New Detailed Modeling of GICs in the Spanish Power Transmission Grid
Author
Publication date
2021-07-20Abstract
The threat of Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GICs) driven by severe Space Weather
looms over technological systems such as power grids. Assessing their vulnerability is thus vital to
avoid damages or even disruption of the electrical power supply. This endeavor, however, entails an
interdisciplinary approach, ranging from the characterization of the geoelectrical structure of the Earth
beneath and around the area of interest, or the modeling of the power network from its parameters and
topology, and including the validation of the modeling process by means of (direct or indirect) GIC flow
measurements. In this paper, we summarize our current achievements focused on mainland Spain,
concentrating on the improvements reached after going from a homogeneous Earth's resistivity to an
alternative 3D electrical resistivity distribution approach to geoelectric field computation, which is still in
progress because new empirical impedance tensors are needed, mainly at sites in the west of the Iberian
Peninsula. The second major achievement has come from the addition of the 220 kV level to the network
model. The overall improvement has been validated against real GIC data in one area of the country. The
new vulnerability maps show that in some nodes the predicted GIC has been substantially reduced by the
sum of both effects. The assessment has been carried out down to the level of the individual windings of
each transformer, and examples of the estimated GIC flow are given for substations with numerous power
transmission lines converging to them at diverse orientations.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Keywords
Pages
17p
Publisher
Wiley
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Rights
© L’autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/