GridINL’s more adaptive grid better for testing new technologies

Published 9 November 2016

Essential services like power distribution require reliable service and continuous operations. The power grid on the U.S. Department of Energy’s Idaho Site is being transitioned to a more adaptive architecture to enable greater flexibility in testing new ideas and technologies.

Essential services like power distribution require reliable service and continuous operations. The power grid on the U.S. Department of Energy’s Idaho Site is being transitioned to a more adaptive architecture to enable greater flexibility in testing new ideas and technologies.

INL says that DOE’s Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (OE) has enabled the lab to make this important investment better to support the need of utilities interested in the secure adoption of new smart grid technologies. INL works with industry, universities, and government stakeholders to provide a testing environment that reduces the risks and facilitates real world validation and verification of new and innovative concepts, technologies, and systems including smart grid devices, distribution automation, communication tools, renewable energy, and grid-scale energy storage.

Within INL’s sixty-one miles of transmission system, seven substations, and associated distribution systems, a dedicated section of distribution lines provides a realistic testing environment for ideas, devices, and systems related to the adoption of a smart grid that uses predominantly digital technology. This supports more reliable, resilient, and flexible energy delivery while increasing security and efficiency of the system. The dedicated test system provides additional lines and a mesh framework to ensure the environment is more consistent with current industry distribution practices.