Quick filter

Renewable Energy Grid Integration Week 2026

Porto, Portugal, 28 September-02 October 2026

Mon, 28 Sep
08:00
REGISTRATION OPEN FOR FOLLOWING EVENTS - CLICK HERE:
Mon, 28 Sep | Foyer
08:00
  • ESIG Large Loads Workshop (to be booked separately from the Symposium/Workshop)
    10:00-18:00 | Room: Douro II
     
  • Tutorial: From Frequency Scan to Immittance-Based Stability Theory  (to be booked separately from the Symposium/Workshop)
    13:15-15:15 | Room: Douro V
     
  • E-Mobility Symposium
    13:30-18:30 | Rooms: Douro I, Douro III, Douro V
     
  • Tutorial "Grid Forming: Academic Approaches and Modelling Aspects" (to be booked separately from the Symposium/Workshop)
    14:00 – 18:30, Room: Douro IV

10:00 - 18:00
ESIG Large Loads Workshop
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro II
10:00 - 18:00
  • 28 September 2026
  • Time: 10:00 – 18:00
  • Room: Douro II
     

Detailed Workshop Agenda and Registration Details


Participation Fees & Registration

  • The ESIG Large Loads Workshop is not included in the general participation fee of the Wind & Solar Integration Workshop.
  • The registration for the ESIG Large Loads Workshop includes coffee breaks, lunch and networking cocktail.

12:00 - 14:00
LUNCH
Mon, 28 Sep | Foyer

13:30 - 13:55
E-MOBILITY SYMPOSIUM – WELCOME
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro I

13:55 - 15:35
EMOB SESSION 1 – KEYNOTE SESSION
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro I
13:55
TBA
NN (REN, Portugal)
14:15
01 GIW26-374
FlexC: Facilitating EV Charging in Collective Buildings with Flexible Connections
Eduardo Francisco, E-REDES, Portugal
14:35
TBA
NN
14:55
02 GIW26-138
Future Conformity Assessment Schemes for EV and EVSE under the Emerging European Network Codes
Bernhard Schowe-von der Brelie, FGH Research Association (FGH e.V.), Germany
15:15
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

15:35 - 16:05
COFFEE BREAK
Mon, 28 Sep | Foyer

16:05 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 1
EMOB SESSION 2A – DISTRIBUTION GRID ASPECTS
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro I
16:05
01 GIW26-112
Device-agnostic control for time-varying EV-induced phase unbalance in low-voltage networks: a UK case study
Zulkiflu Musa Sarkin Adar, King's College London, United Kingdom
16:25
02 GIW26-328
Quantifying the impact of DSO measures on grid stress caused by large scale BEV integration: A co-simulation case study of Hamburg.
SiZhong Hu, Helmut-Schmidt-University, Germany
16:45
03 GIW26-28
Impact of Peak Pricing and Collective Net Metering on Renewable Energy Communities with high EV and PV penetration in Denmark
Mattia Secchi, Danmarks Tekniske Universitet (DTU), Denmark
17:05
04 GIW26-136
Analysis of Harmonic Current Unbalance of Multiple Electric Vehicles Smart Charging
Lewis Hunter, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
17:25
05 GIW26-200
Hybrid Battery Energy Storage for Peak Shaving and Energy Arbitrage in Fast EV Charging Stations in Norway
Lucas Araujo, SINTEF Energy Research, Norway
17:45
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:05 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 1
EMOB SESSION 2B – COUNTRY EXPERIENCE
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro III
16:05
01 GIW26-101
Redispatch 3.0 – Integrating Electric Vehicle Flexibility into TSO Redispatch Processes
Stefan Meisenbacher, TransnetBW, Germany
16:23
02 GIW26-67
Mitigating Synchronization Effects in Price-Aware EV Charging Using Equitable, Communication-Free V-P Control
Pietro Zunino, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Denmark
16:41
03 GIW26-270
Impacts of Electric Vehicle Charging Strategies on Renewable Integration and Power System Operation in Peru
Aaron Omar Colina Calvo, National University of Engineering (UNI), Peru | Université Paris-Est Créteil (UPEC), France
16:59
04 GIW26-381
Practical experience in EV charging regulation development to support transport electrification in Uganda
Thorsten Schlößer, Energynautics GmbH, Germany
17:17
05 GIW26-272
Micro substations
Tiago Santos Guimaraes, Siemens Energy, Germany
17:35
06 GIW26-30
Forecasting Electric Vehicle Adoption in Latin America: A Statistical Analysis of Energy Impact
Ernesto Guevara Leal Maniçoba, Technological University of Uruguay, Uruguay
17:53
07 GIW26-300
Energy Analysis of Pumabús Routes for Optimization of an Electric Fleet in Ciudad Universitaria
Jonathan Hernández García, Institute of Engineering, UNAM, Mexico
18:11
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:05 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 1
EMOB SESSION 2C – AI / MACHINE LEARNING FOR GRID INTEGRATION
Mon, 28 Sep | Douro V
16:05
01 GIW26-323
Benchmarking Large Language Models for Electric Vehicle Charging Session Forecasting
José Andrade, INESC TEC - Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Portugal
16:25
02 GIW26-313
Transfer learning-based utilization forecasting for fleets of EV charging stations
Sebastian Schreck, Siemens AG, Germany
16:45
03 GIW26-166
Preference-Conditioned Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning for Real-Time EV Charging Coordination Under Grid Constraints
Syed Irtaza Haider, Deutsche Telekom Chair of Communication Networks, TU Dresden, Germany, Germany
17:05
04 GIW26-254
Robustness and Scenario Analysis of Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning Policies for Post-Disaster Electric Vehicle Charging Network Recovery
Mohamed Abdelfattah, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
17:25
05 GIW26-70
AI-Based Prediction of Battery Charging Behaviour in a PV–Wind Hybrid System for EV Charging Applications
oluchi ugbe, Competence Center for Renewable Energies and Energy Efficiency (CC4E), Germany | Africa Center of Excellence for Sustainable Power and Energy Development (ACE-SPED), Nigeria
17:45
OPEN FLOOR / DISCUSSION

