Methods for Analysis and Quantification of Power System Resilience

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Abstract

This paper summarizes the report prepared by an IEEE PES Task Force. Resilience is a fairly new technical concept for power systems, and it is important to precisely delineate this concept for actual applications. As a critical infrastructure, power systems have to be prepared to survive rare but extreme incidents (natural catastrophes, extreme weather events, physical/cyber-attacks, equipment failure cascades, etc.) to guarantee power supply to the electricity-dependent economy and society. Thus, resilience needs to be integrated into planning and operational assessment to design and operate adequately resilient power systems. Quantification of resilience as a key performance indicator is important, together with costs and reliability. Quantification can analyze existing power systems and identify resilience improvements in future power systems. Given that a 100% resilient system is not economic (or even technically achievable), the degree of resilience should be transparent and comprehensible. Several gaps are identified to indicate further needs for research and development.

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Stankovic, A. M., Tomsovic, K. L., De Caro, F., Braun, M., Chow, J. H., Cukalevski, N., … Zhao, S. (2023). Methods for Analysis and Quantification of Power System Resilience. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 38(5), 4774–4787. https://doi.org/10.1109/TPWRS.2022.3212688

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