spinjector said:Saw this lovely news story tonight.
Since the reporting on this was non-technical, let me fill in some of the gaps.
Current practice is to manage the grid for a target a frequency of 60.00 Hz. However, due to continually changing loads and other factors, the instantaneous frequency is not constant. It is, however, generally held within the bounds of 59.95 Hz to 60.05 Hz. Over time, on average, the effective frequency is a smidge higher than 60.00 Hz, so synchronous clocks tend to run fast.
To correct this, under present practice, once the accumulated time error reaches several seconds, the grid operators change the target frequency from 60.00 Hz to 59.98 Hz in order to back out the accumulated time error. For the Eastern Interconnect, a control center in Indiana, near Indianapolis, sends out orders for all power plants within the Interconnect -- from Florida in the southeast to Saskatchewan in the Northwest -- to operate at 59.98 Hz for some period of time. Of course, they all must do this in sync. (10 seconds of time error can be backed out at 59.98 Hz in about 8 hours. The procedure is different and more automated on the Western Interconnect.)
The proposal changes nothing about operations when the target frequency is 60.00 Hz. It only ends the practice of switching to a target frequency of 59.98 Hz when the accumulated time error gets big enough. Under the proposal, the grid would stay at a target frequency of 60.00 Hz all the time, and the time error would continue to accumulate indefinitely.
The procedure for deliberately running slow at 59.98 Hz is called "Time Error Correction" (TEC). In one form or another, the industry has been doing this since the 1930s, originally as an inducement that people should buy electric clocks (many of which were made by GE).
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is charged with regulating the _reliability_ of the interstate power grid. The industry maintains that this is a "business practice" issue, not a "reliability" issue. That is, "how" TECs are performed is "reliability." Whether or not TECs are performed is a "voluntary business practice." Nonetheless, there is currently a reliability standard (regulation), BAL-004, that might be read to imply a requirement for TECs. The industry has petitioned FERC to amend this standard. That proceeding is currently pending.
For the complete record on the matter before the FERC, start at http://elibrary.ferc.gov/idmws/docket_search.asp and search for all filings on Docket Number RM09-13 . The nine documents on the docket provide a lot of information about the industry's position.
Additional information can also be found on the NERC website, under "TEC Elimination" http://www.nerc.com/page.php?cid=6|386 . Look at the Webinars.
- Jonathan