https://scitechdaily.com/smoothing-out-the-duck-curve-influx-of-electric-vehicles-accelerates-need-for-grid-planning/
Smoothing Out the “Duck Curve” – Influx of Electric Vehicles Accelerates
Need for Grid Planning
JULY 29, 2020  PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY

[image
https://scitechdaily.com/images/Planning-for-EVs-777x393.jpg
Planning for EVs can help cities avoid large investments in grid
infrastructure down the road. Credit: Mike Perkins, PNNL
] 

For grid reliability, PNNL study shows advance planning and smart EV
charging strategies could help cities and utilities smooth out the duck
curve and avoid costly new infrastructure.

Electric vehicles are coming–en masse. How can local utilities, grid
planners and cities prepare? That’s the key question addressed with a new
study led by researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory for the
U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy’s Vehicle Technologies Office.

“While we don’t know exactly when the tipping point will happen, fleets of
fast-charging vehicles are going to change how cities and utilities manage
their electricity infrastructure” said Michael Kintner-Meyer, an electrical
systems engineer in PNNL’s Electricity Infrastructure group and the study’s
lead author. “It’s not a question of if, but when.”

The study, published today, integrates multiple factors not evaluated
before, such as electric trucks for delivery and long haul, as well as smart
EV charging strategies.

EV Charging Station
Over the next decade, EVs of all sizes will increasingly plug into charging
stations at homes, businesses and on transportation routes.

Transportation electrification is coming
According to EV Hub, about 1.5 million EVs, mostly cars and SUVs, are
currently on the road in the United States. PNNL researchers evaluated the
capacity of the power grid in the western U.S. over the next decade as
growing fleets of EVs of all sizes, including trucks, plug into charging
stations at homes and businesses and on transportation routes.

For their study, the authors used the best available data about future grid
capacity from the Western Electricity Coordinating Council, or WECC. The
analysis revealed the maximum EV load the grid could accommodate without
building more power plants and transmission lines.

The good news is that through 2028, the overall power system, from
generation through transmission, looks healthy up to 24 million EVs–about 9%
of the current light-duty vehicle traffic in the United States.

However, at about 30 million EVs, things get dicey. At the local level,
issues may arise at even smaller EV adoption numbers. That’s because one
fast-charging EV can draw as much load as up to 50 homes. If, for example,
every house in a cul-de-sac has an EV, one power transformer won’t be able
to handle multiple EVs charging at the same time.

Planning for EVs
Planning for EVs can help cities avoid large investments in grid
infrastructure down the road. Credit: Mike Perkins, PNNL

Smoothing out the duck curve.
As detailed in the report, current grid planning doesn’t adequately account
for a mass influx of EVs. That omission exacerbates an already stressful
situation–the dreaded duck curve.


The duck curve is a 24-hour profile of load on the power system, and usually
occurs in areas with a lot of photovoltaic–or solar–rooftop installations.
The curve is based on moderate load in the morning, low load during the day
when solar units feed electricity into the grid, and high load at night as
people get home from work and the sun goes down.

When demand spikes, voltage plummets. This severe swing is hard on system
operations that weren’t designed to flip on and off like a light switch. And
with more EVs plugging in to charge in the evening, the ramp-up becomes even
steeper and drives up electricity costs.

Smart charging strategies–avoiding charging during peak hours in the morning
and early evening–can smooth out demand peaks and fill in the duck curve,
according to the study. The approach has two upsides. First, it would take
advantage of relatively clean solar power during the day. It would also
reduce or eliminate the sharp ramps in the evening when solar power fades
and other sources kick in to make up the difference.

Plausible scenarios emphasize need for planning
Building from the WECC data, the team developed and modeled plausible
scenarios for 2028. The scenarios were vetted with business leaders and
included a mix of light- (passenger), medium- (delivery trucks and vans) and
heavy- (semis and cargo) duty vehicles on the road–the first time all three
vehicle classes have been included in such an analysis. PNNL also developed
a transportation model for freight on the road, with charging stations on
interstate freeways every 50 miles for all three vehicle classes.

The scenarios included the evolution of the grid and its capacity at state
and regional levels. The team focused on scenarios with the greatest
potential for grid impacts.

Bottlenecks due to new EV charging appeared the most in areas of California,
including Los Angeles, which plans to go all-electric with its city fleet by
2030. The pinch came from the growth of fast-charging cars and commercial
fleets of electric trucks. These vehicles can draw 400 amps through a
circuit for as long as 45 minutes, instead of the 15 to 20 amps pulled over
6 to 8 hours by most EVs today.

Dennis Stiles oversees PNNL’s energy efficiency and renewable energy
research portfolio. He said fast-charging vehicles and integrating mobile
loads–fleets on the move–are among the biggest challenges for planners
today.

“They never really had to think about EVs before, but some cities are
already looking into intelligent controls and other ways to modify their
distribution systems and operations,” said Stiles. “The key is to figure out
now how to avoid large capital outlays in the future. Adding a new
transformer here and there is a lot different than a substation overhaul.”

Getting ahead of the curve
But the challenge isn’t limited to large areas like Los Angeles.
Kintner-Meyer said smaller cities with limited resources need help planning
for their charging infrastructure and hosting capacity. That’s the next
step.

In a follow-on study, researchers will take a closer look at ways to
integrate EVs into local and regional power distribution systems across the
nation.

“We have the data and the method to run what-if scenarios,” said
Kintner-Meyer. “With data from utilities about feeders and infrastructure,
we can build out the models then hand it off so they can get ahead of the
curve.”
[© scitechdaily.com]


+ (evercharge-pr> Charging 100's of EVs @condos)
https://revolution-green.com/charging-hundreds-evs-parked-condo-solvable-problem-heres/
Charging hundreds of EVs parked at a condo is a solvable problem, here’s how
Jul 25, 2020 ... many building owners at first want to install charging at
100% capacity for every parking spot, which is unnecessary ... EverCharge
system also is reading, in real-time, other power usage in the building —
such as elevators or industrial exhaust fans ... EV charging can dodge the
building’s peak demands and the exorbitant “demand charges” it can bring.
That doesn’t mean the EV chargers are continually going on and off and on
again. The first EV arriving at the garage might immediately get a full
supply of power. But when more cars arrive, the load gets balanced and
adjusted ... 
...
https://electrek.co/2020/07/22/charging-hundreds-of-evs-parked-at-a-condo-is-a-solvable-problem-heres-how/




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