Electric Utility Resource Planning

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With this 2nd edition, author Dr. Steven Sim again applies the experience and insights he gained from more than 30 years of resource planning for Florida Power & Light (FPL). As one of the largest electric utilities in the U.S., FPL has faced a multitude of resource planning challenges, including how to get to zero carbon.


In 2012, using easy-to-understand text and examples, the first edition of this book explained how electric utilities "work," and how they plan (or should plan) for the future, by:

  • "Creating" a hypothetical electric utility
  • Explaining how (and why) this utility will operate its system of generating units
  • Guiding readers through a planning analysis for the utility, examining various resource options (solar, new gas-fueled generation, and conservation)
  • Introducing four Fundamental Principles of Resource Planning that should guide utilities as they plan for the future The first edition material, with significant updates, now appears as Part I of the second edition of this book. Part II of this book then presents six all-new chapters that address the challenges (and opportunities) of moving toward a zero-carbon future. Using the same hypothetical utility, with its new goal to utilize solar and batteries to serve 100% of its customers' energy with zero carbon emissions by a future "target"year, Part II of this book addresses many subjects, including:
  • The enormous amount of MW of new solar and batteries the utility will need to add
  • Why certain characteristics of new solar and battery additions change as increasing amounts of these resources are added
  • In the years prior to achieving its zero-carbon goal, how the hourly operation of the utility's existing fossil-fueled generators, plus the new solar, will change (and why the stability of the transmission grid will be challenged) With this second edition, author Dr. Steven Sim again applies the experience and insights he gained from more than 30 years of resource planning for Florida Power & Light (FPL). As one of the largest electric utilities in the United States, FPL has faced a multitude of resource planning challenges, including how to get to zero carbon. During this time period, Dr. Sim performed and directed thousands of analyses designed to address these challenges. He also served as an expert witness in dozens of regulatory hearings, addressing both the economics of resource options and the non-economic impacts (air emissions, system reliability, fuel usage, etc.) associated with these options.

    Autorentext

Dr. Steven Sim has worked in the field of energy analysis since the mid-1970s. He graduated from the University of Miami (Florida) with bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics in 1973 and 1975, respectively. He then earned a doctorate in environmental science and engineering from the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1979 with an emphasis on energy.

During his doctoral work, Dr. Sim also completed an internship of approximately a year and a half at the Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC), a research arm of Florida's state university system located in Merritt Island, Florida, near Cape Canaveral. His work at FSEC involved an examination of consumers' experience with solar water heaters and projections of the potential for renewable energy in the Southeastern United States.

In 1979, Dr. Sim joined Florida Power & Light Company (FPL), a subsidiary of NextEra Energy, Inc. FPL is one of the largest electric utilities in the United States. In the more than 40 years from 1979 to the time the 2nd edition of this book is being written, FPL has experienced tremendous population growth in the geographic area it serves. Annual average growth has been roughly 74,000 net new customer accounts per year during that period. With each customer account representing approximately 2.5 people, this represents a growth of approximately 185,000 more people per year that FPL needed to serve.

Therefore, the growth that FPL had to keep up with was roughly equivalent to 1 million new people every 5.4 years. Few, if any, other electric utilities have had to face the challenges inherent in meeting continued growth of this magnitude over such an extended time. This extraordinary growth, combined with the planning issues that all utilities face including changing environmental regulations, fuel decisions, modification/retirement of existing generating units, changes in generating technologies, etc., ensured that FPL's planning efforts have addressed a wide variety of resource planning challenges.

During that time, Dr. Sim has had several roles in regard to FPL's resource planning efforts. He spent approximately the first 10 years of his career at FPL designing a number of FPL's demand side management (DSM) programs. One of these, the Passive Home Program, earned a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) award for innovation. Among the numerous other DSM programs he either designed or co-designed were the Conservation Water Heating Program (that featured heat pump and solar water heaters) and one of the nation's most successful load management programs (FPL's residential load control program, known as the On Call Program, has approximately 800,000 participating customers).

In the course of designing these DSM programs, he became very interested in gaining a better understanding of how DSM programs affect FPL's entire utility system. Of particular interest were how FPL's DSM programs impacted the actual operation of FPL's generation, transmission, and distribution systems, including impacts on air emissions for the FPL system as a whole, and fuel usage by all of the power plants in FPL's system.

This interest led to him joining FPL's System Planning Department in 1991. This department (since renamed the Integrated Resource Planning Department) is charged with determining when new resources should be added to the FPL system, the magnitude of the needed new resources, and what the best resources are for FPL to add to meet the continued growth in customers (and their demand for electricity), changing environmental laws, and other regulatory requirements.

Dr. Sim has found this work to be challenging, continually evolving, and always interesting. Over this time, Dr. Sim has performed, directed, and/or collaborated on many thousands of analyses designed to examine how FPL can best serve its customers given these changing circumstances, laws, and regulations. In addition to these analyses, Dr. Sim has also served as an FPL witness in dozens of hearings before the Florida Public Service Commission (FPSC) and in hearings/meetings with other Florida governmental agencies and organizations. A partial list of the subjects addressed in these hearings included: the economic and non-economic impacts to the FPL system of proposed new resource additions including nuclear, coal, natural gas, solar, battery storage, and conversion of existing fossil-fueled generating units to hydrogen-fueled units; the economic and non-economic impacts to the FPL system of FPL's DSM programs that are alternatives to new power plants; analyses of generation additions versus transmission additions; the air emission and fuel use impacts to the FPL system from each of these resource options; the reliability of the utility system; and the planning processes that can be used by a utility to plan for new resources.

In these numerous regulatory hearings, Dr. Sim has provided both written and oral testimony. In so doing, he has had the opportunity to respond to a wide variety of inquiries from regulators, administrative law judges, environmental organizations, fuel suppliers, etc., regarding a host of issues. Dr. Sim has also participated in various collaborative efforts with other electric utility organizations and individual utilities, including advisory groups for the international Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). In ad…

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • GTIN 09781032294193
    • Anzahl Seiten 413
    • Genre Thermal Engineering
    • Auflage 2. A.
    • Herausgeber CRC Press
    • Gewicht 453g
    • Untertitel Economics, Reliability, and Decision-Making
    • Größe H234mm x B156mm
    • Jahr 2023
    • EAN 9781032294193
    • Format Fester Einband
    • ISBN 978-1-03-229419-3
    • Veröffentlichung 14.10.2023
    • Titel Electric Utility Resource Planning
    • Autor Sim Steven
    • Sprache Englisch

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