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Wind Transmission Issues
Importance
For development of some remote, high-quality, low-cost wind resources, additional transmission capacity will most likely be required. Without it, the net costs of wind investment will be higher.
Options for Resolution
1. Develop wind closer to loads. Use machines that are designed for cost-effective operation in lower-quality wind sites.
2. Connect at the distribution level. At this level, clusters of turbines in small distributed patterns avoid transmission service requirements (see www.nationalwind.org, “Distributed Wind Power Assessment,” page 33 for Tom Wind’s Iowa case study. The study showed that wind can be connected at the distribution level in small clusters without great costs).
3. Separate the ownership of generation and transmission by utilities and government agencies. Require open access to transmission services on a common-carrier basis.
4. Plan for, invest in, and provide sufficient transmission services to allow wind to meet market demand. Participation in transmission planning should expand to include all those with a stake in the outcome, including public officials, non-profit groups, landowners, and individuals impacted by transmission investment. Returns on investment must be sufficient to recompense investors, and the business case for taking the investment risk must be clear and convincing. Investment should be at a level and pace that is current with demand for wind-generated electricity—any less would deny wind the opportunity to compete in a fair market.
5. Reform the transmission planning process, interconnection rules, and interconnection agreements. Provide transmission services to generation resources like wind that can be planned, financed, and constructed in short periods of time to reduce time, costs, and hassles. Do it better, faster, cheaper.
6. Do not penalize wind with imbalance charges unrelated to costs. Do not require wind to nominate strict production schedules to control area operators in the absence of agreements about wind forecasting, data collection and communications, and costs and benefits. Allow imbalances to be settled over monthly periods so wind variations can offset each other.
7. Create transmission services that can be curtailed. Firm transmission is not universally available or economically attractive to wind because wind at capacity factors of 30% to 40% pays much more for firm transmission than higher capacity factor generators. By allowing long-term access to services that can be curtailed or non-firm services (currently limited to one year service contracts by tariff), wind developers could decide whether the amount and timing of interruptions of their transmission service would be economically feasible given their wind farm’s performance over time.
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