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DTSTART:20210314T070000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220817T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220817T170000
DTSTAMP:20260608T151135
CREATED:20220804T005908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T185050Z
UID:15594-1660752000-1660755600@www.esig.energy
SUMMARY:Webinar: Proactive Planning for Generator Interconnection: A Case Study of SPP and MISO
DESCRIPTION:Download Presentation \nView Webinar Recording \nDownload Q&A Responses \n\nFeatured Speaker: Bruce Tsuchida\, Principal\, The Brattle Group \nWebinar Abstract: This study\, from the Proactive Planning Task Force\, examines how costs vary in the generator interconnection (GI) process\, depending on the level of proactive planning. It studies three levels of proactiveness using the MISO and SPP regions as testbeds. It finds significant cost reductions using expanded study windows and additional cost reductions with increased study scope. \nBruce Tsuchida\nAbout the Speaker: Mr. T. Bruce Tsuchida is a Principal of The Brattle Group with thirty years of experience in domestic and international power generation development\, utility operation\, and power market analysis. He specializes in assessing the impact of new technologies and regulatory changes\, including analysis of evolving wholesale electric markets and modeling\, impact of renewable and other new technologies’ on system operations\, utility business\, and various impacts on valuations of transmission and generation assets\, deliverability\, and contracts. These studies range from large interconnected systems to small island systems. \nModerator: Debbie Lew\, ESIG Associate Director \nRegistration Cost: FREE \n \n 
URL:https://www.esig.energy/event/webinar-proactive-planning-for-generator-interconnection-a-case-study-of-spp-and-miso/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220823T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220823T170000
DTSTAMP:20260608T151135
CREATED:20220725T213635Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T185049Z
UID:15573-1661270400-1661274000@www.esig.energy
SUMMARY:Webinar: Market Design Concepts for Evolving Power Systems
DESCRIPTION:Download Presentation \nView Webinar Recording \nDownload Q&A Responses \n\nFeatured Speakers: Bethany Frew\, Group Manager\, Capacity Expansion & Electricity Markets Group\, NREL & Yinong Sun\, Researcher\, Capacity Expansion & Electricity Markets Group\, NREL \nBethany Frew\nAbout the Webinar: This presentation provides a summary of competitive wholesale electricity market modeling tools and analysis being conducted in the Grid Planning and Analysis Center (GPAC) at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). A specific emphasis is placed on the impact of forward and operational market designs on investment decisions and system resource adequacy. This includes linkages that have been developed between a suite of integrated investment\, market operations\, and resource adequacy tools\, as well analysis exploring the impact of non-traditional levels of operational detail on resource adequacy assessment and how markets may need modifications to more efficiently signal for desired resource adequacy outcomes. Analytical approaches and select preliminary results are provided from multiple analyses that leverage NREL’s integrated modeling approach. \nAbout the Speakers: Bethany Frew is the Group Manager of the Capacity Expansion and Electricity Market Group in the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s Grid Planning and Analysis Center\, where she also oversees a team of power system modelers focused on capacity expansion\, resource adequacy\, and wholesale electricity market design. Her personal research interests span a wide range of topics related to grid integration of renewable energy\, including the impact of wholesale electricity market structures on investment decisions and resource adequacy\, the economic and operational impacts of nuclear-hydrogen hybridization\, capacity credit methodologies\, and operational considerations with low-cost solar deployment. Bethany holds a Ph.D. and M.S. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Stanford University and a B.S. in Food\, Agricultural\, and Biological Engineering from The Ohio State University. \nYinong Sun\nYinong Sun is a researcher in the Capacity Expansion and Electricity Markets Group within the Grid Planning and Analysis Center at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Her research focuses on transmission planning\, renewable energy integration\, resource adequacy assessments and wholesale electricity market design. Her current work explores operational impacts on power system resource adequacy\, transmission planning in the context of policy analysis and land use impact assessments\, and power system infrastructure deployment during low-carbon energy system transition. Yinong is currently a Ph.D. candidate at Johns Hopkins University\, and she holds an M.S. from Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and a B.S. in Physics from Peking University. \nModerator: Charlie Smith\, Executive Director\, ESIG \nRegistration Cost: FREE \nQ&A Session: We will be using the slido platform for Q&A. Please submit your questions and follow-along during the event at this link.