18:00 - 20:00
ESIG / E-MOBILITY NETWORKING EVENT / POSTER RECEPTION
Mon, 28 Sep | Foyer

18:30 - 20:00
E-MOBILITY POSTER SESSION
Mon, 28 Sep | Foyer
01 GIW26-4
Charging Strategy Assessment for Second-Life Battery Energy Storage Based on Retired E-Ferry Cells
Aaruththiran Manoharan, Center for Industrial Electronics (CIE), University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
02 GIW26-16
Technical Impacts of Electric Vehicles on Distribution Grids: A Systematic Review
Mauricio Cordero, Technological University of Uruguay (UTEC), Uruguay
03 GIW26-45
Beyond SoH: First- and second-life evaluation of e-ferry batteries
Kun Qian, Center for Industrial Electronics, University of Southern Denmark, Sønderborg, Denmark, Denmark
04 GIW26-52
Energy Performance Assessment and Powertrain Sizing of an Urban Electric Delivery Truck in Guayaquil Based on a Real-World Driving Cycle
Gabriel Carrera-Rivera, Facultad de Ingeniería en Mecánica y Ciencias de la Producción, Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral, ESPOL, Campus Gustavo Galindo km. 30.5 Vía Perimetral, Guayaquil, 090902, Ecuador., Ecuador, Mayken Espinoza-Andaluz, Centro de Energías Renovables y Alternativas, Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral, ESPOL, Campus Gustavo Galindo km. 30.5 Vía Perimetral, Guayaquil, 090902, Ecuador., Ecuador, Brayan Gabriel Ordóñez-Saca, Facultad de Ingeniería en Mecánica y Ciencias de la Producción, Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral, ESPOL, Campus Gustavo Galindo km. 30.5 Vía Perimetral, Guayaquil, 090902, Ecuador., Ecuador
05 GIW26-140
Improving Jeju Island's Power Demand Forecasting Using Electric Vehicle Power Usage Pattern Analysis; A Case Study of Korea
Yongsik Kim, Korea Power Exchange, Korea, Republic of (South)
06 GIW26-218
Cradle-to-Grave Life Cycle Assessment of Sodium-ion Batteries and the Effect of Geographical Location on Their Environmental Impact
Aya Rageh, University of Bristol, United Kingdom | The Faraday Institution, United Kingdom
07 GIW26-237
A MATLAB-Based Design and Optimisation Tool for Wireless Power Transfer Magnetic Couplers
Lourenço Carvalho, INESC TEC, Portugal | FEUP, University of Porto, Portugal, Pedro Pascoal, INESC TEC, Portugal
08 GIW26-321
Method to generate automatically realistic charging infrastructure models for time-series grid planning approaches for electrical grids
Daniel Feismann, TU Dortmund University, Germany
09 GIW26-366
Joint State of Charge and State of Energy Estimation of Lithium-Ion Battery Using Artificial Neural Networks Under Multi-Temperature Dynamic Drive Cycle Conditions.
Arif Sarwat, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Florida International University, United States
10 GIW26-131
A Conceptual Agent-Based Model for Unmanaged Charging in Electric Freight Depots
Ricardo Carvajal-Arango, Design Engineering Research Group (GRID) School of Applied Sciences and Engineering Universidad EAFIT, Colombia
Tue, 29 Sep
08:10 - 10:10
EMOB SESSION 3C – MODELLING ASPECTS I
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro V
08:10
01 GIW26-81
Automated Multi-Period Grid Expansion Planning for a Medium Voltage Grid Area Using Genetic Algorithms
René Helmschrott, Technische Hochschule Augsburg, Germany
08:28
02 GIW26-249
Robust EV Flexibility Assessment Under Data Scarcity: Hybrid Modeling for Live Redispatch Monitoring
Thilo Glissmann, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
08:46
03 GIW26-338
Load-Driven Stability Challenges in Railway Power Systems: Insights for Future Public Grids with High EV Integration
Ibrahim ABDALLAH, Sncf Voyageurs, France
09:04
04 GIW26-340
A frequency-domain dynamic similarity metric for converter-based asset validation
Onur Alican, CITCEA-UPC, Spain
09:22
05 GIW26-271
Integrated Energy-Logistics Models for EV Grid Integration: A Critical Review and Research Agenda
Luís Almeida, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola | ISCTE University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal, Euclides Luís, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola
09:40
06 GIW26-344
Optimizing Decentralized Hydrogen and Electricity Supply via Bidirectional Vehicle Integration in Off-Grid Scenarios
Nies Reininghaus, German Aerospace Center, Germany
09:58
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:30 - 10:10
Parallel sessions 2
EMOB SESSION 3A – CHARGING INFRASTRUCTURE PLANNING FOR MEGA WATT
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro I
08:30
01 GIW26-360
Analysis of Different Booking Strategies for Public Fast-Charging of Heavy-Duty Vehicles
Klara Schlüter, SINTEF Energy Research AS, Norway
08:48
02 GIW26-155
Linking fleet operations to grid requirements: an early-stage framework for electric truck charging depot planning to minimize grid connection capacity
David Eduardo Menchaca Santos, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
09:06
03 GIW26-60
Real‑World Operation of Public Megawatt Charging for Heavy‑Duty Trucks
Felix Heider, Shell Global Solutions Deutschland GmbH, Germany
09:24
04 GIW26-312
Optimized Placement of Dynamic Inductive Charging with Timetable Deviations for Electric Buses
Klara Schlüter, SINTEF Energy Research AS, Norway
09:42
05 GIW26-315
Priority based electric vehicle charging allocation for heavy duty vehicles in shared urban charging infrastructure using MATSim
Yash Ghayal, Helmut-Schmidt-Universität/Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg, Germany
10:00
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:30 - 10:10
Parallel sessions 2
EMOB SESSION 3B – CHARGING ASPECTS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro III
08:30
01 GIW26-8
Achieving AFIR-Ready Interoperability: A Structured Validation Approach for ISO 15118-20 Smart and Bidirectional Charging
Alexey Telegin, Keysight Technologies, Germany
08:48
02 GIW26-94
Characterising User Behaviour and Flexibility Potential in Smart Workplace EV Charging
Mathilde Roblot, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
09:06
03 GIW26-24
Cost reduction through the utilization of electric vehicle flexibility using the example of employee charging
Alexander Hoppert, Fraunhofer IOSB-AST, Germany
09:24
04 GIW26-6
Assessment of Retired E-Ferry Batteries for Fast-Charging Buffer Applications
Henrik Andersen, University of southern Denmark, Denmark
09:42
05 GIW26-362
Influence of Battery Emulation on (High-Power) DC-Charger Testing behaviour
Andreas Stadler, Helmut Schmidt University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg Chair for Electrical Power Systems, Germany
10:00
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:10 - 10:30
COFFEE BREAK
Tue, 29 Sep | Foyer

