Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan

Through the long-distance transmission of electric energy, global interconnected power grids have become promising for the decarbonization of the power systems nowadays. However, the implementation of an extremely large-scale system may be controversial because practical examples are rare. In this p...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shengyu He, Aoife Foley, Ning Chen, Tianyu Jia, Songyan Wang
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/266d2151b21c41089c79a207a0654e9a
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:266d2151b21c41089c79a207a0654e9a
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:266d2151b21c41089c79a207a0654e9a2021-11-18T04:48:19ZCooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan2211-467X10.1016/j.esr.2021.100756https://doaj.org/article/266d2151b21c41089c79a207a0654e9a2021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X21001413https://doaj.org/toc/2211-467XThrough the long-distance transmission of electric energy, global interconnected power grids have become promising for the decarbonization of the power systems nowadays. However, the implementation of an extremely large-scale system may be controversial because practical examples are rare. In this paper, the interconnected power system among Central Asia; Xinjiang, China; and Pakistan is used as a testbed to analyze the feasibility of the multinational interconnections. Based on the increased electricity generation in Central Asia and the increased power shortage in Pakistan, the complementation between generation and consumption in the two areas can be established. Then, the use of the classic Central Asian power grid (CAPG) in the former Soviet Union is analyzed. Following the extension of the local grids in Central Asia; the upgrade of the Xinjiang power grid; and the construction of the CASA-1000 HVDC project, a new CAPG (NCAPG) that connects the Central Asian countries; Xinjiang, China and Pakistan, with four HVDC lines is formed. The NCAPG is entirely different from the classic CAPG because it is fully based on the voluntary participation, operational independence, and the operation security of the member grids. The NCAPG shows potential in the multinational electric energy transmission among Central Asia; Xinjiang, China; and Pakistan in the foreseeable future.Shengyu HeAoife FoleyNing ChenTianyu JiaSongyan WangElsevierarticleCentral AsiaInterconnected power systemRenewable energyCentral Asian power gridGlobal gridEnergy industries. Energy policy. Fuel tradeHD9502-9502.5ENEnergy Strategy Reviews, Vol 38, Iss , Pp 100756- (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Central Asia
Interconnected power system
Renewable energy
Central Asian power grid
Global grid
Energy industries. Energy policy. Fuel trade
HD9502-9502.5
spellingShingle Central Asia
Interconnected power system
Renewable energy
Central Asian power grid
Global grid
Energy industries. Energy policy. Fuel trade
HD9502-9502.5
Shengyu He
Aoife Foley
Ning Chen
Tianyu Jia
Songyan Wang
Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
description Through the long-distance transmission of electric energy, global interconnected power grids have become promising for the decarbonization of the power systems nowadays. However, the implementation of an extremely large-scale system may be controversial because practical examples are rare. In this paper, the interconnected power system among Central Asia; Xinjiang, China; and Pakistan is used as a testbed to analyze the feasibility of the multinational interconnections. Based on the increased electricity generation in Central Asia and the increased power shortage in Pakistan, the complementation between generation and consumption in the two areas can be established. Then, the use of the classic Central Asian power grid (CAPG) in the former Soviet Union is analyzed. Following the extension of the local grids in Central Asia; the upgrade of the Xinjiang power grid; and the construction of the CASA-1000 HVDC project, a new CAPG (NCAPG) that connects the Central Asian countries; Xinjiang, China and Pakistan, with four HVDC lines is formed. The NCAPG is entirely different from the classic CAPG because it is fully based on the voluntary participation, operational independence, and the operation security of the member grids. The NCAPG shows potential in the multinational electric energy transmission among Central Asia; Xinjiang, China; and Pakistan in the foreseeable future.
format article
author Shengyu He
Aoife Foley
Ning Chen
Tianyu Jia
Songyan Wang
author_facet Shengyu He
Aoife Foley
Ning Chen
Tianyu Jia
Songyan Wang
author_sort Shengyu He
title Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
title_short Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
title_full Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
title_fullStr Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Cooperative electric energy transmission between Central Asia and Pakistan
title_sort cooperative electric energy transmission between central asia and pakistan
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/266d2151b21c41089c79a207a0654e9a
work_keys_str_mv AT shengyuhe cooperativeelectricenergytransmissionbetweencentralasiaandpakistan
AT aoifefoley cooperativeelectricenergytransmissionbetweencentralasiaandpakistan
AT ningchen cooperativeelectricenergytransmissionbetweencentralasiaandpakistan
AT tianyujia cooperativeelectricenergytransmissionbetweencentralasiaandpakistan
AT songyanwang cooperativeelectricenergytransmissionbetweencentralasiaandpakistan
_version_ 1718425027915808768