Blackout report blows away big myths about role of wind energy

The latest report into the South Australia blackout by the Australian Energy Market Operator has blown away two of the biggest myths about wind energy that its critics were using as reasons for the state-wide outage.

Within hours of the lights going out in South Australia, mainstream media, state and federal Coalition parties, and anti-wind interests in business and politics were blaming the “intermittency” of wind energy and its inability to generate power when the wind blew too hard.

If it wasn’t obvious to most people almost immediately that these were not factors in the blackout, then the AEMO report has certainly put them to rest.T1460414-Wind_turbine-SPL

“The most well known characteristic of wind power, variation of output with wind strength (often termed ‘intermittency’), was not a material factor in the events of 28 September 2016,” AEMO notes in its report.

And it wasn’t the fault of excessive wind speed either. That was the immediate accusation of the ABC’s Chris Uhlmann and Nick Xenophon in the hour after the blackout occurred, and later by deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce.

“Forty per cent of South Australia’s power is wind generated, and that has the problem of being intermittent – and what we understand at the moment is that those turbines aren’t turning because the wind is blowing too fast,” Uhlmann told the ABC audience on radio and TV within an hour of the blackout.

That, if it wasn’t clear at the time, was also nonsense. The AEMO report says that excessive wind speed only affected 20MW of the more than 800MW of wind power operating at the time. And despite forecasting wind speeds of more than 120kmh, AEMO decided that it had no need to order any further back-up generation.

“This updated report from AEMO confirms that the intermittent nature of wind energy had nothing to do with the September blackout in South Australia,” energy minister Tom Koutsantonis said in a statement.

“There are a number of political opportunists that now owe South Australians an apology for using this event to pursue their anti-renewables agenda.”

It is, however, important to note that the role of 18 wind farms in the state – and its capacity of 1,500MW which accounts for around 40 per cent of total demand – was not exonerated by AEMO.

AEMO points the finger at the loss of 445MW of wind generation after six voltage disturbances and five system faults (after the loss of three major transmission lines) as the straw that broke the camel’s back for the interconnector, causing it to separate from South Australia and for the state to go “system black.”

There is some dispute about the role of this loss of generation – or whether the fault lay with the uncontrolled loss of voltage that was happening, anyway, all around them. AEMO notes that voltage levels fell to 40 per cent of normal levels after the last line was lost. Wind farm operators suggest no generator could ride through such falls.

But the AEMO report makes clear that if the ride-through limits were the cause, it is a technical issue, and it is not about the nature of the energy source. Specifically, this refers to the settings on the “self protect mechanisms” in the wind turbines that might have been the problem. It also notes that issue is easily fixed, and already has been in most of the wind farms affected.

It turns out that some of the wind farms had been programmed to stop generating after riding through only two faults, and stopped generating earlier in the 80 second crisis caused by the fall of three main transmission losses.

Others were programmed to stop after five or six – such as the relatively new Snowtown and Hornsdale wind farms – and continued until just before the separation, while some, either not impacted by voltage issues on the grid or with higher fault ride-through settings, rode through until all generators were disconnected when the interconnector separated.

The Waterloo wind farm was able to ride through five faults that occurred in its area because its ride-through maximum had been set at nine.

It turns out that the problem was not, as first thought, limited to Suzlon turbines, but also affected Siemens technology. Most of these wind farms, including Snowtown and Hornsdale, have adjusted their fault limit to around 20 and are back operating as normal.

aemo wind trips

AEMO is now investigating what limits are imposed on wind turbines elsewhere on the grid. But one question remains: if the generators and the market operator did not know of these limits before the blackout, as some suggest, then why not?

“The voltage shocks this weather caused led nine wind generators to reduce their output. AEMO has confirmed that the wind generators were not able to ‘ride through’ these sustained shocks because of factory settings that only allowed them to sustain between three and six voltage events,” Koutsantonis added.

“This is a software issue – not a problem with renewable energy. I am pleased that AEMO will now lead investigations at a national level to ensure all wind farms around the country have the appropriate settings they need to sustain the types of voltage shocks we can expect in Australia.”

Here is another graph and the AEMO explanation of what happened:

Screen Shot 2016-10-19 at 9.46.06 AMWind turbines are designed so that upon detecting a low voltage at their terminals, the normal steady-state control is suspended and a sequence of actions is performed, referred to as fault ‘ride-through’ mode. The purpose is for the wind turbine to remain connected to the grid and provide support to the voltage recovery at the point of connection.

Wind turbine control systems are set to provide a fault ride-through response when voltage dips to below 80% to 90% of its normal voltage as seen at their low voltage terminals.12

The size of voltage dips observed by SA wind turbines online at the time of the event was sufficient for ten of the thirteen wind farms online to activate their fault ride-through mode. Depending on the wind farm, this mode of turbine operation was activated between three and six times, as shown in Table 4.

Of the 13 wind farms on line prior to the event,13 four remained in service: Canunda, Lake Bonney 1, Lake Bonney 2 & 3, and Waterloo. Of these, only one (Waterloo) initiated ride-through mode multiple times, but it remained in service because it was set to a limit of more than six ride-through events.