URL:https://www.esig.energy/event/webinar-market-design-concepts-for-evolving-power-systems/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220825T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220825T170000
DTSTAMP:20260608T151135
CREATED:20220803T000022Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T185050Z
UID:15586-1661443200-1661446800@www.esig.energy
SUMMARY:Webinar: An Empirical Assessment of Regional and Interregional Transmission Congestion Value
DESCRIPTION:Download D. Millstein Presentation \nDownload J. Pfeifenberger Presentation \nView Webinar Recording \n\nFeatured Speakers: Dev Millstein\, Research Scientist\, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; Johannes (Hannes) Pfeifenberger\, Principal\, The Brattle Group; Michael Goggin\, Vice President\, Grid Strategies \nDev Millstein\nAbout the Webinar: In this webinar we will examine recent trends and characteristics of one important benefit of transmission infrastructure—congestion relief. Specifically\, we examine the marginal value of potential transmission links as indicated by nodal pricing (LMPs) from 2012 through the first half of 2022. We find\, for example\, that many links have hourly average pricing differences in 2021 that exceed $15/MWh—equivalent to $130 million per year for a 1000 MW link. We will examine trends in the transmission value over the past decade. We will explore how extreme conditions and high-value periods play an outsized role in the value of transmission. For example\, we find that 50% of transmission’s congestion value comes from only 5% of hours. These high value transmission hours are only partially attributable to designated extreme weather or grid-stress events identified by NERC\, with the remainder of the high-value hours representing periods that are natural features of actual market operations (possible causes include uncertain generation or other infrastructure outages\, fuel price volatility\, forecast errors\, and electric demand volatility). We will discuss the broad implications of these findings\, key limitations\, and importantly\, the challenge of adequately representing transmission congestion value in transmission planning studies. \nLBNL Report: Regional and Interregional Transmission Have Significant Economic Value | Electricity Markets and Policy Group (lbl.gov) \nHannes Pfeifenberger\nAbout the Speakers: Dev Millstein is a Research Scientist in the Electricity Markets and Policy department at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Dr. Millstein leads research across a diverse range of topics\, including the assessment of wind and solar value\, wind resource variability\, renewable power and grid-integration topics\, and air quality topics. Dev Millstein received a BA in economics from Vassar College in 2002 and a PhD in environmental engineering from UC Berkeley in 2009. \nJohannes (Hannes) Pfeifenberger\, a Principal at The Brattle Group\, is an economist with a background in electrical engineering and over twenty-five years of experience in wholesale power market design\, renewable energy\, electricity storage\, and transmission. He also is a Visiting Scholar at MIT’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research (CEEPR)\, a Senior Fellow at Boston University’s Institute of Sustainable Energy (BU-ISE)\, a IEEE Senior Member\, and currently serves as an advisor to research initiatives by the U.S. Department of Energy\, the National Labs\, and the Energy Systems Integration Group (ESIG). \nMichael Goggin\nMichael Goggin is Vice President at Grid Strategies LLC. He has been at Grid Strategies for nearly 5 years\, and previously worked at the American Wind Energy Association for 10 years. Grid Strategies offers consulting on electric grid and market issues for clean energy sector clients. \nModerator: Debbie Lew\, Associate Director\, ESIG \nRegistration Cost: FREE \nQ&A Session: We will be using the slido platform for Q&A. Please submit your questions and follow-along during the event at this link.
URL:https://www.esig.energy/event/webinar-an-empirical-assessment-of-regional-and-interregional-transmission-congestion-value/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220830T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220830T173000
DTSTAMP:20260608T151135
CREATED:20220726T164711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260116T185050Z
UID:15577-1661875200-1661880600@www.esig.energy
SUMMARY:G-PST/ESIG Webinar Series: Operating the System Towards Zero Carbon
DESCRIPTION:Download Presentation \nView Webinar Recording \nDownload Q&A Responses \n\nAbout the Webinar: National Grid Electricity System Operator (ESO) plays a very important role of ensuring that Great Britain has the essential energy it needs by making sure supply meets demand every second of every day. The flow of electricity is getting more complex in the GB system with key features of more renewable energy and interconnectors; a growing number of ways to source electricity as well as more participants in “demand side response”. National Grid ESO is working hand in hand with the energy industry and continually finding ways to innovate\, invest and adapt the electricity system to keep electricity flowing reliably to homes and businesses across Great Britain. \nAs an active member of the G-PST Consortium\, National Grid ESO will use this webinar  to share a series of good practices featuring five speakers who will cover the following topics below in support of the UK’s Net-zero energy transition: \n\n\n\nGB Grid Forming Grid Code Development (Antony Johnson)\nGB Grid Forming Best Practice Guide Development (Dechao Kong)\nStability Constraint Management – Stability Pathfinder Program (Shurooque Baloch)\nSystem Strength Management – Innovation Project of Strength To Connect (Xiaoyao Zhou)\nInertia Measurement (Anna Blackwell)\n\n\n\nAntony Johnson\nDechao Kong\nShurooque Baloch\nXiaoyao Zhou\nAnna Blackwell\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nFeatured Speakers: Antony Johnson is a chartered engineer and IET member who began working for National Grid within System Operations at the Electricity National Control Center in 1993. In 2012 he started initial work on the implementation of the impact of the European Directive on the GB Grid Code and related industry codes which he saw through to its implementation in 2018 having worked with the wider industry including Government. More recently he was instrumental in the development of technical requirements for storage technologies in GB in addition to chairing a European Expert Storage group. His latest work involves the development of technical requirements for Grid Forming technologies and looking at Black Start arrangements from Embedded Generation which is very much a growth area. \nDr. Dechao Kong is a chartered engineer with heavy involvements in the UK’s academia and industry for DC systems and Power Electronics since 2008\, contributing his such subject-matter expertise in technical strategy & policy development\, new technology & innovation\, engineering and asset management. \nShurooque Baloch is a chartered engineer with over a decade of experience in the electricity transmission planning and operation. Her role is to identify future operability risks\, define system requirements and enable creation of long-term solutions to operate the system. \nDr. Xiaoyao Zhou is a chartered engineer with two decades of transmission system operation\, planning and investment experience. Xiaoyao’s role is to set out operability policy for Great Britain’s electricity network to enable the net zero operation\, specify the technical requirements for new technologies and define future network needs so that market and network owners can invest in the right solutions at the right time. \nAnna Blackwell is a Product Manager (Inertia & Frequency)\, at National Grid ESO\, the Electricity System Operator of Great Britain\, responsible for delivering new WAMS based situational tools into National Grid ESO’s Control Room. Anna has an electrical engineering background having started in HV asset research before moving across to operational planning and delivery of IT products working as business lead between projects\, IT and business. \nRegistration Cost: FREE \n 
URL:https://www.esig.energy/event/operating-the-system-towards-zero-carbon/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
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