UFTO Note - DOE Office of Electric Transmission & Distribution (OETD) - Sep 17, 2003
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Cleantech 706 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Note - DOE Office of Electric Transmission
& Distribution (OETD)
Date: 17 Sep 2003
Back in March, we thought announcements were imminent. (See UFTO
Note ? T&D R&D Gaining Attention, 21 Mar 2003.) Little
did we realize the kinds of struggles that would ensue internally
in DOE over which people, programs and budgets would be won or
lost by which office. The new office started its work
nonetheless, judging from numerous appearances by its chief,
Jimmy Glotfelty, and several planning and roadmapping meetings
over the spring and summer. And the dust has settled internally.
OETD officially "stood up" on August 10, but the big August 14th
blackout made for awkward timing for a press release--none has
been issued. (In fact, until an appropriations bill passes, I'm
told they aren't actually officially "up".)
A new website quietly appeared on August 21. If offers a first
cut at describing the Office and its scope of responsibilities
and giving links to planning documents:
http://www.electricity.doe.gov/
[This site has a good compendium of information on the blackout,
however for the 12 Sept announcment of the release of a report on
the events sequence, go to the DOE home page, www.energy.gov.]
**National Electric Delivery Technologies Vision and Roadmap**
There've been two major meetings this year, one in April and one
in July.
In chronological order:
~~~
April 2003 Vision Meeting Proceedings (PDF 1.1 MB)
[65 people attended, of whom only 8 represented utilities]
http://www.energetics.com/meetings/electric/pdfs/presentations/proceedings.pdf
Results of the April meeting are given in this vision document**.
[The results of the July meeting will be reported in a few more
weeks.]:
"Grid 2030" — "A National Vision for Electricity’s Second 100
Years,
A CALL FOR LEADERSHIP"
**DOE’s National Electric Vision Document
(Final version, July 31, 2003) (PDF 1.2 MB)
http://www.energetics.com/meetings/electric/pdfs/electric_vision.pdf
~~~
Proceedings for National Electric Delivery Technologies Roadmap,
July 8-9, 2003 (PDF 1.0 MB)
[About 20 utilities were represented, with less than 40 people
out of 200 participants.]
http://www.energetics.com/meetings/electric/pdfs/proceedings.pdf
~~~
Glotfelty's kickoff presentation July 8:
"Transforming the Grid to Revolutionize Electric Power in North
America"
http://www.electricity.doe.gov/documents/glotfelty roadmap
opening 07 08 03.pdf
~~~~~~~~~~
No personnel are identified on the new website (other than
Gotfelty and Bill Parks, Assistant Director), and no org charts
shown. The most complete descriptions of the programs appear in a
series of factsheets:
http://www.electricity.doe.gov/documents/
http://www.electricity.doe.gov/documents/OETD_factsheet.pdf
The work of OETD follows these earlier developments: (see
reliability program materials at
http://www.eere.energy.gov/der/transmission/)
-- The National Energy Policy (May 2001) calls for the Department
of Energy to address constraints in electric transmission and
relieve bottlenecks.
-- The National Transmission Grid Study (May 2002) contains 51
recommendations for accomplishing the President's National Energy
Policy and speeding the pace of the transition to competitive
regional electricity markets.
-- The Transmission Grid Solutions Report (September 2002)
provides guidance for priority actions to address congestion on
"national interest" transmission corridors.
OETD conducts research in several areas:
--High-Temperature Superconductivity
--Electric Distribution Transformation
--Energy Storage
--Transmission Reliability
One participant at the July meeting told me he thought that DOE
seems to be in the thrall of superconductors and other
mega-technology solutions, and giving short shrift to distributed
generation, microgrids, and other common sense approaches.
As for budget, through the end of Sept (FY03), OETD is operating
on funds already committed to the programs that were brought in.
Of roughly $85 Million in FY'03, high temperature superconductors
have $40 M, and $27M was subject to Congressional earmarks. The
FY04 budget request has a new line item for electric power
infrastructure, and hopefully will provide more resources in
FY05) explicitly for transmission reliability. Another observer
said that the future program will be more balanced as a result.
The R&D plan is based on a 3-level architecture:
1. "Supergrid", or coast to coast backbone for power exchange.
(superconducting)
2. RegionGrid
3. CityGrid, ultimately involving fully integrated 2-way power
flow, microgrids, etc.
Planning and analysis tools are needed at all 3 levels. The
Supergrid is a longer term goal, operational perhaps in 10-15
years. Other near term elements include sensors, storage, and DC
systems.
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