Typhoon-induced extreme weather poses a severe threat to power systems with high offshore wind penetration. Source-side wind turbine tripping and grid-side transmission line failures are likely to occur simultaneously, which may trigger cascading outages and large-scale load shedding. A multi-level source-grid-load-storage preventive resilience dispatch strategy is proposed. A typhoon spatiotemporal evolution model is first established based on the Batts gradient wind model. Failure probability models for offshore wind turbines and overhead transmission lines are developed while considering strong wind and lightning strike effects. The most probable and severe fault scenario is identified using an entropy-based quantification method. A two-stage robust preventive dispatch model is subsequently formulated. In the day-ahead stage, unit commitment, multi-type reserve allocation, and pumped storage scheduling are optimized at a 1 h resolution. In the real-time stage, combined wind-storage systems are coordinated at a 10 min resolution to accommodate rapid wind power ramps caused by high-wind shutdown events. The model is reformulated through Lagrangian duality and solved by the Benders decomposition algorithm. Case studies on a modified IEEE-RTS 24-bus system with three offshore wind farms demonstrate that the proposed strategy reduces wind curtailment by 66.3%, load shedding by 74.6%, and total cost by 14.8% compared with the case without energy storage. The combined operation cost of storage resources accounts for only 3.1% of the total cost, confirming its favorable cost-effectiveness for resilience enhancement. The proposed strategy contributes to the sustainable integration of offshore wind energy by ensuring a reliable power supply during extreme weather events.
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Qiuhui Chen
Junhao Gong
Xiangjing Su
Sustainability
Shanghai University of Electric Power
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Chen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d0af68659487ece0fa553d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073491
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