Energy04 Terms
Energy04 Terms
Terms
Overview
Provide background terminology and information to course participants Discuss terminology related to the following:
Fundamental energy terminology Electrical system Financial Renewable energy markets Renewable energy policies
Basic terms
Power - (Watt, W) (P) = current x voltage; P=I*V. Rate at which work is done. This is an instantaneous measure at a given point in time.
kW kilowatt = 1000 watts, MW Megawatt = 1 million watts = 1,000 kW GW Gigawatt = 1 billion watts = 1,000 MW
If you increase the pressure (voltage) of the water coming out of the pump, it hits the waterwheel with a lot more force and the wheel turns faster, generating more power. If you increase the flow rate (current), the waterwheel turns faster because of the weight of the extra water hitting it.
Therm - used to measure natural gas usage is 100,000 Btu, so 10 therms = 1 MMBtu Mcf Thousand cubic feet of natural gas. More or less = 1 MMBtu
Average rate for electrical energy = $91.04/980 kWh = 9.3 cents/kWh Average rate for thermal energy = $40.77/41 therms = 99 cents/therm = $9.90/MMbtu
Utility terms
Generating Station a power plant. Can be owned by just about anybody including utilities and non-utilities. Central station vs. distributed. DG Distributed Generation Small-scale power generation systems typically located on a customer site. Typically 3 kW 10 MW in scale. Can be stand alone or grid connected. Cogeneration the sequential production and use of heat and power from a power plant. Transmission system - An interconnected group of lines and equipment for the movement or transfer of bulk electric energy between points of supply and points at which it is transformed for delivery to customers or is delivered to other electric systems. Typically 69,000 volts (69 kV) and higher. Distribution system - The poles, wire and transformers used to deliver electric energy from a bulk power supplier to the consumer.
Market terms
IPP Independent Power Producer. Also called a Non-utility Generator (NUG). A power plant owned not by a utility but by an investor or some other entity (Tribe, company, city, military base). QF - Qualifying facilities are a distinct class of energy producer which consists of either small-scale producers who normally self-generate energy for their own needs but may have occasional or frequent surplus energy. Qualifying facilities were first classified in 1978 with the establishment of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA), a piece of legislation which was intended to encourage more efficient and environmentally friendly energy production in the United States. Avoided cost - the cost a utility would incur to generate its next unit of energy or power. Avoided cost rates have historically been used as the power purchase price utilities offer Qualifying Facilities.
Exercise
Question 1 - A 2 MW wind turbine produced 432 MWh over a 30 day period. What is the capacity factor? Question 2 A 25 kW PV plant has a capacity factor of 25%. How much energy does it produce over a year?
Answers
Question 1
Maximum energy generation over the 30 days:
2 MW * 30 days * 24 hrs/day = 1,440 MWh So the capacity factor is 432/1440 = .30 or 30%
Question 2
25 kW * 365 days * 24 hrs/day * .25 = 54,750 kWh
ME: 30% by 2000; 10% by 2017 goal - new RE NH: 23.8% in 2025 MA: 4% by 2009 + 1% annual increase RI: 15% by 2020 CT: 10% by 2010 NY: 24% by 2013 NJ: 22.5% by 2021 PA: 18% by 2020 MD: 9.5% in 2022 *DE: 10% by 2019 DC: 11% by 2022
IL: 8% by 2013
AZ: 15% by 2025 *NM: 20% by 2020 (IOUs) 10% by 2020 (co-ops) HI: 20% by 2020 TX: 5,880 MW by 2015
Minimum solar or customer-sited requirement
* Increased credit for solar or customer-sited PA: 8% Tier I / 10% Tier II (includes non-renewables); SWH is a Tier II resource
(Source: Database of State Incentives for Renewable Energy. 2006. Renewables Portfolio Standards. NC State University. NC Solar Center. Available online at: http://www.dsireusa.org/documents/summarymaps/RPS_Map.ppt)
REC transactions
Market terms
Net metering - Net metering is a policy for consumers who own, small, renewable energy facilities, such as wind or solar. "Net", in this context, is used in the sense of meaning "what remains after deductions" -- in this case, the deduction of any energy outflows from metered energy inflows. Under net metering, a system owner receives retail credit for at least a portion of the electricity they generate. The ideal has your existing electrical meter spinning backwards, effectively banking excess electricity production for future credit. In reality, the rules vary significantly by utility; if net metering is available, if and how long you can keep your banked credits, how much the credits are worth (retail/wholesale), etc. (Source: Wikipedia)
Net Metering
Source: DSIRE: www.dsireusa.org December 2007
100 50
25/2,000
* * 25
2,000*
100 * 40
500
VT: 15/150
100
25/100
* 20 * *
30
no limit 25
1,000 1,000
25*
100
* 40 10
* * 15
* * *
20/100
varies 80,000
100 * 25/300 50
10/100 25/100
NH: 100 MA: 60 RI: 1,000/1,650* CT: 2,000* 10/25/125/400 50/3,000/5,000* 2,000* 25/500/2,000 2,000 100 10/500*
50
varies
State-wide net metering for certain utility types (e.g., investor-owned utilities only) Net metering offered by one or more individual utilities
(Numbers indicate individual system size limit in kilowatts. Some states limits vary by customer type and/or technology as shown)