Course Description
Power system
operations and control continue to be utility mission-critical activities,
focused on the reliability and security of the grid as well as on economic
dispatch of the system. in this course, participants will learn the
fundamentals of power system dispatchers as well as fossil fuel and
hydroelectric generating station switchboard and control operators.
Course
Objectives
·
Being familiar
with the constraints in power system operation
·
Understanding
principles of frequency control
·
Learing
voltage and power flow control principles
·
Being familar
with Real and Reactive Power Scheduling
·
Understanding
the fundamentals of Preventive, Emergency and Restorative Control
·
Practicing
Power System Structures planning and coordination
Who
Should Attend?
·
Power plant
and system operators
·
System
planners
·
System
security monitors
·
Electric power
marketers and brokers
PROGRAM TOPICS
·
Overview of
power system operations and control
·
Security
analysis framework
·
Role of the
EMS (energy management system)
·
Optimal power
flows
·
Optimization
·
Economic
dispatch problems
·
Formulation of
optimal power flow problem
·
Solution
methods
·
Objective
functions and representation of constraints
·
Applications
to dispatch and rescheduling
·
Pricing
information and spot pricing
·
Role of
reactive power
·
Resource
scheduling and commitment
·
Nature of
resource scheduling problem
·
Time
hierarchies
·
Objectives and
constraints
·
Key functions
and their interrelationships
·
Unit
commitment and hydro-thermal coordination
·
Role in EMS
·
State
estimation
·
Fundamental
notions
·
Static state
estimation - role and formulation
·
The least
squares state estimation solution
·
Constrained
weighted least squares estimation
·
Measurement
requirements
·
Observability
·
Bad data
identification/ detection, analysis and processing
·
Electricity
restructuring
·
Transition
from monopoly to competition
·
Competitive
electricity markets
·
Market design
·
Interrelationships
between various markets
·
Impacts of
restructuring and competition
·
Unbundling
·
Nature of
transmission services
·
Congestion
management
·
Ancillary
services
·
Informational
needs