10:30 - 12:05
Parallel sessions 3
EMOB SESSION 4A – CHARGING INFRASTRUCTURE PLANNING IN DISTRIBUTION GRIDS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro I
10:30
01 GIW26-133
A Data-Driven Analysis of Public EV Charging Behaviour and Infrastructure Use
Lewis Hunter, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
10:48
02 GIW26-107
How Charging Parameters and User Participation Shape V2G Value: A Scenario-Based Analysis of Peak Load Reduction
Michael von Bonin, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
11:06
03 GIW26-194
Voltage-Stability-Aware Siting and Sizing of EV Charging Stations in Emerging-Market Radial Distribution Networks: An Artificial Bee Colony Approach
Ignatius Maranga, Strathmore University, Kenya
11:24
04 GIW26-310
Residential Electrification and Its Impact on Swedish Low-Voltage Distribution Networks: The Role of PV, EVs, Heat Pumps, and Battery Storage
Reza Fachrizal, Mälardalen University, Sweden
11:42
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:30 - 12:05
Parallel sessions 3
EMOB SESSION 4B – V2G ASPECTS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro III
10:30
01 GIW26-228
V2G as Backup Power: Performance in 3-Phase Islanding
Nicholas Etherden, University of Gävle, Sweden
10:48
02 GIW26-301
Market-based EV flexibility activation – A real-world demonstration
Paul Scharnhorst, CSEM SA, Switzerland
11:06
03 GIW26-78
Multi-Use V2G Integration of Large Commercial EV Fleets into Industrial Energy Management: A Rolling Horizon Framework for Frankfurt Airport
Philipp Hess, Hochschule Darmstadt - University of Applied Sciences, Germany
11:24
04 GIW26-223
EV usage patterns for flexibility for smart charging based on real-world logging data in Sweden
Yuki Kobayashi, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
11:42
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:30 - 12:05
Parallel sessions 3
EMOB SESSION 4C – MODELLING ASPECTS II
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro V
10:30
01 GIW26-153
Co-Simulation Framework for Bidirectional EV Fleet Integration in Low-Voltage Grids
Khanh Nguyen Gia, Department of Electrical Engineering University of Applied Sciences Darmstadt, Germany
10:48
02 GIW26-11
Battery-Buffered Fast Charging System Demonstration in the European Project AHEAD
Tommaso Reschiglian, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Denmark
11:06
03 GIW26-279
Challenges in Differentiating Locally Generated Renewable and Grid-Sourced Electricity in Storage Systems for V2G: A Simulation-Driven Study Based on the German MiSpeL Regulatory Framework
Florian Sehr, EBZ Business School, Germany
11:24
04 GIW26-19
Causal Regularised Dual-Model Framework for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection and Prioritisation in Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
Carla Trevino, Irdeto B.V, Netherlands
11:42
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

12:05 - 12:15
SHORT BREAK
Tue, 29 Sep | Foyer

12:15 - 13:00
EMOB SESSION 5 – CLOSING SESSION – PANEL DISCUSSION
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro V
12:15
PANEL DISCUSSION
TOPICS ADDRESSED
Panelists:
TBA
12:45
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION
12:55
Closing Remarks

13:00 - 14:00
LUNCH – Aroma Restaurant + Foyer
Tue, 29 Sep | Aroma Restaurant

14:00 - 14:15
WISO WORKSHOP WELCOME & INTRODUCTION
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro I + II

14:15 - 16:10
WISO OPENING & KEYNOTE SESSION
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro I + II
14:15
25 years Wind & Solar Integration Workshop
Thomas Ackermann, Energynautics, Germany
14:35
TBA
NN, REN, Portugal
14:55
TBA
NN, Lopez
15:15
01 GIW26-375
Challenges and Opportunities in Renewable Energy Integration into Distribution Grids
Ana Lopes, E-REDES, Portugal
15:35
02 GIW26-171
Long-term vision of the Portuguese power supply mix for RFNBO production and export
Ricardo Aguiar, Directorate-General for Energy and Geology, Portugal
15:55
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 16:40
COFFEE BREAK
Tue, 29 Sep | Foyer

