Burning Issues: Modeling Risk of Wildfire Ignitions and Power Outages in the Electric Grid

Line Roald

Assistant Professor in Electrical & Computer Engineering

University of Wisconsin, Madison

Seminar Information

Seminar Series
Energy: Joint Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Dept & Center for Energy Research

Seminar Date - Time
October 13, 2021, 11:00 am
-
12:15

Seminar Location
~ Topic: MAE+CER Energy Webinar (10/13) w/ Prof. Line Roald (UW)
~ Meeting ID: 985 2351 3762
~ Seminar Recording Available: Please contact seminar coordinator, Jake Blair at (j1blair@eng.ucsd.edu)

Professor Line Roald

Abstract

Electric grid faults can be the source of catastrophic wildfires, particularly in regions with high winds and low humidity. In short-term operations, electric utilities have few options to mitigate the risk of wildfire ignitions, leading to use of disruptive measures such as proactive de-energization of equipment, frequently referred to as public safety power shut-offs. Decisions of which lines to turn off and how to bring them back on again has significant impacts on customers, who lose access to electricity in an attempt to protect them from fires. 

This talk discusses two complementary aspects of this problem. First, we will discuss the question of how to optimally balance the negative impacts of both wildfire risk and power outages, before describing how we model this trade-off in our proposed optimal power shut-off problem, an optimization model to support operational decision making in the context of extreme wildfire risk. We will demonstrate that accounting for the size of power outages when deciding which lines to turn off can reduce the size of the power shut-offs compared with simple threshold-based models. Next, we will discuss algorithms for proactive restoration planning that can help re-energize the system faster after a disaster, and how distributed energy resources (DERs) aid in this processes.

Speaker Bio

Line Roald is an Assistant Professor and Grainger Institute Fellow in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in University of Wisconsin—Madison. She received her Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering (2016) from ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Prior to joining UW Madison, she was a postdoctoral research fellow with the Center of Non-Linear Studies at Los Alamos National Laboratory. She is the recipient of an NSF CAREER award and the UW Madison ECE Outstanding Graduate Mentor award. Her research interests center around modeling and optimization of energy systems, with a particular focus on managing uncertainty and risk from extreme weather and renewable energy variability.