DocumentCode
3521689
Title
Impacts of increased photovoltaic panel utilisation on utility grid operations - a case study
Author
Chant, Timothy I. ; Shafiullah, GM ; Oo, Amanullah M T ; Harvey, Blake E.
Author_Institution
BHP Billiton, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
fYear
2011
fDate
13-16 Nov. 2011
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
Renewable energy is starting to be used as the panacea for solving climate change or global warming problems. Therefore in the starting of 21st century, Government, utilities and research communities are working together to develop a climate-friendly power generation systems for a sustainable society by increasing large-scale energy generation from renewable energy sources. However, due to the intermittent nature of renewable energy sources creates a number of potential challenges in integrating renewable energy with the existing grid. Harmonic distortion, voltage fluctuation, voltage management, demand assessment, and load rejection are the major potential issues concerning the application of photovoltaic - Distributed Generation. This paper develops a model using PSS SINCAL to investigate the impacts on integrating photovoltaic panel on the utility grid.
Keywords
distributed power generation; electricity supply industry; global warming; photovoltaic power systems; power grids; renewable energy sources; PSS SINCAL; climate change; climate-friendly power generation system; demand assessment; global warming problem; harmonic distortion; large-scale energy generation; load rejection; photovoltaic distributed generation; photovoltaic panel utilisation; power utility grid operation; renewable energy source; sustainable society; voltage fluctuation; voltage management; Australia; Fluctuations; Harmonic distortion; Inverters; Load modeling; Voltage control; Voltage fluctuations; Photovoltaic; Renewable energy; grid integration; harmonics; load rejection; voltage fluctuation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Innovative Smart Grid Technologies Asia (ISGT), 2011 IEEE PES
Conference_Location
Perth, WA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0873-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4577-0874-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISGT-Asia.2011.6167120
Filename
6167120
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