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Transforming electric utilities

Bruce Wollenberg's pioneering study of loss allocation discovers an algorithm that promises to be a major advance for the electric utility industry

by Andy Tellijohn

Serendipity must have been on the menu that day back in spring 1999 when electrical and computer engineering professor Bruce Wollenberg and teaching assistant Aniss Fradi met for a working lunch.

Wollenberg and Fradi, a doctoral student, were discussing a complex mathematical problem whose solution had eluded them for months. Doctoral student Sergio Brignone walked in, saw their calculations on the chalkboard, and blurted out the answer within seconds.

“Sometimes it takes another pair of eyes,” Wollenberg says with a chuckle. “You will work on a problem for weeks and not see the answer, but a casual visitor will walk by and make you look like a fool."

Thanks to Brignone's fresh perspective, Wollenberg and Fradi gained a team member and discovered an algorithm that promises to benefit electric utilities and their customers.

For most of the 20th century, a few utility companies in each state supplied electrical power to U.S. consumers and businesses. Each utility staked out its own turf, restricted its service to that area, and charged rates that were regulated by the federal government and state public utility commissions. But in the 1990s, the federal government deregulated the electric utility industry, offering consumers the prospect of lower costs and the option of choosing among service providers.

Although slow to take effect in the Midwest, those changes have occurred in other regions of the country and eventually will benefit all consumers, say industry experts. However, deregulation also exposed industry flaws, including an inaccurate loss allocation system.

A percentage of the electricity flowing through transmission lines is always lost. Before deregulation, there was less of an incentive to determine exactly how much loss should be attributed to each utility company. Losses were distributed among companies using approximate formulas, and the companies in turn compensated for their added costs by raising consumer prices.

In the highly competitive deregulated marketplace, however, price is a critical factor for consumers and utilities alike. Under deregulation, suppliers in one part of the country can sell energy to a user in another area, sending the electric power over transmission lines owned by other utility companies.

The new algorithm can allocate transmission line losses equitably among the various energy providers using the lines at a given time. Efficiency—and resulting cost savings—can provide the critical margin that utilities need in order to stay competitive.

Wollenberg says the new algorithm would distribute transmission line losses fairly. “Losses could be off by 20 to 30 percent,” Wollenberg says of past loss calculations. “We've come up with a way of precisely doing loss allocation."

The calculation initially used trapezoidal integration—a method of calculating slopes—and multiplication by a small change in power transfer to obtain the change in losses. Now, Wollenberg says, they use more advanced methods that can accurately measure electricity loss to six decimal points.

“If I [as a company] am being overallocated for the losses I'm sustaining, I [won't have] a happy board of directors,” Wollenberg says.

Deregulation required a whole new way of measuring loss allocation, says Vern Albertson, professor emeritus in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and former head of the Center for Electric Energy.

Established in 1981, the center promotes and financially supports electric power and energy engineering research. The center's industry advisory board, which consists of eight to ten Midwest companies, recommended that its researchers undertake a study of loss allocation, an issue that had been neglected for years, according to Albertson.

“Prior to Professor Wollenberg's research on this topic, there was no accurate method of allocating the costs of these losses to each electric supplier using the transmission grid. The electric utilities that owned the transmission grids were in a quandary as to how to recover these costs,” Albertson says. “Wollenberg's research is pioneering work in this field and is of critical importance to the electric utility industry, not only nationally, but internationally as well. It will be recognized as a major breakthrough and contribution."

The new algorithm could provide a major windfall for companies that do a good job of preventing energy waste. One public utility anxiously awaiting the long-term results of Wollenberg's research is Otter Tail Power Company, a relatively small but highly respected electric utility based in Fergus Falls, Minnesota. The company has been working to solve the problem of loss allocation since the 1960s, when it was absorbing losses caused by transmission of energy from the Missouri River hydroelectric generating plants to the Minneapolis loads. Otter Tail is one of the companies that advised the Center for Electric Energy to study loss allocation.

“Before, the generation using the transmission was mostly serving the company's load, and the losses were provided by those generators,” says Larry Larson, manager of delivery operations at Otter Tail.

“We are excited about having more accurate allocations,” he says. “Currently the Mid-Continent Area Power Pool—which we are members of—uses a calculation that is inherently in error because of simplified assumptions."

Most companies in the industry are excited about the University's research, Larson says, because they want to control their costs. Some companies have been absorbing costs that are disproportionately high, relative to the amount of electricity lost through their lines, he says.

A new loss allocation method must obtain government approval, so there will be a waiting period before any new system takes effect nationwide. But as the new method is adopted and deregulation starts taking effect throughout the country, Wollenberg's research is one step among many that will help consumers, Larson says.

“In the long run, everyone should benefit because of the competition,” he says.

For more information see www.ece.umn.edu/faculty/wollenberg.html.  

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