RATIONAL USE OF CONNECTED CAPACITIES IN PURPOSE OF MORE ELECTRICITY EFFICIENT POWER DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
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Paper number
504
Working Group Number
Conference name
CIRED 2019
Conference date
3-6 June 2019
Conference location
Madrid, Spain
Peer-reviewed
Yes
Short title
Convener
Authors
Aganovic, Senad, Regulatory Commission for energy in Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Aganovic, Edina, Independent System Operator in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Konjic, Tatjana, University of Tuzla - Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Aganovic, Edina, Independent System Operator in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Konjic, Tatjana, University of Tuzla - Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Abstract
Distribution System Operator (DSO) is obliged to provide the contracted power to the system user. The use of the distribution capacity below the contracted connection power causes the inefficient engagement of the available distribution capacity. Investing, maintaining and managing of an unused power distribution capacity is an unjustified expense. In order to avoid undue costs, it is possible to create such tariff design, which would activate system users to use the contracted connection power more efficiently, through price signals. More efficient use of the contracted connection power by the system users has a positive effect through more efficient use of distribution capacities. Through the analysis of a part of the distribution network, the unused capacity and unjustified distribution network costs were detected. In this paper, it is suggested a way to activate system users for more efficient use of contracted power. More efficient use of the contracted connection power by the system users results with a more efficient distribution network.
Table of content
Keywords
Publisher
AIM
Date
2019-06-03
Published in
Permanent link to this record
https://cired-repository.org/handle/20.500.12455/37
http://dx.doi.org/10.34890/80
http://dx.doi.org/10.34890/80
ISSN
2032-9644
ISBN
978-2-9602415-0-1