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Publication Date
11 November 2022

Generating Hourly Electricity Load Profiles for Resilient Grid Planning

Subtitle
A new model uses machine learning to project electricity loads across the United States.
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Science

The Total ELectricity Load (TELL) model was created to simulate future U.S. electricity demand at spatial and temporal scales useful for energy system planning and operations. The model fills a gap in current capabilities because it simultaneously addresses the impacts of changes in climate, population, and economic factors on future demand. The TELL model is important because it can help planners and policymakers prepare for future changes in electricity demand and make decisions about electric grid investments to improve resilience.

Impact

The electricity demand projections from the TELL model help energy system planners and operators better understand and plan for the resilience of the U.S. electricity system, as it provides load projections that are responsive to compounding human and natural stressors. It also has a sufficient spatial and temporal resolution for grid stress modeling. TELL is unique in its ability to blend aspects of short- and long-term load projections as well as its spatial component that allows for the distribution of projected loads within a high-resolution grid operations model. Additionally, TELL is based entirely on publicly available, open data and was released as an extensively documented open-source code base, allowing for easy reuse by others.

Summary

The TELL model generates profiles of hourly electricity load demand across the conterminous United States (CONUS) in response to climate and socioeconomic changes. It uses a machine learning approach to ensure that its hourly projections are responsive to weather patterns and population. It then harmonizes those results with state-level, annual load projections from a national to global scale energy-economy model. The model is unique in its ability to distribute projected loads spatially and to flexibly aggregate its output for use in grid operations models. TELL is based entirely on publicly available data and is designed for the 54 balancing authorities in CONUS. The model provides 8,760-hour time-series of total electricity demand at the county, state, and balancing authority scale that is conceptually and quantitatively consistent. TELL can be accessed via its GitHub repository, and its user guide provides more details on its formulation and intended purpose.

Point of Contact
Jennie Rice
Institution(s)
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Funding Program Area(s)
Publication
tell: a Python package to model future totalelectricity loads in the United States
McGrath, Casey R., Casey D. Burleyson, Zarrar Khan, Aowabin Rahman, Travis Thurber, Chris R. Vernon, Nathalie Voisin, and Jennie S. Rice. 2022. “Tell: A Python Package To Model Future Totalelectricity Loads In The United States”. Journal Of Open Source Software 7(79) (79). The Open Journal: 4472. doi:10.21105/joss.04472.