Book Review: Engineering IT-Enabled Sustainable Electricity Services

By Jim MacInnes

The impacts of climate change and a decreasing Energy Return on Energy Invested (EROI) of fossil fuels1 have sparked interest in increasing the penetration of intermittent renewables into the world’s electric power grids.  While pursuing this goal, however, “Perhaps the most important message in this book is that it is not effective to pre-commit to the deployment of a certain fixed capacity of renewables without understanding the characteristics of the existing resources and customer preferences” say authors Marija Ilic, Le Xie, and Qixing Liu in their book Engineering IT-Enabled Sustainable Electricity Services, The Tale of Two Low-Cost Green Azores Islands, published by Springer in 2013. And, “If new technologies are deployed as mandated by the regulators without enhancing today’s operating and planning industry practices it will be very difficult to manage new resources efficiently and reliably.”

Marija IliÄ holds a joint appointment at Carnegie Mellon University as professor of electrical & computer engineering and engineering & public policy as well as honorary chaired professor for control of future electricity network operations, Delft University of Technology. Her principal fields of interest include electric power systems modeling; control of large-scale dynamic systems; nonlinear network and systems theory; modeling and control of economic and technical interactions in dynamical systems.  Le Xie is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Texas A&M University. His research interests include modeling and control of large-scale complex systems, smart grid applications in support of renewable energy integration, and electricity markets. Qixing Liu is a PhD candidate at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University.

The Azores Archipelago consists of nine islands and is located about 900 miles off the coast of Portugal. Their book reports on results of simulations of the electricity flows on two islands based on a ten-year study demonstrating proof-of-concept using combinations of intermittent resources, complex software methods and adaptive hardware technologies in order to reliably manage system imbalances caused by intermittency. These concepts have the potential to scale to large interconnected power grids such as those found in the US, China and Europe.

Engineering IT-Enabled Sustainable Electricity Services, the Tale of Two Low-Cost Green Azores Islands is divided into seven parts.

Much has been written about the need for and expense of additional fossil fuel generation backup as increasingly higher percentages of renewables are integrated into power systems.  Contrary to this conventional thinking, Marija Ilic and her team show there is significant hidden potential in reliably and efficiently combining higher penetrations of distributed renewable energy resources at a low cost and with minimal use of fossil fuels. Their concepts enable intermittent resources to be effectively integrated using embedded model-based sensors, enhanced communications links and decision-making algorithms, combined with Adaptive Load Management (ALM) techniques that include DR and load shifting.

The authors recommendations on scheduling generation and interchanges at shorter intervals to reduce the need for fast ramping reserves are supported by data on the costs and emission impacts of cycling fossil fuel plants contained in the recently released NREL Western Wind and Solar Integration Study.5  

Their identification of the need for a more flexible governance policy was echoed in the recently released America’s Power Plan, which advocates operational changes that reduce system costs using a more performance-based regulatory model.6

This data-rich book is an excellent resource for those who are interested in gaining a more thorough understanding of the enabling principles and technologies needed to cost effectively develop a stronger, cleaner and more intelligent electric energy infrastructure.

References:

  1. Hall and Klitgaard, “Energy and the Wealth of Nations,” Springer 2012, Reviewed in Today’s Engineer, June 2012, https://www.todaysengineer.org/2012/jun/book-review.asp
  2. E. Ostrom et al., “A general framework for analyzing sustainability of social ecological systems,” Science 325, 419 (2009)
  3. Ben Ramalingham, “Conversations on Complexity, a Tribute to Elinor Ostrom,” August 16, 2012, https://aidontheedge.info/2012/08/16/conversations-on-complexity-a-tribute-to-elinor-ostrom/
  4. Peter Fairley, “Flexible AC Transmission: the FACTS Machine,” IEEE Spectrum, December, 2010, https://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/the-smarter-grid/flexible-ac-transmission-the-facts-machine
  5. NREL, Western Wind and Solar Integration Study, Phase 2, September 2013,https://www.nrel.gov/electricity/transmission/western_wind.html#!
  6. Americas Power Plan; September, 2013, https://americaspowerplan.com/

Jim MacInnes worked as a power engineer in the electric utility industry for Ebasco Services, Inc. and later developed renewable power plants in California.  He is chairman of the Michigan Utility Consumer Participation Board and has testified on energy issues before the Michigan House and Senate Energy Policy Committees. He is a member of the IEEE Power and Energy Society, the IEEE USA Energy Policy Committee and the US Society for Ecological Economics. He is a licensed professional engineer and holds BSEE and MBA degrees from the University of California, Irvine.

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