefits:

 - Retail prices paid by customers would reflect the wholesale market, in
which mid-day power is already becoming less expensive in some locations due
to abundant solar electricity.

 - Electric vehicles at workplaces could charge with low cost clean power.

 - “Smart chargers” could adjust the charging rate if needed to accommodate
variations in power supply.

 - Flexible loads such as air conditioners could run at low cost during the
mid-day hours to pre-cool homes and reduce the evening power draw.

 - The electric grid would see a more gradual “ramp” from the mid-day load
to the evening peak.

 - Solar power systems selling at wholesale (such as utility-scale systems)
would see increased revenues from their power sales due to greater daytime
demand.

 - If a car is plugged in at work for nine hours, and needs only two
full-power hours to charge, there is a great amount of flexibility in when
the charger is used and what rate it charges at.

Shifting the charging time to align with a period of surplus solar power,
through “time of use” rates, helps address solar power variation on the
timescale of hours. Starting, stopping, or varying the rate of power
transfer (“smart charging”) can help address shorter-term variation.

My research: how PV and EVs can best work together

There are dozens of pilot projects on “smart charging,” and hundreds of
research efforts in this area on topics ranging from consumer behavior to
battery lifetime impacts to communication protocols. Some companies already
earn real revenue from providing ancillary services to the grid (including
both one-way “smart charging” and two-way “vehicle-to-grid” arrangements).

Part of my work at UCS is identifying how these options can increase value
for EV owners, for electricity grid operators, for renewable energy
providers, and for the public. Right now it is possible to integrate
variable energy resources into the grid at a low cost. Can flexible loads
reduce this integration cost further as variable renewable generation grows? 
If so, how can we align incentives so that the market prioritizes lower-cost
solutions for grid integration of variable renewables over more expensive
ones?
[© ucsusa.org]




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Shift-low-cost-PV-electricity-rates-to-the-middle-of-the-day-tp4679600.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to