2012 Smart Grid System Report to Congress: Smart Electric Meters, Renewables Integration, Electric Cars and Vehicles, Transmission Automation, Grants and Programs, Cyber Security, Energy Efficiency

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Technology, Electricity, Power Resources
Cover of the book 2012 Smart Grid System Report to Congress: Smart Electric Meters, Renewables Integration, Electric Cars and Vehicles, Transmission Automation, Grants and Programs, Cyber Security, Energy Efficiency by Progressive Management, Progressive Management
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Progressive Management ISBN: 9781476461441
Publisher: Progressive Management Publication: May 10, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Progressive Management
ISBN: 9781476461441
Publisher: Progressive Management
Publication: May 10, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

This comprehensive energy department report presented to Congress in February 2012 (and dated for the 2010 reporting period) provides unique insight into the ongoing effort to update and modernize America's electric utility system. A smart grid uses digital technology to improve the reliability, security, and efficiency of the electricity system, from large generation through the delivery systems to electricity consumers. Smart grid deployment covers a broad array of electricity system capabilities and services enabled through pervasive communication and information technology, with the objective of improving reliability, operating efficiency, resiliency to threats, and our impact on the environment.

Contents: Executive Summary * Acronyms and Abbreviations * 1.0 Introduction * 1.1 Objectives * 1.2 Scope of a Smart Grid * 1.3 Stakeholder Landscape * 1.4 Regional Influences * 1.5 What's New in this Report * 1.6 About This Document * 2.0 Deployment Metrics and Measurements * 2.1 Smart Grid Metrics * 2.2 Smart Grid Characteristics * 2.3 Mapping Metrics to Characteristics * 3.0 Deployment Trends and Projections * 3.1 Enables Informed Participation by Customers * 3.1.1 Grid-Enabled Bi-Directional Communication and Energy Flows * 3.1.2 Managing Supply and Demand * 3.2 Accommodating All Generation and Storage Options * 3.2.1 Distributed Generation and Storage * 3.2.2 Standard Distributed-Resource Connection Policy * 3.3 Enables New Products, Services, and Markets * 3.3.1 Enabling New Products and Services * 3.3.2 Enabling New Markets * 3.4 Provides Power Quality for the Range of Needs * The Cost of Poor Power Quality * Smart Grid Solutions to Power Quality Issues * 3.5 Optimizing Asset Utilization & Operating Efficiency * 3.5.1 Bulk Generation * 3.5.2 Delivery Infrastructure * 3.5.3 Distributed Energy Resources * 3.5.4 Overall System Efficiency * 3.6 Operates Resiliently to Disturbances, Attacks, & Natural Disasters * 3.6.1 Area, Regional, National Coordination * 3.6.2 DER Response Metrics * 3.6.3 Delivery Infrastructure Metrics * 3.6.4 Secure Information Networks * 4.0 Challenges to Deployment * 4.1 Technical Challenges * 4.2 Business and Financial Challenges * 5.0 Recommendations for Future Reports * 6.0 Conclusions * 6.1 Progress towards Realizing the Characteristics of the Modern Grid * 6.2 Challenges to Smart Grid Deployments * 6.3 Recommendations for Future Reports * 7.0 References.

Significant challenges to realizing smart grid capabilities persist. Foremost among these are the challenges tied to the value proposition and the capital required to purchase the new technologies envisioned for communicating information between end-users, energy providers, and distribution and transmission providers. These and other challenges are explored in this report.

The DOE states: Our current electric grid was built in the 1890s and improved upon as technology advanced through each decade. Today, it consists of more than 9,200 electric generating units with more than 1 million megawatts of generating capacity connected to more than 300,000 miles of transmission lines. Although the electric grid is considered an engineering marvel, we are stretching its patchwork nature to its capacity. To move forward, we need a new kind of electric grid, one that is built from the bottom up to handle the groundswell of digital and computerized equipment and technology dependent on it—and one that can automate and manage the increasing complexity and needs of electricity in the 21st Century.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This comprehensive energy department report presented to Congress in February 2012 (and dated for the 2010 reporting period) provides unique insight into the ongoing effort to update and modernize America's electric utility system. A smart grid uses digital technology to improve the reliability, security, and efficiency of the electricity system, from large generation through the delivery systems to electricity consumers. Smart grid deployment covers a broad array of electricity system capabilities and services enabled through pervasive communication and information technology, with the objective of improving reliability, operating efficiency, resiliency to threats, and our impact on the environment.

