In direct load control (DLC) programs, utilities can curtail the demand of participating loads to contractually agreed-upon levels during periods of critical peak load, thereby reducing stress on the system, generation cost, and required transmission and generation capacity. Participating customers receive financial incentives. The impacts of implementing DLC programs extend well beyond peak shaving. There may be a shift of load proportional to the interrupted load to the times before or after a DLC event, and different load shifts have different consequences. Tools that can quantify the impacts of such programs on load curves, peak demand, emissions, and fossil fuel costs are currently lacking. The Grid Project Impact Quantification (GridPIQ) screening tool includes a Direct Load Control module, which takes into account project-specific inputs as well as the larger system context in order to quantify the impacts of a given DLC program. This allows users (utilities, researchers, etc.) to test and compare different program specifications and their impacts.
Revised: April 19, 2018 |
Published: November 13, 2017
Citation
Pal S., B.L. Thayer, E.L. Barrett, and K.E. Studarus. 2017.Estimating the Impacts of Direct Load Control Programs Using GridPIQ, a Web-Based Screening Tool. In IEEE Conference on Technologies for Sustainability (SusTech 2017), November 12-13, 2017, Phoenix, Arizona, 1-8. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE.PNNL-SA-127311.doi:10.1109/SusTech.2017.8333505