16:40 - 18:45
Parallel sessions 4
WISO SESSION 2D – FLEXIBILITY OPTIONS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro V
18:28
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:40 - 18:45
Parallel sessions 4
WISO SESSION 2A – GRID FORMING PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro II
16:40
01 GIW26-110
Grid-Forming behaviour evaluation on Celtic HVDC Interconnector
Pierre RAULT, RTE, France
16:58
02 GIW26-373
Grid Forming Inverter Experience in Texas
Jeff Billo, ERCOT, United States
17:16
03 GIW26-333
Wind Industry Perspective on Grid Forming Capabilities in Europe
Vidushi Dembi, WindEurope, Belgium
17:34
04 GIW26-196
Comparison of centralized and distributed compensation strategies to ensure converter driven stability in the Finnish Power System
Olli-Pekka Janhunen, Fingrid Oyj, Finland
17:52
05 GIW26-35
Enhancing System Strength and Stability in High-Penetration Renewable Networks: A Case Study of the Hechi Source-Grid-Load-Storage Integration Project
BO YIN, China Datang Technology Innovation Co., Ltd., China
18:10
06 GIW26-132
Grid-Forming Capabilities of PV-BESS Systems for Frequency Control: Practical Insights from Tamil Nadu Power System
NALLASIVAN CHENNIAPPAN, The Tamil Nadu Power Distribution Corporation Limited, India | RESEARCH SCHOLAR, CENTRE FOR RESEARCH , ANNA UNIVERSITY,CHENNAI, India
18:28
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:40 - 18:45
Parallel sessions 4
WISO SESSION 2B – IBERIAN GRID ASPECTS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro I
16:40
Blackout Iberian Peninsula
TBA
16:58
01 GIW26-317
Grid incident in Spain & Portugal - Conclusions regarding conformity assessment procedures
Christian Scheefer, FGH Zertifizierungsgesellschaft mbH, Germany, Sebastian Weiss, FGH Zertifizierungsgesellschaft mbH, Germany
17:16
02 GIW26-342
VRE Overbuilding and Proactive Curtailment: Assessing the Firm Power Paradigm for a Reliable Iberian Grid
Carolina Baptista Crespo, Instituto Dom Luiz, Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon, Portugal
17:34
03 GIW26-181
Reserve Activation under Network Constraints in a High-Renewable 2030 Portuguese Scenario
Ana Estanqueiro, LNEG – Laboratório Nacional de Energia e Geologia, I.P., Portugal
17:52
04 GIW26-187
High-level integration of Portuguese industrial sector decarbonization roadmaps
Ricardo Aguiar, Directorate-General for Energy and Geology, Portugal
18:10
05 GIW26-224
Dynamic Linepack Management and Hydrogen Blending in High-Pressure Natural Gas Networks: A Transient Simulation Approach
João Fontoura, INESC TEC, Portugal
18:28
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:40 - 18:45
Parallel sessions 4
WISO SESSION 2C – GRID CODE DEVELOPMENT
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro III
16:40
01 GIW26-260
What’s Next for European Network Codes? New Requirements for Emerging Grid Technologies
Bernhard Schowe-von der Brelie, FGH Research Association (FGH) e.V., Germany
16:58
02 GIW26-10
Technical requirements for connecting data centers
Daniel Stenzel, TenneT TSO GmbH, Germany
17:16
03 GIW26-76
New technical requirements for Large Demand Facilities in Finland
Lasse Linnamaa, Fingrid Oyj, Finland
17:34
04 GIW26-378
How to make large loads contribute to Grid stability using advanced grid-forming BESS
Daniel Duckwitz, SMA Solar Technology AG, Germany
17:52
05 GIW26-190
How grid codes drive the design of large-scale PtX facilities: A 300 MW hydrogen case study
Marie Lerstad, ABB, Norway
18:10
06 GIW26-36
Riding Through Grid Faults: Centralized vs Distributed UPS in Data Centres
Amalie Bullen, Monash University, Australia
18:28
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:40 - 18:45
Parallel sessions 4
WISO SESSION 2D – FLEXIBILITY OPTIONS
Tue, 29 Sep | Douro V
16:40
01 GIW26-383
Large Load Forecasting, Risk Mitigation, and Flexibility
Trieu Mai, ESIG, United States
17:00
02 GIW26-169
A Comparative Study of Flexibility Valuation Methods in Renewable Energy Communities
João Carlos Agrela, Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science (INESC TEC), Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
17:20
03 GIW26-82
Flexible PV/battery power forecasting and firm power commitment application
Marco Pierro, EURAC Research, Italy
17:40
TBA
NN (Aeronautics Institute of Technology – ITA & University of São Paulo, Brazil)
18:00
04 GIW26-87
Flexibility potential of shared battery storage in energy communities: optimal sizing across collective optimisation strategies for local solar and wind integration
Leonie Malin Schneider, University of Applied Sciences Weihenstephan-Triesdorf, Germany
18:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

18:45 - 20:15
Parallel sessions 5
WIND & SOLAR POSTER RECEPTION
Tue, 29 Sep | Foyer

