학술논문

A Review of Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS) for Wildfire Mitigation: Policies, Practices, Models and Data Sources
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Energy Markets, Policy and Regulation IEEE Trans. on Enrgy Mrkts, Pol and Reg Energy Markets, Policy and Regulation, IEEE Transactions on. 1(3):187-197 Sep, 2023
Subject
General Topics for Engineers
Geoscience
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Fires
Guidelines
Surveys
Safety
Soft sensors
Data models
Biological system modeling
Proactive de-energization
Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS)
PSPS data
PSPS model
PSPS policy
PSPS process
wildfire mitigation
Language
ISSN
2771-9626
Abstract
Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS), also known as proactive de-energizations, proactively de-energize a portion of power systems to mitigate the risk of catastrophic wildfires caused by electric infrastructure. Since the first practice in Southern California in 2012, PSPS have been widely discussed in government and industry, but seldom in the academic literature. This article surveys the PSPS program in California, including its history, policies, and practices. In practice, PSPS present strong interactions between electric utilities and customers, yielding PSPS a trade-off problem to balance the risk of power-line-ignited wild-fires (i.e., wildfire risk) against the harms of power shutoff (i.e., PSPS risk). In this regard, this article summarizes the industry-standard and research methods for PSPS studies, including models, data sources, and test systems. It is suggested to integrate engineering solutions with social-economic science, such as energy innovation, energy equity, and PSPS uncertainties, in future PSPS studies.