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Subject: RE: Ramp Rate Curve


Thanks

 

That is consistent with

 

a)      Several segments / intervals of fixed duration, power. (power increasing)

b)      An interval in the middle with no duration set ç ws-calendar gluon entry

c)       Several segments / intervals of fixed duration, power. (power decreasing)

 

That is the definition of a product.

 

Contract comes along and Adds a start time, duration to the gluon

 

Now we have generation schedule

 

 

 


"If something is not worth doing, it`s not worth doing well" - Peter Drucker


Toby Considine
TC9, Inc

TC Chair: oBIX & WS-Calendar

TC Editor: EMIX, EnergyInterop

U.S. National Inst. of Standards and Tech. Smart Grid Architecture Committee

  

Email: Toby.Considine@gmail.com
Phone: (919)619-2104

http://www.tcnine.com/
blog: www.NewDaedalus.com

 

 

From: Crimmins, Sean [mailto:SCrimmins@caiso.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2010 8:16 PM
To: emix@lists.oasis-open.org
Cc: Toby.Considine@gmail.com
Subject: Ramp Rate Curve

 

Toby,

 

Here’s an example of a ramp rate “curve” from the CIM.  The participant would register a number of segments that represent the units maximum ramp rate in a range of power outputs (from Pmin to the max output).  For example.

 

Output MW

Ramp MW/min

50

10

100

15

175

20

200

20

Then the “curve” will look like:

 

 

Sean Crimmins

Data Architect

Architecture and Systems Engineering

California ISO

Office (916) 608-5978

Cell    (916) 802-4803

 

 



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