The size of the voltage dips for wind farms connected to the South East region of SA, such as Lake Bonney and Canunda wind farms (Figure 7), was not as large as the voltage dips observed at Davenport (see Figure 4). Wind turbines in the South East region initiated fault ride-through mode either once, at around 16:18:15, or not at all.

Comments

12 responses to “Blackout report blows away big myths about role of wind energy”

  1. AllanO Avatar
    AllanO

    I’d be interested to know whether as part of its generator connection & registration processes AEMO has historically asked newly connecting generators about the specifics of fault ride-through settings in control system software, such as “for how many faults (eg voltage or frequency excursions) in some defined time period will the software attempt ride-through before disconnecting?”.

    The report makes clear that for traditional thermal generators, this is not a question that would normally arise because ride-through is effectively provided by the mechanical properties of large synchronous generators (inertia), and not managed by a specific control system software configuration as is the case for windfarms and other equipment employing power conversion electronics.

    The fact that control system ride through settings for voltage dips varied considerably across the whole SA windfarm fleet tends to suggest that this may not be something on which AEMO has previously mandated minimum standards. I also wonder what minimum standards AEMO would have specified (or did specify) if it had asked this question prior to the SA black system event.

    1. MikeH Avatar
      MikeH

      I don’t believe what you say about thermal generators is entirely correct.

      For example the Northern Power Station tripped in 2005 after a temporary voltage drop “because of the operation of the NPS unit 1 Over-speed Protection Controller (OPC) system (a control scheme which is designed to protect the generator from exceeding its maximum rotational speed). ”

      During the same incident 2 Pelican Point gas turbines tripped from approximately 100MW approximately 2.5 seconds after the loss of the interconnector while responding to the change in frequency.

      Pelican Point Power Ltd later said that this trip may have been attributable to a sub-optimal version of software being used in the implementation of
      the digital control system.

      Even during the last event, following the interconnector loss we had
      • Torrens Island power station trip.
      • Ladbroke Grove power station trip.
      • All remaining wind farms trip.
      • Murraylink interconnector trip.

      1. AllanO Avatar
        AllanO

        Mike, to be clear I wasn’t saying that thermal generators have no protection mechanisms implemented in software – they certainly do. What I meant was that they would probably not have specific settings for “number of ride throughs attempted in [specific time frame] before disconnection”, whereas windfarm control systems obviously do have such settings. This is due to the quite different mechanisms through which these forms of generation respond to a voltage / frequency disturbance.

        As for the trips of Torrens etc in the last event after the Heywood interconnector opened, well of course this is what would happen as the frequency was plummeting on the loss of 900 MW of supply, and no generators are expected to remain connected once frequency falls below 47 Hz.

        1. MikeH Avatar
          MikeH

          Thanks for clarifying the point Allan.

      2. Analitik Avatar
        Analitik

        Yes after the 2005 event, and Northern were fined heavily for not meeting specified performance.

        Pelican Point escaped largely because they were deemed to have been brought down by Northern so their trip was classed as non-credible.

        http://www.neca.com.au/Files/NECA_Report_FINAL_for_14_March_2005.pdf

        Finally, the whole state wasn’t brought down when this took place – about 1/3rd was blacked out,

  2. Vox Avatar
    Vox

    To me, the crux of this whole saga is: why hadn’t AEMO set a requirement for the number of fault ride throughs the wind farms needed to have as a minimum? According to AEMO, it apparently has a large impact on the system’s ability to withstand this sort of shock.
    If a wind farm operator is given no guidance on what the number of events it should withstand, why would they ever set a high number?

    1. AllanO Avatar
      AllanO

      Agree. AEMO could be seen as trying to deflect when they write

      “information on the control system involved and its settings was not included in the models of wind turbine operation provided to AEMO during NEM registration processes prior to connection of the wind farms”

      but they don’t say whether this information was ever requested, nor what standards they expected these windfarms to meet.

      1. Analitik Avatar
        Analitik

        Rubbish. The AEMO would have required this information as part of registration in order to set the ratings for credible vs non-credible events for various conditions.

        1. Giles Avatar

          You would have thought, but AEMO are saying the didn’t. so go figure.

        2. AllanO Avatar
          AllanO

          So Analitik you are certain that these specific software settings (minimum sustainable number of ride through events) were subject to mandated standards? Surprising then that AEMO apparently didn’t notice that they hadn’t received any relevant information on this from any of the windfarm operators, despite some of them having been in operation for more than a decade!

        3. DJR96 Avatar
          DJR96

          AEMO are there to support archaic tech generators. They don’t (or are only now just learning) understand the capabilities of energy conversion tech found in all renewable tech. Too advanced for them!

    2. Ray Miller Avatar
      Ray Miller

      Agree, AEMO has been caught sleeping and is incompetent in not being up to date on the newer technologies and their parameters. Its AEMO’s job to specify and check/confirm all the operational parameters of connected equipment are appropriate. The other issue is wind speed data from all the wind farms should be available to them in real time to be able get a heads up on any likely operation of high wind speed safety protection to manage the network.
      Nobody at present has mentioned the design specification of the transmission towers that fell over, seeing a tower pulled out the ground with minimal cement foundation is unbelievable.

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