The definition of NLCC is different from that of ELCC in the following terms: net load (instead of load), flexibility (instead of reliability), and RSE (instead of LOLE). Among these terms, RSE is an important factor, which makes a great difference between NLCC and ELCC. The differences between RSE and LOLE and between NLCC and ELCC are explained in detail using the following example.
3.1. Description of Illustrative Example
In the peak day of the targeted year, the forecast net loads at 0 h, 1 h, and 2 h are 50 MW, 50 MW, and 150 MW, respectively. The net load forecast error is neglected for simplicity. The number of the preexisting units is three; the capacity of each unit is 100 MW; their ramp-up rates are 25 MW/h (Unit A), 50 MW/h (Unit B), and 75 MW/h (Unit C), respectively. The generation schedule is determined following the merit-order principle, and the result is presented in
Figure 1. All units are in online states; thus, a two-state capacity state model is used to calculate their failure probabilities. The failure rates of all of the units are 1/2940 (occurrences/h), and the repair rates are 1/60 (occurrences/h). A new unit, Unit D, which has the capacity of 100 MW and ramp rate of 40 MW/h, is considered to be added; it also has the lowest priority in the merit order. In this example, the value of Δ
t is assumed to be 1 h, and
NLFEt is not considered for simplicity. The values of RSE and LOLE for the system without Unit D are selected as the RSE and LOLE criterion, respectively.
3.2. Comparison of RSE and LOLE
The calculation of LOLE determines whether the net load level is larger than the sum of the installed capacity every time. It is not concerned with whether the generating unit can be committed into operation or can raise output to follow changes in the net load; that is, the operating conditions of the generating units are neglected. In this example, the outage events occur only when the numbers of failed units are more than 3, 3, and 2 at 0, 1, and 2 h, respectively. This means that the outage events are irrelevant with the operating conditions of the units according to the generation schedule. For the details of the LOLE calculation, refer to
Appendix A.
Meanwhile, it should be noted that the outage events could occur due to the shortage of ramping capability, even if the total capacity of the online units is larger than the net load level.
Figure 2 shows how the failure of Unit B at 1 h can result in load shedding. The load shedding lasts for an hour, though Units A and B raise output to satisfy the net load increase after Unit C failed. Unlike LOLE, cases as this one are considered in the calculation of RSE. This is a major difference between RSE and LOLE.
3.3. Calculation Procedure of NLCC
Step 1: The RSE is applied to the worst-case scenario, where failure events occur just before the targeted time. For example, when estimating
RSP2 (for reference, the RSE is the sum of every
RSPt.), the failure scenario at 1 h is considered. Likewise, the failure scenario at 0 h is selected for
RSP1. When considering the worst-case scenario,
RSP1 and
RSP2 are calculated, but
RSP0 is not because there is no information before 0 h. Based on the Markov chain-based capacity state model, the failure probabilities for all units are calculated as
at 0 h, and
at 1 h.
Table 1 shows whether a load-shedding event occurs, depending on failure cases and the consequential
RSPt. For example, load shedding does not occur at 1 h as a consequence of the failure of Unit A at 0 h, and the corresponding failure probability at 0 h is calculated as
. The
RSPt is the sum of probabilities of the failure cases causing load-shedding events. For example, the
RSP2 can be computed using Equation (1) as follows:
The failure cases that the FNL2 is larger than the value on right-hand side include ‘A’, ‘B’, ‘A&B’, ‘A&C’, ‘B&C’, and ‘A&B&C’ (corresponding to the failure cases at 1 h causing the load shedding event at 2 h). Adding all RSPt, RSE is determined as h/period, and this value is selected as the RSE criterion.
Step 2: The load level is varied within a range from 0% to 50%, with a step size of 5%. For reference, when the load variance is 5%, the forecast net loads at 0 h, 1 h, and 2 h are 52.5 MW, 52.5 MW, and 157.5 MW, respectively. By repeating Step 1 for each load variance,
Table 2 can be obtained.
Step 3: Unit D is added to the system. As shown in
Table 3, the failure cases and consequential load sheddings according to the addition of Unit D are newly calculated for each load variance. For the same load variance, the RSE in
Table 3 is smaller than that in
Table 2. It is because the addition of the unit improves the ramping capability of the system.
Step 4: The RSE value is larger than the RSE criterion (i.e.,
h/period) when the load variance is 20%. In order to find a point matching with the RSE criterion, the load variances are increased by 1% in each step from 15% to 20%, and the corresponding RSE are derived. The RSE begins to exceed the RSE criterion when the load variance is 16%; thus, in this example, the NLCC is equal to the peak load (i.e., 150 MW) multiplied by 15%, that is, 22.5 MW. This value is 27 MW smaller than the ELCC of 49.5 MW (refers to
Appendix A.2). This difference is due to a shortage of ramp capability, which is caused by the operating conditions of each generating unit, such as operating point, maximum generation level, and ramp rate. Unlike ELCC, those conditions can be taken into account by the NLCC.