Ingenieur Vol. 75 ingenieur July 2018-FA | Page 49

Figure 4: The impacts of variable generation on the flexibility time line. Figure 5: The Balancing Mechanism between Variability and Flexibility As mentioned earlier, with the anticipated large-scale integration of solar renewable variable generation in the electricity infrastructure grid network, future power systems will need to have a higher level of flexibility which requires challenging MW ramping rates in the operational time frame, and characterising these ramping rates within the planning domain is becoming increasingly necessary. Operational flexibility is related to the system’s ability to deal with variability within system operation time scales - normally from a day ahead down to real time. The type of operational flexibility required will depend on the time scale: • Increased frequency response and reserves from seconds to minutes; • Increased ramping capability from minutes to hours; and • Scheduling flexibility from hours to a day ahead. The time scales of flexibility, from the system- planning perspective down to very short-term operation, and the impacts of variable generation on flexibility can be seen in Figure 4. Figure 5 depicts how each part of the system affects the need for and supply of flexibility. The variability sources drive the need for flexibility to 47