%0 Report %K FIDVR %A Anthony Faris %A Dmitry Kosterev %A Joseph H Eto %A Dave Chassin %D 2020 %G eng %T Load Composition Analysis in Support of the NERC Load Modeling Task Force 2019-2020 Field Test of the Composite Load Model %8 06/2020 %X

In 2015, NERC’s reliability standards were revised to require the use of dynamic load models in transmission planning studies. To comply with the standards, planners must use load models that explicitly represent the dynamic behavior of the different constituents of load at each load bus within their transmission planning models. The most important of these constituents are motor-driven and power electronics-based loads. Collectively, these representations are known as composite load models.  

In anticipation of the compliance date for the new standards, NERC’s Load Modeling Task Force (LMTF), in 2019, initiated a field test of composite load models involving the regional reliability planning entities. In support of the field test, DOE and BPA researchers developed region-specific composite load models that could be assigned to each non-industrial load bus in the planning models for each of the North American interconnections. Separate models were developed for each hour of a summer peak day, a winter peak day, and a spring light-load day. 

This report is the technical documentation for the load composition analysis that was conducted to develop these non-industrial composite load models.