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Toolbox Entry: International Review of Residential PV Feed-in Management

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Revision as of 14:26, 24 November 2022 by ***** (***** | *****) (Created page with "{{TUEWAS ToolboxDB |TUW title=International Review of Residential PV Feed-in Management |TUW author=Electric Power Research Institute |TUW year=2018 |TUW entry=Study Report |T...")
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Last edited on 24/11/2022 by Hector Alfaro
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General Information

ID Number
20
Main Author
Electric Power Research Institute
Publication Year
2018
Type of Entry
Study Report
Active management of distribution grid
  • Control Solutions
Enabling Distributed Technologies
  • Distributed generation (solar)


Connection Agreement Solutions
  • Technical requirements for connection (grid codes, standards)



Information Exchange
  • Interoperability and communication
  • Cybersecurity
Which of the above categories best describe the material
Active management of distribution grid
Geographical Scope of the Publication
Australia


File



URL
Abstract
The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) is investigating technological and functional solutions to the challenge of integrating large amounts of distributed, residential-scale photovoltaic (PV) generation. Information is provided on the following five key elements necessary to perform management of PV feed-in: device hardware, communication protocols, network infrastructure, a management system, and interconnection agreements. EPRI conducted interviews with representatives from entities facing similar challenges, including from the United States, Germany, Japan, and parts of Australia outside of the National Electricity Market and South West Interconnected System. The interviews and research revealed similar efforts to AEMO, yet none in widespread use that simultaneously address all three challenges of 1) high PV penetrations, 2) consisting mostly of small, distributed PV systems, and 3) on systems without strong (or any) interconnections to neighboring countries or regions. In considering solutions, a holistic view of PV management that includes more than just feed-in management (e.g. other advanced inverter functionalities and customer control of their net energy output) is likely on the horizon.