DSO - TSO Coordination
Abstract
Distributed energy resources (DER) are bringing connection problems, generation
uncertainty, bidirectional flows... However, they may also provide services to the
system operators. Improvements of information and communication technologies (ICT)
are bringing new possibilities for the monitoring of the low voltage grid levels. In this
thesis it will be studied how DER and ICT affects to the European system operators
roles.
It has been identified the roles, objectives and tools that system operators (DSO and
TSO) have nowadays and which ones they will have in the future. In future, roles will
remain but DER will bring new tools that will be useful for both DSO and TSO.
Since both system operators (SOs) are willing to act over DER, it is necessary to
establish coordination so that both SO are be able to use DER services increasing the
efficiency of the system: it is necessary to decide who is going to act over DER and
how the other SO will be able to consider DER services.
In order to solve this coordination issue, it has been proposed a methodology that
analyses how different coordination models fit in a country. The methodology is based
on three different steps:
1. Analysis of current country boundary conditions
2. Evaluation of the transition costs if this model is implemented using
technical, regulatory and economical approaches
3. Assessment of the decision variables for the long term looking at the whole
country.
In order to see the robustness of the methodology it has been applied the methodology
for 3 different models in three different countries. The three countries considered for
this master thesis are three different representative countries after studding 12
European countries .Then, it has been applied the methodology nine times: one per
each one of the couples country-model that this master thesis consider in order to
study the European representative countries.
The different models that have been considered are based on state of the arts
reviewed within this project. Furthermore, those models have been deeply defined
during this master thesis.
By doing this, this work has studied the different possibilities on how Europe regulation
may evolve for solving the TSO-DSO coordination issue. Comparing the results of the
different case studies, it is possible to see that there is not one model that fits better for
all the countries. Transition costs are different depending on the current situations of
the countries nowadays. Furthermore, the long run efficiency is different depending on
the DER penetration of each country and the market power/competition of the DSOs.
Trabajo Fin de Máster
DSO - TSO CoordinationTitulación / Programa
Master in the Electric Power IndustryMaterias/ UNESCO
33 Ciencias tecnológicas3306 Ingeniería y tecnología eléctrica
330609 Transmisión y distribución