Contents: Executive Summary * Acronyms and Abbreviations * 1.0 Introduction * 1.1 Objectives * 1.2 Scope of a Smart Grid * 1.3 Stakeholder Landscape * 1.4 Regional Influences * 1.5 What's New in this Report * 1.6 About This Document * 2.0 Deployment Metrics and Measurements * 2.1 Smart Grid Metrics * 2.2 Smart Grid Characteristics * 2.3 Mapping Metrics to Characteristics * 3.0 Deployment Trends and Projections * 3.1 Enables Informed Participation by Customers * 3.1.1 Grid-Enabled Bi-Directional Communication and Energy Flows * 3.1.2 Managing Supply and Demand * 3.2 Accommodating All Generation and Storage Options * 3.2.1 Distributed Generation and Storage * 3.2.2 Standard Distributed-Resource Connection Policy * 3.3 Enables New Products, Services, and Markets * 3.3.1 Enabling New Products and Services * 3.3.2 Enabling New Markets * 3.4 Provides Power Quality for the Range of Needs * The Cost of Poor Power Quality * Smart Grid Solutions to Power Quality Issues * 3.5 Optimizing Asset Utilization & Operating Efficiency * 3.5.1 Bulk Generation * 3.5.2 Delivery Infrastructure * 3.5.3 Distributed Energy Resources * 3.5.4 Overall System Efficiency * 3.6 Operates Resiliently to Disturbances, Attacks, & Natural Disasters * 3.6.1 Area, Regional, National Coordination * 3.6.2 DER Response Metrics * 3.6.3 Delivery Infrastructure Metrics * 3.6.4 Secure Information Networks * 4.0 Challenges to Deployment * 4.1 Technical Challenges * 4.2 Business and Financial Challenges * 5.0 Recommendations for Future Reports * 6.0 Conclusions * 6.1 Progress towards Realizing the Characteristics of the Modern Grid * 6.2 Challenges to Smart Grid Deployments * 6.3 Recommendations for Future Reports * 7.0 References.

Significant challenges to realizing smart grid capabilities persist. Foremost among these are the challenges tied to the value proposition and the capital required to purchase the new technologies envisioned for communicating information between end-users, energy providers, and distribution and transmission providers. These and other challenges are explored in this report.

The DOE states: Our current electric grid was built in the 1890s and improved upon as technology advanced through each decade. Today, it consists of more than 9,200 electric generating units with more than 1 million megawatts of generating capacity connected to more than 300,000 miles of transmission lines. Although the electric grid is considered an engineering marvel, we are stretching its patchwork nature to its capacity. To move forward, we need a new kind of electric grid, one that is built from the bottom up to handle the groundswell of digital and computerized equipment and technology dependent on it—and one that can automate and manage the increasing complexity and needs of electricity in the 21st Century.

More books from Progressive Management

Cover of the book 2014 Complete Guide to the TransCanada Keystone XL Pipeline: State Department Final Supplemental EIS, Risks to the Environment and Water Resources, Congressional Report by Progressive Management
Cover of the book NASA's Management of the Mars Science Laboratory Project (MSL): Inspector General Report on Technical and Financial Problems with Mars Exploration Program Rover by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Environmental Laws Applicable to Construction and Operation of Ethanol Plants: NEPA, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Pollution Prevention Act by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Military Bibliographies: History, Terrorism, Military Classics, Ethics, Cyberspace, Conflict Termination, Women in the Military, China Relations, Officership, Civil-Military, All-Volunteer Force by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Facing the Heat Barrier: A History of Hypersonics - V-2, Sanger, Missile Nose Cones, X-15, Scramjets, Space Shuttle, National Aerospace Plane (NASP), X-33, X-34 (NASA SP-2007-4232) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book National Defense Intelligence College Paper: Imperial Secrets - Remapping the Mind of Empire - Thuggees, Roman and Ottoman Empire, Nomads, Panopticon, Sepoy Revolt of 1857, Barzakh by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Providing Comfort to Iraq's Kurds: Forming a De Facto Relationship - History of Kurds, Anfal Campaign, Iran-Iraq War, Persian Gulf War, International Relations Framework, Kurdistan Democratic Party by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Other than War: The American Military Experience and Operations in the Post-Cold War Decade, 19th and 20th Century, Central America, Panama, Caribbean, Humanitarian, Stability Operations by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS): Comprehensive Planning and Training Strategy Needed to Support Growing Inventories, Greater Commonality and Efficiencies among Unmanned Aircraft Systems by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The U.S. Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center 1951-2001: Sierra Nevada Range, Cold Weather, Pickel Meadow, Hold Back the Night Movie, John Payne, Chuck Conners, NATO's Northern Flank by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Fire Effects of Bombing Attacks: The Firebombing and Destruction of Hamburg and Dresden in World War II by Incendiary Attack, Fire Storms, Effectiveness of Barriers, Japanese Fire Bombing by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century Veterans Health: Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) VA Independent Study Course and Additional Material - Cognitive Problems, Living with TBI, Family Impact, Treatment by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Essential Guide to Interrogation and Torture: CIA KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation Manual, Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual, Art and Science of Interrogation by Progressive Management
Cover of the book U.S. Marine Corps Expeditionary Warrior 2013: Future Maritime Operations for the 21st Century Operating Environment - Command and Control, Maneuver, Fires, Logistics/Sustainment, Force Protection by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The Economic Impact of Terrorism in the Near East: Understanding the Threats Posed by Militant Groups - Role of Counterinsurgency, Counterterrorism, Guerilla Warfare, Defense Strategy Implications by Progressive Management
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy