By Tom Kleckner
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — It doesn’t take much for SPP’s Casey Cathey to let his inner geek flag fly.
“Have you heard about Solar Reserve’s salt tower?” he asks, jumping to his feet and grabbing a marker. Cathey steps to the whiteboard and begins to sketch a representation of the 110-MW Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant in Nevada. It is capable, its developers say, of providing enough firm solar energy to power 75,000 homes.
Cathey explains how the 10,000 tracking mirrors encircle the 640-foot molten salt tower, following the sun’s movements to concentrate sunlight onto a large receiver at the top of the tower. Molten salt flows through the receiver and down piping inside the tower, eventually being stored in a thermal tank. The salt is then passed through a steam-generation system that provides electricity as needed.
“I’m sorry, but I really geek out about things like this,” a visibly excited Cathey says.
It comes with the job. As manager of operations analysis and support, Cathey led the group that produced a 2015 wind-integration study that revealed SPP could successfully handle wind-integration levels as high as 60%. That same group is now working on a follow-up analysis, the newly renamed Variable Generation Integrated Study.
Cathey also represents SPP on the ISO/RTO Council’s Emerging Technologies Task Force, which has further exposed him to the new technologies and challenges facing the electric industry.
“What we’ve learned is everyone has problems,” he says. CAISO “has too much solar; we have a lot of wind; [and] Toronto has reduced their nuclear plants to offset the wind.”
Front-Row Seat
Cathey almost can’t believe his luck at having a front-row seat to the latest in technological innovation.
“It’s pretty amazing, especially with the people I get to meet and talk to. Ph.D.s, Popular Science, Elon Musk,” he says. “I used to put that stuff on a pedestal, but then you get to meet them and see where we’re at and where we’re going, and you start to realize where the human race is in terms of technology.
“There are a lot of brilliant people out there, but at the same time, there’s a lot of things we can do better,” he added. “There’s a lot of stuff we can improve on.”
For now, Cathey and SPP are working to educate themselves on wind and solar energy, behind-the-meter resources, and batteries, flywheels and other energy storage technologies. The more staff knows, Cathey says, the better they can forecast.
What’s Out There?
“We’re focused on our current business functions as a balancing authority and market reliability. It’s starting to be a little worrisome that we don’t know what’s out there, and we don’t have rules in place to report it.”
Cathey says SPP currently has a requirement that any behind-the-meter resource capable of producing 10 MW or more has to register in the Integrated Marketplace, so it can be modeled correctly. He says loopholes in the requirement allow for derating resources or splitting them up, saying the ratings of some resources do not always tell the whole story.
“The worst risk is if there are many smaller facilities we don’t know about, we could potentially coordinate outages incorrectly and we would not know the real impacts on the Bulk Electric System,” he says. “At these small magnitudes, they’re not going to bring down the system, but if we don’t know about certain generation and we’re not coordinating it, we could have a problem with efficiency and reliability.
“We understand the capabilities and types of generation out there, but … we’re pretty much in the same boat as a lot of other ISOs and RTOs. We don’t know what we don’t know, and [other RTOs] don’t know. The loads themselves don’t know.”
To get better information, SPP has surveyed its members about their behind-the-meter resources.
The RTO hasn’t yet settled on a name for the resources. MISO calls them DERs (distributed energy resources) while ERCOT refers to them as DG (distributed generation). And SPP?
“We don’t have a term yet, but I’m sure it’ll be a different acronym when we come up with it,” Cathey says with a laugh. “Right now, we just want to know about it, so that our models are accurate.”
The RTO will eventually require more stringent reporting on distributed generation, Cathey says — and despite some stakeholder fears, the requirement will not force them to register the resources in the market or to inhibit their contributions to state renewable portfolio standards.
SPP does have an acronym for stored energy resources: SERs. Staff has drafted a revision request that would add energy storage capability to the Integrated Marketplace’s rules, enabling the resource to be registered as a generator type for regulation only. Staff has tweaked the revision request to take advantage of PJM‘s and MISO’s experience with the technology.
Cathey says SPP’s current rules are not “conducive to allow us to embrace that technology.”
“You can actually help out the system by plugging [the batteries] in … they’re providing regulation-down service,” says Cathey, who expects the first SER to show up by year-end. “That extends the life of conventional resources, because we’re not [ramping] them up and down. We’re sending the battery up and down.”
SPP’s current wind-integration study was renamed to include technologies like these, but its primary focus remains wind. The RTO has already seen wind integration reach 48.32%, a record for all North American ISOs and RTOs. It currently has 12,397 MW of installed and available wind capacity, with another 33,819 MW in development.
Cathey says the current study, which will use updated models and assumptions to analyze frequency response and transient response, is an extension of the 2015 study. It will take a “much more thorough” look at voltage, he said. The first study ignored thermal constraints and used an hourly ramp, but the second study will honor thermal ratings and use a five-minute ramp, “so it’s much more realistic.”
“Frequency and ramp, that’s one aspect we’re really interested in,” he says. “Is there a real problem when we have 50%, 60% wind penetration, while honoring thermal constraints? Are we Chicken Little, or is this an actual problem?”
SPP is working with Powertech Labs to develop a module that honors thermal constraints and is placed on top of its voltage-security assessment tool. Cathey says the RTO is past the R&D phase with the technology, which will eventually be rolled out to other ISO/RTOs.
“The model basically … lets us know we need to concentrate further on [a] scenario and build in more planning and operational processes,” he says.
Data, Data and More Data.
Cathey is also helping out with SPP’s Synchrophasor Strike Team’s work, which is intended to ensure the RTO isn’t pushing phasor measurement units (PMU) without stakeholder buy-in.
PMUs are devices that measure the voltage, frequency and angle of the grid’s electrical waves, using a common time source for synchronization. The devices can take samples hundreds of times a second, while the standard SCADA systems can have scan rates of 10 to 30 seconds.
“If we’re making measurements at that scale, we can determine whether there are issues with the models,” Cathey says. “But the problem with PMU incorporation is the data is so much. An operator needs to understand if it’s just a blip on the system for a nano-second. You’re talking petabytes [1 million gigabytes] of data. You’re well beyond terabytes.”
Staff is currently working on how best to filter the data and make it more manageable for operators. In the meantime, SPP has posted a revision request that would require all new generators to have a PMU. The request has been vetted within the strike force, which will determine whether the cost-benefit analysis justifies requiring existing generation to be retrofitted with PMUs.
Oklahoma Gas & Electric, which has installed more than 200 PMUs as part of a Department of Energy grant, has become a proponent of the technology, Cathey said.
“They’re the [subject-matter experts] for the industry, not just our area,” he says. “According to OG&E, the cost is not that much. Where the cost comes into play is if your substation or your switchyard is not capable of accepting the PMU.
“These are things we don’t traditionally think about. We think about power, getting it from Point A to Point B and whether the line can sustain it. … Now, we’re thinking about very engineering-centric problems.”
Which is exactly the way Cathey likes it.