With energy experts forecasting substantial increases in solar power in the coming decades, scientists at GE Global Research are working with Arizona Public Service, the state’s largest electric utility, to understand how large amounts of solar can best be integrated into today’s grid. The first-of-its-kind study, which was approved earlier this month by the state’s regulators and is part of the utility’s ongoing smart grid efforts, will focus on methods and technologies to make the grid more reliable and efficient in a setting in which solar power is generated and delivered in close proximity to its customers.
As Kathleen O’Brien, Project Leader for GE and an Electrical Engineer in GE’s Smart Grid Lab explains: “Much of the focus has been on new cell developments and system improvements to make solar more cost competitive, but the larger question is how to reliably integrate the higher penetrations of solar power expected. Through this study, we hope to gain more insight and answers.”
Kathleen says her team will also look at the effect fluctuating solar power production has on the power network’s stability and how new features on GE’s Solar Inverter technology — which plugs solar power into the grid — can improve stability. The work in Flagstaff, Ariz. has been green-lighted by the U.S. Department of Energy — which recently awarded APS, along with four partners including GE, a $3.3 million High Penetration Solar Deployment grant to pursue it. In the project, APS will integrate 1.5 megawatts of solar power — about one-third each from residential, commercial, and solar park sites. That’s enough power for about 500 homes.
When I look at pictures of wind turbines, It looks to me to be an ideal location for solar panels. There is a lot of wasted space and a sturdy mount for such panels. I am not an electrical engineer, just an observation I have made and curious to know why.
What Exactly Does a “Smart” Electric Grid Look Like?
Smart meters and time-of-use plans make headway toward developing a smart grid, but there’s so much more to be done to avoid the blackouts and brownouts that cost us $80 billion a year – and to create an electric grid that is truly fit for purpose in this century.
A truly smart electricity grid would enable a “two-way flow of electricity and information to create an automated, widely distributed energy delivery network” (National Institute of Standards and Technology) and:
-Allow for real-time pricing
-Deliver clean power
-Have open and interoperable standards
-Be more reliable
http://www.arizonaic.org/blog/266-what-exactly-does-a-smart-electric-grid-look-like