4.7 Article

Methods for Analysis and Quantification of Power System Resilience

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER SYSTEMS
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 4774-4787

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPWRS.2022.3212688

Keywords

Resilience; Power systems; Task analysis; Reliability; Power system reliability; Planning; Force; Power system resilience; reliability; emergency response; restoration; recovery; planning; operation; operator training

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This paper summarizes an IEEE PES Task Force report on the concept of resilience in power systems. Resilience is crucial for power systems to withstand extreme incidents and ensure uninterrupted power supply. Quantifying resilience as a key performance indicator is essential, along with considering costs and reliability. The paper also identifies gaps for future research and development.
This paper summarizes the report prepared by an IEEE PES Task Force. Resilience is a fairly new technical concept for power systems, and it is important to precisely delineate this concept for actual applications. As a critical infrastructure, power systems have to be prepared to survive rare but extreme incidents (natural catastrophes, extreme weather events, physical/cyber-attacks, equipment failure cascades, etc.) to guarantee power supply to the electricity-dependent economy and society. Thus, resilience needs to be integrated into planning and operational assessment to design and operate adequately resilient power systems. Quantification of resilience as a key performance indicator is important, together with costs and reliability. Quantification can analyze existing power systems and identify resilience improvements in future power systems. Given that a 100% resilient system is not economic (or even technically achievable), the degree of resilience should be transparent and comprehensible. Several gaps are identified to indicate further needs for research and development.

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