A
PRESENTATION
ON
LOAD SHEDDING
CONTENTS
Introduction
Electrical energy flow
load shedding schedule
Conventional load shedding
Intelligent load shedding
Affects of load shedding
Benefits of load shedding
Disadvantage of load shedding
Electricity saving v/s load shedding
Conclusion
LOAD SHEDDING
Load shedding is a measure of last resort to
prevent the collapse of the power system country-
wide.
When there is insufficient power station capacity
to supply the demand (load) from all the customers,
the electricity system becomes unbalanced, which
can cause it to trip out country-wide (a blackout),
and which could take days to restore.
As the difference between supply and demand
becomes small, we refer to the system becoming
“tight”.
This implies that action has to be taken to prevent the
system from becoming unstable.
ELECTRICAL ENERGY FLOW
Power Generation Consumers
(Thermal, Hydro-electric, Nuclear) (Demand or Load)
(Supply) e.g: Lighting
Or -Computer/IT Equipment
Non-conventional -Industrial Processes
(Solar PV, Wind etc)
Transmission and Distribution
Network
(T & D)
Load-shedding
Demand is more than
supply Ideally...
(Basically a Power
Shortage/Power Cut) Supply=Demand
(Power-generated=Power-consumed)
Supply
Demand
Increasing supply rapidly
Rapidly
is very difficult
increasing
SUPPLY SIDE
Optimize T&D infrastructure
Deploy efficient substation automation
Upgrade to smart metering solutions
Optimize quality and availability of supplied power
Measure and improve delivered power quality
Implement DG in frequently congested areas
Influence demand consumption
Introduce new tariff structures and smart revenue
metering
Provide customers with accurate and relevant
consumption data
Establish DR programs
DEMAND SIDE
Act on Users
Educate people on efficient use of energy
Act on business related procedures
Act on loads
Replace, renovate aging loads (lighting, motors, HVAC, …)
Implement intelligent load control (variable speed drives,
regulation systems, lighting control, ...)
Optimize quality and availability of on site power
Measure and improve on site power quality
Implement backup generation
Exploit co-generation means
Optimize supply costs
Use the right tariffs according to specific load profile
Participate in DR programs
Resell excess power
DEMAND RESPONSE
Time-of-Use, TOU
Price-Based Real-Time Price, RTP
options Critical-Peak Pricing, CPP
Demand
Response
(DR)
Capacity Market Programs/Ancillary
Services Market Programs
Incentive-Based Demand Bidding/Buyback
options Emergency DR programs
Direct Load Control Programs
8
LOAD SHEDDING SCHEDULE
Load shedding schedules are drawn up in advance
to describe the plan for switching off parts of the
network in sequence during the days that load
shedding is necessary.
On days when load shedding is required, the
networks are switched off according to the
predetermined plan, to ensure that, as far as possible,
customers experience load shedding in accordance
with the published load shedding schedules.
In exceptional circumstances, if scheduled load
shedding is not achieving the required load reduction
and/or unexpected emergencies or failures occur, then
System Control Centres will shed load outside the
published schedules by using emergency switching in
order to protect the network.
PURPOSE OF LOAD SHEDDING
SHEDULE
To make the schedules easier to understand and
remember
To improve our ability to adhere to the planned
schedules
To improve the stability and consistency of the
schedules
To improve the predictability of being switched off
To improve the communication of the schedules and
the status of the power system
INTELLIGENT LOAD SHEDDING
An effective load shedding approach requires a
comprehensive understanding of power system
Dynamics and process constraints, combined with
knowledge of system disturbances.
Pre-disturbance operating conditions
Total system load demand
Generation of each on-site unit
Spinning reserve for each on-site unit
Control settings for each running unit
B. Post-disturbance operating conditions
New system load demand
Remaining generation from on-site generation
Spinning reserve for each remaining unit
Time duration to bring up the spinning reserve
C. Nature and duration of the disturbance:
Electrical and/or Mechanical faults
Complete or partial loss of power grid connection
Complete or partial loss of on-site generation
Location of disturbance
Duration of disturbance and its termination (self
clearance, fault isolation, protection device tripping,
etc.)
D. System transient response to a disturbance
System frequency response (decay, rate of change,
final frequency)
System voltage response
Rotor angle stability of each remaining unit
Operation of protective devices
A load shedding system, which can incorporate the
above parameters into its calculation and decision
making process, must possess certain intelligence.
In addition, power system modelling and simulation
software tools have been significantly improved to
perform various system analyses from a simple load
flow study to more advanced studies such as transient
stability analysis.
