August 1, 2019
Conference Paper

GridAPPS-D™ a distribution management platform to develop applications for rural electric utilities

Abstract

Rural electric utilities, many of which operate with a co-op management approach, have unique operational challenges not shared with their municipal or IOU counterparts. Rural electric utilities typically have fewer customers per feeder mile, and are generally less able to afford the costs, or provide robust support for today’s Advanced Distribution Management System (ADMS) offerings. Additionally, co-ops typically do not need the full suite of ADMS offerings but would benefit from a subset of applications such as OMS, Unbalanced Power-Flow, Volt-VAR optimization and FLISR (Fault Location Isolation and Service Restoration). Their needs, even within these applications, are simpler and more standardized. Lastly, due to their size, their IT capabilities and resources are commonly limited; hence hardware and software needs to be standards-based and easy to maintain with only most expansions of current capabilities. GridAPPS-D™ is an open-source, application development environment that’s part of the Department of Energy’s Grid Modernization Efforts, being led by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The GridAPPS-D project is developing a reference architecture and implementation with the goal of reducing the time and cost to integrate distribution applications for both planning and operations through the use of standardized interfaces and data models. In this paper, we present a view of the reference architecture for GridAPPS-D and highlight its applicability to the rural electric utilities’ needs, including descriptions of applications being developed using this platform, and how they can be applied to other rural electric utilities.

Revised: October 9, 2020 | Published: August 1, 2019

Citation

Melton R.B., K.P. Schneider, and S.V. Vadari. 2019. GridAPPS-D™ a distribution management platform to develop applications for rural electric utilities. In IEEE Rural Electric Power Conference (REPC 2019), April 28-May 1, 2019, Bloomington, MN, 13 - 17. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE. PNNL-SA-140894. doi:10.1109/REPC.2019.00012