18:45 - 20:15
Parallel sessions 5
WIND & SOLAR POSTER SESSION
Tue, 29 Sep | Foyer
01 GIW26-17
Sustainability Assessment of Manufacturing Materials for the Hydraulic Variable Inertia Flywheel
Lisanne Reese, Flensburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
02 GIW26-20
ENERGY EFFICIENT OF WIND POWER BY STUDYING DIFFERENT PARAMETERS ESTIMATION METHODS OF WEIBULL DISTRIBUTION: CASE OF BURUNDI
Prime Niyongabo, Burundi Military Academy: ISCAM, Burundi, Onesime Nibitegeka, Burundi Military Academy: ISCAM, Burundi
03 GIW26-25
Comparative analysis of PV–PEM, PV–SOEC and PV–CSP–SOEC systems for solar hydrogen production
Hajar Rati, Al Akhawayn University, Morocco
04 GIW26-31
Conflicts and Synergies in Renewable Energy Transition: An Analysis of Taiwan’s "Fishery and Electricity Symbiosis" Policy
Ming-You Lin, Green Energy and Environment Research Laboratories, Industrial Technology Research Institute, Taiwan
05 GIW26-34
Zonal Active Power Ramping Control Strategy for Improving the Outbound Transmission Stability of Renewable Energy Bases
Cuidi Qin, China Datang Technology Innovation Co., Ltd., China
06 GIW26-38
Event-Driven Energy System Sizing for Self-Sufficient Electrified Container Terminals
Adrian Galvez, INESC TEC, Portugal
07 GIW26-39
GIS-Integrated Machine Learning Framework for Spatial Prediction and Scenario-Based Estimation of Large-Scale Solar Power Expansion
Mohamad koubar, Uppsala university, Sweden
08 GIW26-41
Evaluation of system strength in a converter dominated power system
Fabian Hohn, Svenska kraftnät, Sweden
09 GIW26-42
Comparative Analysis of a Matching Control Method and a Synchronverter Based on VDE FNN Requirements for Grid-Forming Units
Linus Hertle, KIT - Instititute of Electric Energy Systems and High-Voltage Technology (IEH), Germany
10 GIW26-43
A Hybrid Grid–Coordinate Approach for Wind Farm Layout Optimization Considering Initial Grid Geometry
Faisal Al-Otaibi, King Abdulaziz University, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Saudi Arabia
11 GIW26-44
ASSESSMENT OF ROTATIONAL ENERGY AND AVAILABLE ACTIVE RESERVE OF A FUTURE NORDIC POWER SYSTEM
Lakshmi Vidusala Kumari Wedikkara Arachchige, Department of Electrical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology., Sweden
12 GIW26-50
Negative Electricity Prices: Regulatory Drivers in the Context of Germany’s Wind Onshore Energy Expansion
Kristian Platta, BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany
13 GIW26-51
Towards More Accurate High-Resolution Renewable Generation Datasets for Energy Market Modeling
Florian Maurer, FH Aachen, Germany
14 GIW26-55
Deterministic and Heuristic Optimisation of the Q(U)-Characteristic Curve’s Parameters of Decentralized Renewable Energies in Distribution Networks
Gerald Gebhardt, elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems | Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany
15 GIW26-58
From Marine Propulsion to Grid-Scale Storage: Quantifying the Efficiency-Degradation Trade-off in PV-Integrated Second-Life BESS via Optimal Scheduling
Fazal Ur Rehman, University of L'Aquila, L'Aquila, Italy, Italy | University of Southern Denmark (SDU), Sønderborg, Denmark, Denmark
16 GIW26-68
Assessing the Accuracy of Small-Signal Analyses under Limited IBR Model Knowledge
Nicolae Darii, Denmark Technical University, Denmark | Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, Denmark
17 GIW26-71
Modeling Considerations for Grid-forming Capable Devices in Modern Power Systems
Mohammad Moradzadeh, Elia Group, Belgium
18 GIW26-72
Design and Dynamic Simulation of Liquid Hydrogen Transfer Assisted by Compressed Boil-off Hydrogen Gas
euichan lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea, Republic of (South)
19 GIW26-73
Elastic wave velocity measurements to quantify sample disturbance of thin-walled tube samples
Junbong Jang, Dong-A University, Korea, Republic of (South)
20 GIW26-74
Efficient Parametrization of Generic Type IV Wind Turbine Models for Transient Stability: A Julia-Based Approach
Javier Jimenez-Ruiz, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM), Spain
21 GIW26-85
Renewable Energy Integration and Operational Flexibility in Wastewater Treatment Plants: A Techno-Economic Assessment
Marten Herzog, john becker ingenieure, Germany | University of Bremen, Germany
22 GIW26-90
Spatio-Temporal Intelligence for Future Energy Systems
Jan Dobschinski, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Kassel, Germany | University of Kassel, Department of Sustainable Electrical Energy Systems, Germany
23 GIW26-91
Solar Energy Systems Installation in Closed Areas of Hebron: Strengthening Resilience and Economic Independence through PV Solutions
Abeer Alnazer, Hebron Electric Power Company/ Hebron Municipality, Other
24 GIW26-96
Timing Electricity Procurement for Large-Scale Heat Pumps in District Heating Systems under Market Uncertainty
Verena Köppl, Hochschule Weihenstephan-Triesdorf, Germany
25 GIW26-99
A Two-Stage Stochastic Programming Framework for Redispatch Planning under Uncertainty in the German Transmission System
Veli Ünlü, FGH e.V., Germany
26 GIW26-100
A Data-Driven Market Module for Scenario-Dependent Conventional Dispatch Adaptation under Renewable Forecast Uncertainty
Antoni Chajan, FGH e.V., Germany
27 GIW26-102
Stochastic Multi-Period Security-Constrained Optimal Power Flow via Approximated Chance Constraints
Micael Simões, INESC TEC, Portugal | FEUP, Portugal, Diogo Reis, INESC TEC, Portugal | FEUP, Portugal
28 GIW26-103
Short-term forecasting of imbalance volume and position for intraday flexibility management
Diya Achi, CSEM, Switzerland
29 GIW26-104
Beyond Market Noise: Graph Neural Networks for Interzonal Flow Forecasting in Zonal Electricity Markets
Rafael Carrillo, CSEM, Switzerland
30 GIW26-108
Comparison of Optimization Tools for Integrating Renewable Energy into Large-Scale Co-located Industrial Clusters
Diptish Saha, Aalborg University, Denmark
31 GIW26-109
Impedance models of medium-voltage grid simulator
Glib Chekavskyy, ABB Poland, Corporate Technology Center, Poland
32 GIW26-111
Structured Modal-Energy Dissipation for Inter-Area Oscillations in Low-Inertia Power Systems
Stephan Kohlhaas, Chair of Automatic Control Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI) Technical University of Munich Boltzmannstrase 15, 85748 Garching, Germany, Germany
33 GIW26-114
Analysis of Transformer Inrush Current during a Grid Black Start by a Three-Terminal HVDC System Connected to an Offshore Wind Farm
Tadashi Shinno, Tokyo City University, Japan
34 GIW26-115
