Client sites are responsible for declaring and maintaining a pattern of MW availability for large industrial loads, with agreed 30 minute blocks of power being available for use elsewhere on the grid. This allows automatic tripping at pre-set frequency levels. NGC business sites are responsible for general system health monitoring, and for occasional special operations such as load un-suppression, and manual acceptance of availability data. The agent site, Yorkshire Electricity, is responsible for the setting up of advance Availability Declaration patterns, and the site engineering and communications work for their sites. Each class of user has had application-specific training from Scomagg and also, in the case of the client sites, from Yorkshire Electricity. The SCADA HMI gathers information on clients’ declared availability per half hour for the coming week and monitors frequency trips and “power returns”. Significant transactions are reported to the relevant personnel via e-mail, with a log of site incidents being maintained in MS Outlook. Minute-by-minute plant data and enduser availability data is logged and sent to the main customer sites for analysis. Comma separated files are generated every hour to provide information for other systems. Data is passed to the DEC Alpha based hub of National Grid’s Frequency Control/Monitoring System to enable the National Grid Central Control Operator to make decisions about utilising the Frequency Response provided by the new System. Data is also exported for contract management audits. The system runs on Compaq Proliant servers and Compaq Deskpro PC’s. The Central Business Site has two Adroit servers operating in hot standby. For confidentiality and security, the system uses a firewall hosted on a HP Vectra Series 8 PC. Plant equipment is monitored via a LonWorks® network, communicating with a Low Frequency Relay over a serial line. LonWorks was selected as it provides a high performance solution at low cost. The system also links to a Rugby clock via a Ruggedised Active MSF Antenna and a Time & Frequency Solutions M210 Time System, as time synchronisation is crucial for accurate time-stamping of real-time data across all sites. The system was written largely in C/C++ and Visual Basic, with user interfaces being written in Visual Basic with C back ends. Client/server communication is implemented using RPC to optimise throughput on existing telephone lines. Most of the programs run as NT Services, although some programs are batch queue initiated. There are 21 programs and 12 Dlls including a proprietary OLE Dispatch interface to Adroit. It is now possible to trip demand sites automatically following the successful delivery of the Frequency Control by Demand Management information system (FCDM). The system is managed from National Grid’s Wokingham site and is already in operation at 17 client sites - steel and cement manufacturers to date - throughout England and Wales, 2 business sites and 1 agent site, Yorkshire Electricity. Installed and supported by Scomagg Ltd, the contract-based system has already resulted in a number of significant benefits to both National Grid and its clients. National Grid is able to map the available pool of power more thoroughly and has reduced the need to buy in extra power from other providers during periods of high load. Clients participating in the arrangement get paid to respond, with the protection of a guaranteed service. Scomagg, an Adroit approved system integrator, secured this major project due to their extensive knowledge of both the power and industrial sectors and, working with Adroit Technologies, demonstrated a working model prior to contract award. They took complete ownership of the running of the project, illustrating their extensive analytical, design and technical strengths in both real time engineering and software disciplines, and, of course, designing and implementing the wide area network across all the sites.
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