Impact of Plug-in Electric Vehicles and Photovoltaic Technologies on the Power Distribution Network ( case-study of a suburban medium-voltage network )
Many recent studies have dealt with the future of the power distribution system, and there are different technologies which will facilitate the development towards the smart power distribution grid vision. Plug-in electric vehicles (PEV) and distributed generation (DG) technologies will become integral part of this vision. PEVs are specific because they can act both as a load and as a source of energy in a concept known as Vehicle-toGrid (V2G). This paper analyses the impact of these technologies on an example of a real medium-voltage distribution network operating in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The impact of each technology and in combination with another technology is analyzed. It is shown that the impact of PEVs may be negative in terms of the increase in the peak load and power losses as well as transformer overloading for scenarios of a high-penetration level and uncontrolled charging. However, controlled charging and regulated implementation of V2G can be beneficial in certain terms. The Photovoltaic (PV) technology can reduce the power losses, but will violate voltage-limitations in periods of high solar insolation, especially for a high-penetration level. By controlling the new emerging technologies, many of the negative impacts can be reduced and even turned into positive effects.