Virginia, U.S.A. --
From David and Goliath to Luke Skywalker and the Death Star, the
human race has been reminded again and again that big things have their
vulnerable points. The U.S. power grid, sometimes called the world’s
largest machine, is no exception.
So it was little surprise when the Wall Street Journal
reported earlier this month that the U.S. government had identified nine
key substations (out of 55,000), whose coordinated destruction could
knock out power coast-to-coast. This would not be a flicker of lights,
but an outage that lasts weeks or even months, a blow to our
electricity-steeped economy like something from a Dystopian movie.
We’ve heard similar warnings before. As far back as 1982, Amory and
Hunter Lovins raised the issue in “Brittle Power: Energy Strategy for
National Security.” Talk of the grid’s susceptibility heightened
following 9/11, and after the Northeast Blackout of 2003, and again last
year when gunmen destroyed 17 transformers in an attack on Pacific Gas
& Electric equipment.
These latest threats aren’t being ignored. Federal action is underway
to better guard the grid. But with so much awareness of the problem,
why are we focusing mostly on fences, sentries and surveillance, instead
of fixing the root cause?
The grid’s weakness lies in its interconnectedness, which can lead to
domino-like failures that can quickly traverse states and even affect
Canada. We can reduce this vulnerability by adding decentralized energy –
dispersed generation, energy storage, and microgrids – that supply
power even when the grid is down.
James Newcomb, managing director at the Rocky Mountain Institute, an
organization that has focused on this issue for many years, says it
would not take a lot of decentralized energy to make a big difference,
at least in the early stage of a grid crisis.
“In an emergency, even a very small penetration of distributed
generation, deployed in the right places, can make a huge difference to
human welfare by providing essential services, supporting first
responders, and enabling supply chains for critical goods. This could be
achieved by providing emergency electricity service, delivered by
distributed resources, to only 1 percent of the load normally served by
the grid,” he said.
While one percent would get us through an emergency, we would need
far more dispersed energy if the grid outage lasted weeks or months “to
sustain supply chains for essential goods and services,” he added.
Dispersed energy is the term that the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission uses to describe distributed generation that is not connected
to the grid, and therefore spared when a cascading failure occurs. How
much dispersed energy exists now in the U.S.? We don’t really know. The
Energy Information Administration does not keep the figures because the
data is hard to track.
Microgrids are another form of energy that can supply power in a
crisis. While they are connected to the grid, they also have the ability
to disconnect and act as self-sufficient, mini-grids. “Existing microgrids provide "islandable" power systems — systems
that can continue operating on a stand-alone basis if the grid goes down
— for some military bases, university campuses, and other facilities.
These systems are relatively rare today, but their numbers are rapidly
increasing,” Newcomb said.
What about all of the solar the U.S. has added in recent years? True,
the U.S. had enough solar to power 2.2 million homes by the end of
2013, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. But,
unfortunately, most of it is connected to the grid. So it goes off when
the grid fails.
Meanwhile, much of our dispersed generation uses fossil fuels,
according to John Moore, a senior attorney with the Sustainable FERC
Project at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “Unfortunately, most of these systems are simply backup diesel or propane-powered generators, so they are both dirty and vulnerable to interruptions in the fuel supply,” Moore said
Renewables, on the other hand, “are impervious to the supply
disruptions and price spikes of coal, natural gas and nuclear fuel,” he
said. “To be able to supply a constant power supply, DG should be
coupled with energy storage and/or integrated into microgrids to
eliminate the need for grid backup power.”
Moore sees the need for “more clean DG, more renewables, more smart
grid innovations, and more energy storage” to keep the economy running
if widespread grid failure occurs. “Specifically, DG will have to become more independent of the grid to
insulate its users against the effects of blackouts,” Moore said.
“Scaling up of energy storage is critical because it reduces DG’s
reliance on grid-supplied power as backup. Microgrids also could be a
solution; they are community-scale energy networks that generate most of
their power from DG and use super-efficient buildings and energy
storage to reduce power needs.”
FERC in early March took action to shore up physical protection of
the grid through new rules for utilities. Specifically, FERC ordered the
North American Electric Reliability Corporation to propose standards in
90 days that will guide how utilities decide to protect their critical
facilities.
The order doesn’t require grid decentralization. But in a separate
opinion, FERC commissioner John Norris, suggested at least a plan toward
bringing greater intelligence to the grid. Norris said that the U.S. “simply cannot erect enough
barriers to protect North America’s over 400,000 circuit miles of
transmission, and 55,000 transmission substations.”
Instead, he called for “building a smarter and more
agile grid,” which would discourage attacks “by ensuring that power will
continue to flow to consumers even if certain elements of the grid are
harmed.” Such a grid could “readily integrate intermittent resources,
increase demand-side management capabilities, enhance the
competitiveness of the wholesale energy market and more,” he said.
It’s clear that grid threats aren’t going away. They
are getting worse and evolving beyond physical attacks to cyber
assaults. A report last month underscored this new menace. The
non-profit Bipartisan Policy Center said that cyber-attacks “are
increasing, both in frequency and sophistication” in its report,
“Cybersecurity and the North American Electric Grid: New Policy
Approaches to Address an Evolving Threat.”
This is “alarming because the potential consequences of a successful
large-scale cyber-attack — or combined cyber and physical attack — on
the electric power sector are difficult to overstate,” the report said.
The choice seems pretty clear. If we don’t fix the root problem that
threatens the U.S. grid by adding more decentralized and intelligent
resources, in a few years we’ll likely again be revisiting the issue of
security, following yet another calamity that shows the grid is too big
not to fail.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/03/how-do-we-really-protect-the-grid-from-the-bad-guys
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