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Since the 1800’s when the bulk transmission delivery system evolution began, change in the electric utility industry has been relatively slow, until now. Over the past several decades, technological advancement in high speed communication, power generation, energy storage and energy efficiency has increased exponentially creating change for the electric power grid.
Renewable resources have become economically feasible. In the past decade alone, the amount of energy generated from renewable generatorsin the United States has nearly tripled according to data from U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). As renewable resources are geographically limited, the need to transport the generation to load centers has become a new challenge for the transmission industry. This trend has warranted additional transmission infrastructure to support connecting the new generators to existing loadand to ensure system reliability. As an intermittent resource, renewable generation has dramatically changed the way the transmission system functions and how utilities must plan to preserve service reliability. The current state of technology has not progressed to a point where utilities can offer renewable energy on a stand- alone basis. The generation produced is not dispatchable, at least not yet. This requires the transmission grid be built such that resources can be shifted quickly based upon weather conditions.As an intermittent resource, renewable generation has dramatically changed the way the transmission system functions and how utilities must plan to preserve service reliability
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