OBJECTIVE OF INTELLIGENT LOAD SHEDDING
Automatic recall of system configuration, operating
condition, and system response to disturbances
Pattern recognition capability to predict system
response to disturbances
Systems knowledgebase trainable by user defined
cases
Self-learning capability to new system changes
Shed the minimum amount of load to maintain
system stability
BENEFIT OF INTELLIGENT LOAD SHEDDING
Optimize load preservation
Eliminate unnecessary load shedding
Reduction of spinning reserve requirements
Reliable load preservation system
AFFECT OF LOAD SHEDDING
The following will not be available when the electricity
supply to your home is switched off:
Electric geyser and electrically heated water supplies
Electric stoves, electric kettles, microwave ovens and
refrigerators Lights
TV and hi-fi equipment
Electrically motorised security gates and garage
doors Pool pumps
Personal computers
Electric air conditioning
Electric alarm clocks
Household electric pumps for irrigation or
plumbing systems
Electrically operated ignition systems on
certain gas appliances
CONSIDERATION DURING LOAD SHEDDING
Remember to reset the time control clocks on cooking
ovens, pool pumps, geysers and other automatically
controlled appliances, unless these are battery
operated.
remember that householders are responsible for all
electricity usage and appliances in their homes.
Ensure that your cell phone is always fully charged
when power is available.
Think about transport and communication
Ensure that your vehicle (car, motorcycle, etc.)
always has fuel in the tank because petrol stations
cannot pump fuel during power outages.
Ensure that you have enough cash because ATMs
cannot operate without electricity.
Think about access, security and safety and release
automatic electric garage door mechanisms so that
you can gain access to your property during a power
outage.
Release electric security gates and switch to manual
operation to avoid being either locked out of or into
your home.
Keep temporary lighting readily available, e.g.
battery powered torches and candles and make sure
you put these items in places where they will be easy
to find in the dark.
BENEFIT OF LOAD SHEDDING
Demand control
Demand control involves making precisely timed load
reductions to prevent energy spikes. Savings come
from lower peak demand charges.
Time-of-use management
With this approach, often called “load shifting,”
savings come from managing operations to shift
power use to nonpeak times.
Real-time pricing (RTP) optimization
Utilities that use this pricing method change their
rates frequently based on the market price of
electricity.
Participating in an RTP program means that much of
the time rates are 20 to 40 percent lower, but peak
rates can be astronomical even as high as 100 times
the usual rate for short periods.
Saving money involves shifting your facility’s
energy use as much as possible to lower-priced
periods and away from super-peak periods.
Demand response
Demand response programs, which let you earn
money for reducing electricity use on demand, come
in two main favours.
standby/reliability
With standby/reliability programs, you commit to
specific load reductions when the grid is under stress.
These events are infrequent and typically last two to
four hours.
reserves/market-based
With reserves/market-based programs, participation is
usually voluntary. Instead of committing in advance
to cutting a certain number of kilowatts, you agree to
cut usage for a quoted price. Participants can decide
on a daily basis or with even shorter notice whether
they want to participate and for what amount.
DISADVANTAGE OF LOAD SHEDDING
Even though people are trying to cope with this
situation with the help of alternate energy resources
there are lots of drawbacks and disadvantages.
Industries having to consume huge amounts of power
to run their machinery for bulk production of
materials cannot depend upon the alternate resources.
We can look at the examples of factories being closed
down or shut down in the past due to electrical supply
not being able to meet the demand that is created.
One another major problem in our society created by
load shedding is safety.
People in our society not only work at day but have
night shifts as well.
These people face serious threat from attackers at
night specially walking down dark narrow lanes with
no light.
ELECTRICITY SAVING
Load shedding is therefore done to protect the
national power system from collapsing.
Saving electricity (by using energy-efficient
appliances, switching off equipment when not in use,
using alternative sources of energy such as solar
geysers) has benefits such as reduced cost, less
pollution, the better use of natural resources (coal,
water and fuel) and less wear and tear on the power
stations, transmission and distribution systems and it
saves customers money.
In these times of capacity constraints, saving
electricity also means that the load on the national
power system is reduced.
This helps to stabilise the balance between the
available generation and the demand, in this way
reducing the risk of load shedding.
This is why saving electricity can help to prevent the
need for load shedding, especially if customers switch
off unnecessary appliances and loads during peak
periods, and also at other times when the risk of load
shedding is high (when the Power Alert goes into
Orange, Red or Brown).
FAULT VS LOAD SHEDDING
When the power goes off, it is not possible to know if
it is a fault, emergency load shedding or a scheduled
load shedding except by looking at the published
schedules.
If an outage occurs at a different time to the published
schedule, or goes on for longer than the published
time, and emergency load shedding is not being
publicised in the media, it should be treated as a fault.
Customers must always check the load shedding
schedules, and any outage that does not coincide with
these must be reported as a fault.
CONCLUSION
Automatic load shedding is basically a last resort
backup measure. As such, it will be called on to
operate only when a highly improbable, potentially
catastrophic disturbance occurs.
Our method is based on extracting a set of features
from the traffic streams to build an on-line prediction
model of the query resource requirements, which is
used to anticipate overload situations and effectively
control the overall system CPU usage, with minimum
impact on the accuracy of the results.
We also intend to develop smarter load shedding
strategies that allow the system to maximize its
overall utility according to utility functions defined
by each query.
Just switch off the lights and electrical appliances
when they are not required.
THANK YOU
ANY QUERY??