Abstract
The rapid growth in household energy demand in developing countries can pose significant technical issues at the low-voltage (LV) distribution power network in terms of the voltage fluctuation, thermal losses, power network stability problems and the limited capacity of network assets. Having sophisticated representative LV network models is essential to conduct detailed network analysis. At present, the lack of accurate models and transparent data is a huge barrier to undertaking detailed power engineering studies, which are required to operate and plan networks optimally. This paper provides a detailed guidance and proposes a structured methodology which is based on knowledge exchange and sharing the best practice used by UK electricity utilities, to follow, when modelling LV distribution networks using Open-access network simulation software. Essentially, the data is stored, sorted and analyzed in Excel, which then uses Quantum GIS (QGIS) as an entry point for visualisation. The distribution network data is extracted from QGIS to construct the LV network using power engineering software Open Distribution System Simulator (OpenDSS). The paper also calls on researchers, network planners, developers and operators to collaborate to initiate this in developing countries.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 5 |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 23 Jul 2024 |
Event | 2024 IEEE PES/IAS PowerAfrica - Johannesburg, South Africa Duration: 7 Oct 2024 → 11 Oct 2024 https://ieee-powerafrica.org/ |
Conference
Conference | 2024 IEEE PES/IAS PowerAfrica |
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Country/Territory | South Africa |
City | Johannesburg |
Period | 7/10/24 → 11/10/24 |
Internet address |
Keywords
- energy access
- developing countries
- network modelling
- power distribution network