The Value of Increased HVDC Capacity Between Eastern and Western U.S. Grids: The Interconnections Seam Study
Aaron Bloom, Josh Novacheck, Greg Brinkman, James D. McCalley, Armando L. Figueroa-Acevedo, Ali Jahanbani-Ardakani, Hussam Nosair, Abhinav Venkatraman, Jay Caspary, Dale Osborn, Jessica Lau
Abstract
The Interconnections Seam Study examines the potential economic value of increasing electricity transfer between the Eastern and Western Interconnections using high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) transmission and cost-optimizing both generation and transmission resources across the United States, proposing, assessing, justifying, and illustrating a major infrastructure change involving two of the world's largest power grids. The study conducted a multi-model analysis that used co-optimized generation and transmission expansion planning and production cost modeling. Four transmission designs under eight scenarios were developed and studied to estimate costs and potential benefits. The results show benefit-to-cost ratios that reach as high as 2.5, indicating significant value to increasing the transmission capacity between the interconnections under the cases considered, realized through sharing generation resources and flexibility across regions.