Hardware-in-the-Loop Simulation-Based Evaluation of a Supply-and-Demand Balancing Scheme Using Biogas Power Plants with Reused EV Batteries in Rural Microgrids
Masaki Motohashi, Tokyo City University, Japan, Atsushi Hayashida, Hokkaido Research Organization, Japan, Tastuhito Nakajima, Tokyo City University, Japan
35 GIW26-116
One-week Simulation Evaluation of V2X System Operation in Community Microgrids with Solar and Biogas Power Plants, EVs, and On-Site Reused EV Battery Storage
Taiyo Ishikawa, Tokyo City University, Japan
36 GIW26-117
Evaluation of a Supply-Demand Balancing Scheme for Rooftop Solar Power and Battery Storage using Weather Forecasting and Inter-household Coordinated Operation
Haruki Keino, Tokyo City University, Japan
37 GIW26-123
The feasibility of using impedance-based methods for assessing the subsynchronous interaction risk of Type-3 wind power in a meshed series compensated transmission network
Joona Kittilä, Fingrid, Finland
38 GIW26-124
Evaluation of Dynamic Input-Output Characteristics of Frequency Meters for Fast Frequency Response Control of Grid-Following Inverters
Ayami Yamada, Tokyo City University, Japan
39 GIW26-125
Overcurrent Suppression Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Using Virtual Resistance and Active Power Reference Control Based on Operating Conditions
Tatsuya Shioya, Tokyo City University, Japan
40 GIW26-126
Improved IDFT-Based Frequency Measurement for Fast Frequency Response Control of Grid-Following Inverters in Battery Energy Storage Systems
ZHIQIANG LI, Tokyo City University, Japan
41 GIW26-127
Ammonia Cracking Process with Molten salt-based Thermal Energy Storage for Green Hydrogen Supply Chain via Ammonia: Case Study of South Korea
Hyunjick Kim, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea, Republic of (South)
42 GIW26-137
Optimal Sizing of Liquid Air Energy Storage Integrated with a Wind Turbine for Microgrid Power Applications
Milica Ašćerić, Go2Power Consulting, Serbia | School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Serbia
43 GIW26-139
Investigation of the Mechanical Loading of Wind Turbines with Grid Forming Capabilities Under Disturbances
Rita Kastrati, Deutsches Zentrum für Luft-Raumfahrt, Germany
44 GIW26-141
Assessment of the Effects of Flexibility Enhancement in Conventional Power Plants; A Case Study of Korea
Yong-Sik Kim, Korea Power Exchange, Korea, Republic of (South)
45 GIW26-142
Development of a Methodology for Estimating Offshore Wind Generation Profiles: A Case Study of Korea
HYEONHAK JEONG, Korea Power Exchange, Korea, Republic of (South)
46 GIW26-143
Field Test Results of Frequency Control Mode Compliance: Synchronous Engine Power Plants under High Dynamic Response Requirements
Aleksandre Piranishvili, Piller Germany GmbH & Co. KG, Germany
47 GIW26-146
A Multi-Source Hierarchical Framework for Probabilistic Forecasting of Net Load and Self-Consumption for Distributed Grid Planning
Adrian Carrillo-Galvez, INESC TEC, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
48 GIW26-148
Stability Limits and Interoperability Criteria for Grid-Forming Inverters
Rebekka Denninger, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems, Germany
49 GIW26-158
Low Carbon Buildings: Investigating the Adoption of Building Integrated Photovoltaics in Ghana’s Building Skin
Francis Kyere, Hunan University, China, Fan Zijie, Hunan University, China, Agyemang Kwasi Sampene, Hunan University, China
50 GIW26-160
Hierarchical RMS–EMT Stability Assessment of Inverter-Dominated Power Systems Supplying Hydrogen Electrolysers
Todor Siljegovic, Go2Power Consulting, Serbia
51 GIW26-165
Influence of Grid-Forming Converter Share, Grid Strength, and Topology on Distribution Grid Frequency Stability
Jakob Ungerland, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE, Germany
52 GIW26-167
Transient Effects of Faults in High-Voltage Grids Considering Operational and Deployment Concepts of Grid-Forming Generation
Sven Ratajczak, FGH e.V., Germany
53 GIW26-170
Performance and Techno-Economic Evaluation of Second-Life Batteries in Photovoltaic-BESS Applications
Fazal Ur Rehman, University of L'Aquila, Italy, Italy | University of Southern Denmark (SDU), Sønderborg, Denmark, Denmark
54 GIW26-182
Economic evaluation of electrolyser participation in ancillary services market
Md Rizwan, Group Research and Development, DNV AS, Veritasveien 1, 1363, Høvik, Norway
55 GIW26-193
Quantifying the Quiet Creep: Degradation of 15,000 Wind Turbines in Germany
Diego Alejandro Prieto Melo, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus–Senftenberg, Germany
56 GIW26-199
Metaheuristic-based Planning of Energy Communities with Flexibility Market Support
José Villar, INESC TEC - Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
57 GIW26-203
Hybrid PSP-PV-BESS participation in day-ahead and intraday markets
David Reis, INESC TEC, Portugal
58 GIW26-204
A Comparative Study of Modeling Approaches for Stability Analysis of Converter-based Technologies
Saman Armand, Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
59 GIW26-207
Metaheuristic Approach for Optimal Sizing of Distributed Energy Resources in Energy Communities
José Villar, INESC TEC – Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
60 GIW26-208
Improving Frequency Support Capability of Hybrid Power Plants in Weak Grids Using Grid-Forming Control
Kaushik Das, Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
61 GIW26-216
Analysis of the impact of wind power plant active power output ramp limitation controls on WTG blade and pitching system operation
Ignacio León Alonso, Vestas Wind Systems A/S, Denmark
62 GIW26-217
Modelling the influence of building integrated photovoltaics on operations and investments in the electricity system at the national level to assess its environmental impact
Joseph Brisson, CEA, Liten, Campus Ines, France
63 GIW26-219
Impact of Measured vs. Virtual Current Feedback on the Stability and Operation of Grid-Forming Inverters
Daniel Bohnet Millan, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - IEH, Germany
64 GIW26-220
Dynamic Simulation and Optimal Control of E-Methanol Production: Evaluating Forecast Horizon in Renewable Integration
Carlos Cabrera, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile | HIF Global, Germany
65 GIW26-225
Grid-Aware Sizing of Battery Energy Storage Systems in Seaport Microgrids: A High-Granularity Optimization Framework for the Port of Sines
Adrian Carrillo-Galvez, INESC TEC, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
66 GIW26-227
