Active PAR

P1854

Guide for Smart Distribution Applications

This guide identifies and categorizes important smart distribution applications, develops descriptions of the critical functions involved, defines important components of these systems, and provides examples of the systems that can be considered as part of distribution management systems or other smart distribution systems. This guide includes discussion on control, communications, and cybersecurity considerations when deploying smart distribution applications.

Standard Committee
PE/T&D - Transmission and Distribution
Joint Sponsors
PE/PSCC
PE/PSRCC
Status
Active PAR
PAR Approval
2020-12-03
Superseding
1854-2019

Working Group Details

Society
IEEE Power and Energy Society
Standard Committee
PE/T&D - Transmission and Distribution
Working Group
SDWG - Smart Distribution Working Group
Learn More About SDWG - Smart Distribution Working Group
IEEE Program Manager
Michael Kipness
Contact Michael Kipness
Working Group Chair
Sal Martino

Other Activities From This Working Group

Current projects that have been authorized by the IEEE SA Standards Board to develop a standard.


P3102
Standard for Conservation Voltage Reduction (CVR) Data Collection and Management Procedures

This standard specifies a set of procedures for CVR data collection and management. Functional requirements, procedures and use cases are defined for the following scenarios: 1. Identification of cycling schedule disruptions and required data cleaning. 2. Compression rates to archive values. 3. Detection of accurate CVR status. 4. Identification of load shifts and how to deal with these in terms of measurement and verification. 5. Data cleaning and reconstruction approaches for anomalous data. 6. Procedures for determining CVR factor range and system-level CVR factor. 7. Procedures for data adequacy based on accurate CVR status, and power and voltage data. 8. Methodology selection and assumption validation based on data availability.

Learn More About P3102

Standards approved by the IEEE SA Standards Board that are within the 10-year lifecycle.


1854-2019
IEEE Trial-Use Guide for Smart Distribution Applications

Important smart distribution applications are categorized, descriptions of the critical functions involved are developed, important components of these systems are defined, and examples of the systems that can be considered as part of distribution management systems or other smart distribution systems are provided in this guide.

Learn More About 1854-2019

1885-2022
IEEE Guide for Assessing, Measuring, and Verifying Volt-Var Control and Optimization on Distribution Systems

Electric utilities are seeking to improve the overall efficiency and performance of the distribution system while helping to achieve energy and demand savings. Distribution volt-var optimization (VVO) can play a major role in accomplishing these objectives while maintaining safety, preserving assets, and meeting all operating constraints such as loading and voltage levels. Initial studies and experience show there is significant potential for energy savings, demand management and loss reduction through improved management of distribution voltage profiles and reactive power flow. Consistent methods are needed for verifying the benefits achieved by VVO systems that have already been implemented. Guidelines for modeling system loads as well as distributed resources and their response to voltage and var changes are needed along with methods for performing the evaluations to estimate total benefits. These benefits can then be evaluated as a function of the investment requirements for the improved VVO on a feeder by feeder or substation by substation basis and deployment priorities can be developed.

Learn More About 1885-2022

These standards have been replaced with a revised version of the standard, or by a compilation of the original active standard and all its existing amendments, corrigenda, and errata.


No Superseded Standards

These standards have been removed from active status through a ballot where the standard is made inactive as a consensus decision of a balloting group.


No Inactive-Withdrawn Standards

These standards are removed from active status through an administrative process for standards that have not undergone a revision process within 10 years.


No Inactive-Reserved Standards
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