Abstract
The combination of high oil costs, concerns about oil security and availability, and air quality issues related to vehicle emissions are driving interest in plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs). PHEVs are similar to conventional hybrid electric vehicles, but feature a larger battery and plug-in charger that allows electricity from the grid to replace a portion of the petroleum-fueled driveenergy. PHEVs may derive a substantial fraction of their miles from grid-derived electricity, but without the range restrictions of pure battery electric vehicles. As of early 2007, production of PHEVs is essentially limited to demonstration vehicles and prototypes. However, the technology has received considerable attention from the media, national security interests, environmentalorganizations, and the electric power industry. The use of PHEVs would represent a significant potential shift in the use of electricity and the operation of electric power systems. Electrification of the transportation sector could increase generation capacity and transmission and distribution (T&D) requirements, especially if vehicles are charged during periods of high demand. This study isdesigned to evaluate several of these PHEV-charging impacts on utility system operations within the Xcel Energy Colorado service territory.
Original language | American English |
---|---|
Number of pages | 29 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2007 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/TP-640-41410
Keywords
- Colorado
- electric charging
- electric generation
- NREL
- null
- null
- null
- PHEV
- plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV)
- T&D
- transmission and distribution
- transportation
- utility system
- vehicle emissions
- vehicle technologies
- Xcel Energy