Tim Lucas
(919) 613-8084
tdlucas@duke.edu
NOTE: Dalia Pati帽o-Echeverri can be reached for additional comment at dalia.patino@duke.edu
DURHAM, N.C. 鈥 A new $2.44 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) will support a 91社区福利-led initiative to help utilities and wholesale electricity markets improve their efficiency and reliability while reducing emissions and costs, at a time of needed transformations to tackle climate change.
The initiative, A Grid that鈥檚 Risk-Aware for Clean Electricity (GRACE), taps the expertise of researchers from academia, industry and government.
鈥淥ur goal is to make a meaningful and tangible contribution to the transformation of the U.S. electricity sector into a cleaner and more efficient system,鈥 said Dalia Pati帽o-Echeverri, Gendell Family Associate Professor of Energy Systems and Public Policy at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment, who will lead the three-year project.
To achieve that goal, the GRACE team will design an energy system management (EMS) framework that enables U.S. electricity providers to better anticipate and manage uncertainty in the performance of conventional and renewable power generators in their systems. This will help improve the systems鈥 short-term operational efficiency and guarantee its reliability at the lowest possible environmental and economic cost, Pati帽o-Echeverri explained.
鈥淥perating under conditions of uncertainty places burdens on any business or enterprise. For electricity system operators, these burdens are compounded by a changing climate, uncertain demand and variable and unpredictable performance of conventional and renewable power generators,鈥 she said.
To help relieve some of these burdens, the GRACE framework will use specially developed algorithms that let energy managers characterize risk considerations for assets within their systems 鈥 for instance, how and when weather conditions might affect solar or wind power generation, or when short-term spikes in consumer demand might require redirecting available power supplies, tapping reserves or bringing new resources on line.
The framework will be ready for integration into industry practice by summer 2023, she said.
Pati帽o-Echeverri's co-principal investigators on the GRACE team include David Brown, associate professor of business administration at Duke鈥檚 Fuqua School of Business; Antonio Conejo, professor of integrated systems engineering and electrical and computer engineering at Ohio State University; Jordan Kern, assistant professor in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Assets at North Carolina State University; and Ali Daraeepour, a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton University鈥檚 Andlinger Center for Energy and Environment.
Other co-principal investigators are Pavel Etingov, staff research engineer at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL); Veronica Adetola, chief research scientist in the Electricity Infrastructure and Buildings Division at PNNL; Arnab Bhattacharya, operations research scientist at PNNL; and Hong Chen, senior consultant and project manager at PJM Interconnections LLC, and secretary of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers鈥 Power & Energy Society鈥檚 Technical Council.
Eric Rohlfing, energy executive in residence at the 91社区福利 Energy Initiative, will serve on the GRACE advisory committee, along with Jim Smith, Jack Byrne Distinguished Professor in Decision Science at Dartmouth College, Mark Oliver, manager of short-term planning at Duke Energy, and Charles Rossmann, forecasting and model development manager at Southern Company.
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Tim Lucas
(919) 613-8084
tdlucas@duke.edu
NOTE: Dalia Pati帽o-Echeverri can be reached for additional comment at dalia.patino@duke.edu