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Conceptual Framework for Developing Resilience Metrics for the Electricity, Oil, and Gas Sectors in the United States

Watson, Jean-Paul W.; Guttromson, Ross G.; Silva-Monroy, Cesar A.; Jeffers, Robert F.; Jones, Katherine A.; Ellison, James; Rath, Charles; Gearhart, Jared L.; Jones, Dean A.; Corbet, Thomas F.; Hanley, Charles J.; Jenkins, La T.

This report has been written for the Department of Energy’s Energy Policy and Systems Analysis Office to inform their writing of the Quadrennial Energy Review in the area of energy resilience. The topics of measuring and increasing energy resilience are addressed, including definitions, means of measuring, and analytic methodologies that can be used to make decisions for policy, infrastructure planning, and operations. A risk-based framework is presented which provides a standard definition of a resilience metric. Additionally, a process is identified which explains how the metrics can be applied. Research and development is articulated that will further accelerate the resilience of energy infrastructures.

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New wholesale power market design using linked forward markets :

Silva-Monroy, Cesar A.; Ellison, James; Elliott, Ryan T.; Byrne, Raymond H.; Guttromson, Ross G.

This report proposes a reformulation of U.S. ISO/RTO-managed wholesale electric power mar- kets for improved reliability and e ciency of system operations. Current markets do not specify or compensate primary frequency response. They also unnecessarily limit the participation of new technologies in reserve markets and o er insu cient economic inducements for new capacity invest- ment. In the proposed market reformulation, energy products are represented as physically-covered rm contracts and reserve products as physically-covered call option contracts. Trading of these products is supported by a backbone of linked ISO/RTO-managed forward markets with planning horizons ranging from multiple years to minutes ahead. A principal advantage of this reformulation is that reserve needs can be speci ed in detail, and resources can o er the services for which they are best suited, without being forced to conform to rigid reserve product de nitions. This should improve the business case for electric energy storage and other emerging technologies to provide reserve. In addition, the facilitation of price discovery should help to ensure e cient energy/reserve procurement and adequate levels of new capacity investment.

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Results 51–58 of 58
Results 51–58 of 58