North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather

Space weather driven by solar activity can induce geomagnetic disturbances at the Earth's surface that can affect power transmission systems. Variations in the geomagnetic field result in geomagnetically induced currents that can enter the system through its grounding connections, saturate tran...

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Main Authors: Piccinelli Roberta, Krausmann Elisabeth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2017033
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spelling doaj-6c23b1584a074b899380010ffb32c0332021-04-02T15:11:14ZengEDP SciencesJournal of Space Weather and Space Climate2115-72512018-01-018A0310.1051/swsc/2017033swsc160049North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weatherPiccinelli RobertaKrausmann ElisabethSpace weather driven by solar activity can induce geomagnetic disturbances at the Earth's surface that can affect power transmission systems. Variations in the geomagnetic field result in geomagnetically induced currents that can enter the system through its grounding connections, saturate transformers and lead to system instability and possibly collapse. This study analyzes the impact of extreme space weather on the northern part of the European power transmission grid for different transformer designs to understand its vulnerability in case of an extreme event. The behavior of the system was analyzed in its operational mode during a severe geomagnetic storm, and mitigation measures, like line compensation, were also considered. These measures change the topology of the system, thus varying the path of geomagnetically induced currents and inducing a local imbalance in the voltage stability superimposed on the grid operational flow. Our analysis shows that the North European power transmission system is fairly robust against extreme space weather events. When considering transformers more vulnerable to geomagnetic storms, only few episodes of instability were found in correspondence with an existing voltage instability due to the underlying system load. The presence of mitigation measures limited the areas of the network in which bus voltage instabilities arise with respect to the system in which mitigation measures are absent.https://doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2017033
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Piccinelli Roberta
Krausmann Elisabeth
spellingShingle Piccinelli Roberta
Krausmann Elisabeth
North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
author_facet Piccinelli Roberta
Krausmann Elisabeth
author_sort Piccinelli Roberta
title North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
title_short North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
title_full North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
title_fullStr North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
title_full_unstemmed North Europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
title_sort north europe power transmission system vulnerability during extreme space weather
publisher EDP Sciences
series Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
issn 2115-7251
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Space weather driven by solar activity can induce geomagnetic disturbances at the Earth's surface that can affect power transmission systems. Variations in the geomagnetic field result in geomagnetically induced currents that can enter the system through its grounding connections, saturate transformers and lead to system instability and possibly collapse. This study analyzes the impact of extreme space weather on the northern part of the European power transmission grid for different transformer designs to understand its vulnerability in case of an extreme event. The behavior of the system was analyzed in its operational mode during a severe geomagnetic storm, and mitigation measures, like line compensation, were also considered. These measures change the topology of the system, thus varying the path of geomagnetically induced currents and inducing a local imbalance in the voltage stability superimposed on the grid operational flow. Our analysis shows that the North European power transmission system is fairly robust against extreme space weather events. When considering transformers more vulnerable to geomagnetic storms, only few episodes of instability were found in correspondence with an existing voltage instability due to the underlying system load. The presence of mitigation measures limited the areas of the network in which bus voltage instabilities arise with respect to the system in which mitigation measures are absent.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2017033
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AT krausmannelisabeth northeuropepowertransmissionsystemvulnerabilityduringextremespaceweather
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