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Intelligent microgrids

How microgrids help simplify an electrical energy future

The U.S. electrical grid has been in place for decades, and by and large has been a dependable electricity distribution network. But as a result of decarbonization of production, electrification of transportation, and extreme weather events, centralized production and distribution is no longer as reliable as it once was.

With grid dependability waning, many government institutions, businesses, and communities are turning to microgrids to keep the power on.

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What is a microgrid?

A microgrid is an interconnected electrical system of multiple generation sources and controllable loads that can operate in parallel or independently from the utility grid to keep the power flowing during an outage. It provides a reliable solution for unexpected power loss and energy management by balancing energy demand, optimizing energy usage, and reducing operating costs and carbon emissions. The generation sources are often referred to as distributed energy resources (DERs) that are decentralized assets controlled as an integrated system.

A microgrid is a DER system than can operate autonomously or “islanded” from the grid for maximum system resilience. Ultimately, microgrids are a grid within the grid designed to provide uninterrupted, reliable power in the event of a utility grid outage to keep the power on, no matter what.
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How does a microgrid work?

A microgrid coordinates power generation assets that can either work with a utility provider to augment their production or operate autonomously to power critical operations. Often consisting of traditional fossil fuel generators, as well as renewable sources such as windsolar, and energy storage, microgrids work to generate and optimize energy usage to provide resilient, efficient, and sustainable electricity solutions.

Intelligent microgrid control systems are used to enable the various microgrid components and DER assets to operate in a coordinated way. You can think of the microgrid controller as the conductor of the DER orchestra.  

What does a microgrid controller do?

A controller is the brains of a microgrid. An optimized combination of local and system control is used to integrate generating and load management assets, such as distributed energy resources (DERs). The local controller provides semi- autonomous and fast device control, maintains operation within connected equipment limits, provides local sequencing and alarm management and includes an integrated sequence of events recorder. 

A system controller interfaces with upstream SCADA and optimizes the operation of power system assets (sources and loads) through the downstream local controllers. The system controller can support various system-wide applications such as optimal source dispatching, demand control, renewable firming and more.

What are the benefits of a microgrid? 

A microgrid is as unique as the business, community, or government institution that deploys it. The solution is never "one-size-fits-all"; by understanding an organization's needs and wants, microgrid developers can identify the applications and assets needed to custom engineer an appropriate solution.

Organizations typically fall within the spectrum of prioritizing three goals: resilience, efficiency, and sustainability. Of course, every customer would like to build a microgrid that "does it all." However, while benefits certainly overlap, building a solution that entirely satisfies all three objectives can be cost-prohibitive.

Resilience

The need for consistent, always-on power is a huge concern for many companies and residential communities. Cybersecurity threats and extreme climate-related weather emergencies like wildfires, hurricanes, and winter storms are impacting access to reliable power. Many states have awarded grants and passed disaster-response legislation to invest in microgrids and similar technologies to help reduce or eliminate power loss. More than ever, our global energy and infrastructure must be able to withstand extreme conditions. Our lives, communities, and businesses depend on it.

Additionally, remote communities and developing nations are exploring microgrids for resilient energy as well as to lessen their dependence on fossil fuels, especially oil and diesel. Resilience is about bolstering critical operations and the ability to recover quickly from a crisis. Microgrids can play a key role in providing a more resilient energy infrastructure and are an investment in business continuity.

Efficiency

Many governments, corporations, and institutions look to microgrids for financial benefits. These benefits are achieved by two primary methods: cost avoidance and external monetization. Cost avoidance can take many forms, such as maximizing freely produced energy from renewable sources like solar and wind. When energy storage is added to renewable sources, it enables the freely produced power to be a dispatchable resource. That free power can then be leveraged during times of high utility grid energy costs to reduce peak demand charges, providing utility bill savings. External monetization occurs by participating in demand response programs or by selling energy and frequency regulation services to a third party such as independent system operator (ISO) or virtual power plant (VPP).

Sustainability

Organizations around the world have established environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals. These goals very often contain milestones or pledges to reaching a carbon neutral operations footprint by a given date. Microgrids can be a significant tool in reaching decarbonization goals while providing stakeholder value through energy cost savings and operational resiliency. A common challenge in powering business operations from renewable sources such as solar or wind is their intermittent nature. The sun isn’t always shinning or the wind blowing. The rise of affordable battery energy storage systems (BESS) has made popular a control technique known as renewable firming. Microgrids leveraging a combination of renewable sources and BESS store excess energy during times of peak generation and discharge it when renewable sources are not producing or producing less than required to support the load.

Helping you maintain dependable power

To address the challenge of increasing electricity demand and to meet the need for low carbon energy, Eaton is collaborating with Enel X at our Arecibo plant in Puerto Rico to build a fully operational microgrid. The completed microgrid will provide greater than 50% of power from solar and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 4500 metric tons with an estimated savings of 7-10% of annual energy costs. The Arecibo microgrid demonstrates how Eaton's Everything as a Grid approach to the energy transition can help customers safely add more renewables and energy storage and lower costs. Watch the video to learn more about the Arecibo microgrid project. 

The intelligent components behind optimization

Microgrid clients have one thing in common: the need for reliable power. But reliability means different things to different customers. Eaton helps customers understand the ins and outs of power alternatives via its microgrid at the Eaton Experience Center.
In the Eaton Experience Center's controlled environment, a full-scale operational microgrid powers the lighting, HVAC and house loads. The microgrid features Eaton's Power Xpert Microgrid Controller and is used as a "live" platform for testing control advancements. The microgrid controller intelligently manages multiple sources, including solar, energy storage, generation and the utility supply, to ensure power continuity for shortand long-term utility interruptions.
The Eaton solution employs a modular system design that accounts for microgrid needs now and in the future. Repeatable generation module templates, pre-format load options, a suite of pre-engineered optimization strategies, standard displays and reports and scale templates help Eaton build a microgrid from the ground up.

Additional resources

Additional resources