Forecasting electricity consumption time series at NUTS-3 level in Germany
Ann-Katrin Goldmaier, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology (Fraunhofer IEE), Germany
67 GIW26-233
Practical Experience with Laboratory Determination of Wind Turbine Thevenin Equivalents following IEC 61400‑21‑4 Annex E
Florian Hans, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy Systems IWES, Germany
68 GIW26-241
Real-Time Elliptical Trajectory Approximation: Maintaining Estimation Accuracy in Weak and Distorted Grid Conditions
Heinrich T. Eickhoff, Silicon Austria Labs GmbH, Austria
69 GIW26-242
Economic Impact of Forecast Errors on BESS Participation in Day-Ahead electricity and Reserve Markets
Mahan Ebrahimi, Department of Electric Power Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
70 GIW26-243
Waveform Based Dynamic State Estimation of Power Systems Using Cubature Kalman Filtering
SEYED MASOUD Mohseni-Bonab, Hydro Québec, Canada
71 GIW26-246
Assessment of Energy Complementarity and Techno-Economic Performance of Hybrid Renewable Systems: A Case Study in Uruguay
María Victoria Arduino, Universidad Tecnologíca de Uruguay, Uruguay, Matías Loinaz, Universidad Tecnologíca de Uruguay, Uruguay
72 GIW26-252
Early‑Stage Power System Studies for Virtual Power Plant Integration in a 138 kV Subtransmission Network
Vanessa Guedes, Cepel, Brazil
73 GIW26-253
Coordinated Current Control for Wind Turbine Generators with Multiple Parallel Power Converters
Florian Aust, University of Rostock, Germany
74 GIW26-261
AI for the energy system – Review of a joint workshop by IEA Wind Tasks 51 and 63
Gregor Giebel, DTU Wind, Denmark
75 GIW26-262
An Evaluation of Black-box IBR Modeling Methods
Slobodan Matic, GE Vernova, United States
76 GIW26-264
Adaptive Droop Control for Hotel Load Inverters in Hybrid Ferry Microgrids
Henrique Rocha, Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Portugal | Systec, Portugal
77 GIW26-265
Dynamic-Inversion ADRC with Cascaded Extended State Observer for DC-Voltage Regulation of Point-to-Point MMC-HVDC Systems
Ning Yang, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
78 GIW26-275
Impacts of Hydrogen Blending on Dynamic Frequency Responses of Gas Turbines under Disturbance Events
Saikrishna Vallabhaneni, DLR, Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Oldenburg, Germany, Germany
79 GIW26-283
Grid Compliance Studies Optimisation: Parallel Computing
Nuno Gonçalves, Opoura, Denmark, Pedro Cardoso, Opoura, Denmark, Pedro Zulaica, Opoura, Denmark
80 GIW26-284
Spatial optimization of solar PV–battery hybrid microgrids for railway and mining infrastructure: The Lobito Corridor case
Abreu Liliano, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola, Debs Tavares, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola
81 GIW26-285
Decarbonizing Industrial Processes: A Global Techno-economic Analysis of Off-Grid Solar Energy and Thermal Battery Storage for Manufacturing Facilities
Anna Yuen, University of California, Berkeley. Energy and Resource Group., United States | University of California, Berkeley. India Enery and Climate Center, United States
82 GIW26-287
Time-Dependent Degradation and Risk Evolution in Utility-Scale Photovoltaic Systems: Evidence From Long-Term Operational Data
Kajal Sheth, New York Tech, United States, Dhvanil Patel, Texas A&M University, United States
83 GIW26-288
Extended Genetic Algorithms for AC-Exact Topology Optimization in Transmission Grids
Pawel Lytaev, University of Kassel, Germany
84 GIW26-289
Analyzing industrial flexibility participation in Day-ahead and Intra-day markets of Nordic Countries: Electrified Asphalt Production Process as an example case
Saba Norouzi, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland, Finland
85 GIW26-298
Techno-Economic and Socioeconomic Evaluation of Solar PV Energy Storage Systems in Saudi Arabia
Malakah Alnabhani, Effat University, Saudi Arabia
86 GIW26-303
Impacts of Local Energy Communities on Low Voltage Distribution Networks
venkata suryakiran Bhamidipati, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden
87 GIW26-304
APPLICATION OF SMALL CLOSED-LOOP PUMPED STORAGE HYDROPOWER PLANTS FOR BALANCING AND ENERGY MANAGEMENT OF RENEWABLE-BASED MICROGRIDS IN HILLY REGIONS
Milica Ašćerić, School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Serbia | Go2Power Consulting, Serbia
88 GIW26-306
Cost surfaces for joint export-technology and substation-position decisions in offshore wind
Stephen Hardy, Enersynt BV. Geldenaaksevest 2, 3000 Leuven, Belgium., Belgium
89 GIW26-308
Attention-Based Soft-Weight Combination of Power Forecasts
Alexander Lipskij, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Germany
90 GIW26-309
Safety-Aware Optimal Operation for Hydrogen Integration in the Glass Industry Decarbonisation
Lorenzo Bruno, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), Spain
91 GIW26-316
Optimal Black Start Restoration using Offshore Wind Farm
Denis Kho, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Curtis Fox, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Mobolaji Bello, Electric Power Research Institute, United States
92 GIW26-322
Flexibility resource, service and product definition
Alex Kanerva, Tampere university, Finland
93 GIW26-339
Negative-Sequence Compensation in DFIG-Based Wind Energy Conversion Systems
Johann Krenn, Silicon Austria Labs GmbH, Austria
94 GIW26-341
Grid Operation considering ensemble forecasts: A case study for the Transmission System of Germany
Yannic Harms, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology, Germany
95 GIW26-349
Characterization of Wind Power Ramps in the Brazilian Interconnected System
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
96 GIW26-350
Hybrid Passive–Active Harmonic Filtering for Power-to-X Plants: Grid-Connected Power-to-Hydrogen Systems
Arman Arman Fathollahi, Aarhus University, Denmark
97 GIW26-351
Evaluation of Peak Power-Based Grid Tariffs for Solar Prosumers with Battery Storage in Sweden
Reza Fachrizal, Mälardalen University, Sweden
98 GIW26-354
Economic impact of transmission failures on wind and solar curtailment in the Brazilian Interconnected System: a maintenance-strategy framework based on public data
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
99 GIW26-355
Distributed green hydrogen from renewable curtailment: a techno-economic study for decarbonizing heavy-duty road freight in Southeast Brazil
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
100 GIW26-359
Secure Smart Meter Infrastructure as Grid Intelligence Layer: NILM-Based Disaggregation and Modular HEMS Integration in a Live German Grid State Monitoring Deployment
