DocumentCode
1416320
Title
Ten Steps to a Smarter Grid
Author
Collier, Steven E.
Author_Institution
Member, IEEE. Milsoft Utility Solutions in Abilene, Texas
Volume
16
Issue
2
fYear
2010
Firstpage
62
Lastpage
68
Abstract
The U.S. electric grid is not smart. It was not planned and constructed to be able to meet the new constraints, variables and uncertainties that the future holds. The central system architecture and operating schemes haven¿t really changed in a century. Long term construction and operations plans were founded upon the availability of extra capacity and redundancy to passively withstand short-term variation of demand, longer term growth and outages of lines and equipment. The traditional tools to achieve adequacy and reliability, additions to conventional generation, transmission and distribution assets, aren¿t as viable now. Already, electric utility performance indicators eroding: economy, reliability, security, asset value, profitability, sustainability, and service quality.
Keywords
Availability; Capacity planning; Monitoring; Power industry; Quality of service; Redundancy; Smart grids; Storage automation; US Department of Energy; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Industry Applications Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1077-2618
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MIAS.2009.935500
Filename
5411860
Link To Document