Andre Hoffmann, Arvato Systems, Germany
101 GIW26-369
Automatic Voltage Regulator (AVR)-Integrated Integral Sliding Mode Control for Intelligent Vehicle-to-Grid Support via Coordinated Active and Reactive Power Loops
Hemant Kumar, Punjab Engineering College Chandigarh, India
102 GIW26-371
From GFL to GFM: Technical Behaviors, Operator Concerns and Evolving Compliance Frameworks
Óscar Alonso Sádaba, SiG coop, Spain
103 GIW26-372
Sensitivity Analysis for Frequency Stability Studies in High-Penetration Renewable Grids under Low-Inertia and Low-Damping Paradigms
Susana Martín-Arroyo, University of Zaragoza, Spain
104 GIW26-379
Carbon Emission Intensity of Electricity Demand in GB: A Comparison of Zonal and Nodal Estimates
Elina Spyrou, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
105 GIW26-382
Offshore Wind Development Over Time: Stylised Facts and Structural Trends
Abubakar Bagudo Muhammad, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
Wed, 30 Sep
08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 6
SESSION 3A – GRID FORMING WIND POWER PLANTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro II
08:45
01 GIW26-325
Grid Forming Control of DC Connected Offshore Wind Farms: Requirements, Technical Limitations and Contribution to Instantaneous Reserve
Sebastian Höhn, TenneT TSO GmbH, Germany
09:05
02 GIW26-307
Influence of Offshore Wind Farm Electrical Networks on Grid Forming Control Performance at Point of Connection
Dhanashree Ashok Ganeshpure, Shell Global Solutions International B.V., Netherlands
09:25
03 GIW26-75
Coordinated Impedance Reshaping for DFIG Wind Farms: Turbine Optimization and Grid-Forming Compensation
Yin Bo, China Datang Technology Innovation Co., Ltd., China
09:45
04 GIW26-291
Protection Coordination of the 100% Grid Forming Based Offshore Wind Farm Connecting to an Offshore Diode Rectifier Unit HVDC Substation for Renewable Hydrogen Production
Songda Wang, Shell Global Solution International B.V., Netherlands
10:05
05 GIW26-97
New VSM-Split Control Concept for Grid-Forming Wind Power Plants: Enhancing Stability and Damping Under Grid Disturbances
Erat Siddharth Mannadiar, Universität Kassel, Germany | Fraunhofer IEE, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Germany
10:25
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 6
SESSION 3B – DISTRIBUTION GRID ASPECTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro I
08:45
01 GIW26-168
Shifting Responsibilities: The Growing Role of Distribution Levels in Reactive Power Provision by Wind Energy in Germany
Kaveh Malekian Boroujeni, BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany
09:05
02 GIW26-210
The Orchestrator: Grid-Friendly Activation of Aggregated Flexibility in Distribution Networks
Pierre Hülsemann, Fraunhofer ISE, Germany
09:25
03 GIW26-380
From grid constraints to smart planning: managing DER-driven challenges in distribution networks
Fabio Monachesi, Siemens, Italy
09:45
04 GIW26-206
Residential PV Hosting Capacity Under High EV Adoption: A Swedish Low-Voltage Grid Study
Elisabetta Perotti, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
10:05
05 GIW26-305
Attributing Operational Limitations in Preventive Control of Low-Voltage Grids Using Controlled Scenario Analysis
Sarah Fayed, German Aerospace Center (DLR) - Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Germany
10:25
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 6
SESSION 3C – GRID CODE ASPECTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro III
08:45
01 GIW26-332
The Growing Complexity of Dynamic Grid Integration Studies Across Europe
Mansoor Ali, FGH GmbH, Germany
09:05
02 GIW26-88
Enhanced Evaluation of EMT and RMS Simulation Models to Accelerate the Grid Connection Process
Peter Randewijk, Energinet, Denmark
09:25
03 GIW26-14
Impact of grid code requirements on post-contingency static voltage stability in the Nordic transmission system
Luis Kuhrmann, Department of Environmental and Energy Sciences, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden, Sweden
09:45
04 GIW26-86
Grid Stability Challenges and Mitigation Strategies for a Weak Connection: A Case Study from a Large Type 3 Wind Farm
Mehdi Shafiei, Acciona Energia, Australia, Manuel Gomez Nogales, Acciona Energia, Spain
10:05
05 GIW26-230
The effect of high RoCoF on the dynamic behaviour and stability limits of gas turbine power plants
Laurenz May, Institute of Power Plant Technology, Steam and Gas Turbines, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
10:25
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 6
SESSION 3D – EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro V
08:45
01 GIW26-191
A comparison of dunkelflaute events and their potential impacts on future energy systems in different regions
Hannele Holttinen, Aalto University, Finland
09:05
02 GIW26-185
Capturing Climate Change, Large‑Scale Wakes and Forecast Uncertainty in Pan‑European Energy System Analyses
Matti Koivisto, DTU Wind and Energy Systems, Denmark
09:25
03 GIW26-46
From Scarcity to Surplus: A Threshold-Based Characterization of Dark Doldrum and Bright Breeze Events in European Power Systems
Marvin Dorn, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
09:45
04 GIW26-129
Wind Forecast-Error-Driven Imbalances in Future Nordic Power Systems Under Alternative Sector-Coupling Scenarios
Mohammadhassan Bahmani, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Denmark
10:05
05 GIW26-163
How Representative are Different Weathers Year for Long-term planning of Energy Systems? Evidence from Multi-Decadal Pan-European Weather Data
Shubham Nayak, Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
10:25
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:40 - 11:10
COFFEE BREAK
Wed, 30 Sep | Foyer

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 7
SESSION 4D – REGULATORY/MARKET ASPECTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro V
11:10
01 GIW26-290
Challenges and Emerging Solutions for Electricity Markets with High vRES Shares
Ana Estanqueiro, LNEG - Laboratório Nacional de Energia e Geologia, Portugal
11:28
02 GIW26-385
Beyond the Least-Cost Mandate: Redefining Value in Transmission Regulation
Amy Rose, Energynautics, Germany
11:46
03 GIW26-180
The Impact of European Energy Transition Scenarios on the Iberian Electricity Day-ahead and Balancing Markets
Ana Estanqueiro, LNEG – Laboratório Nacional de Energia e Geologia, Portugal
12:04
04 GIW26-294
Variable Renewable Expansion and Operational Challenges in the Brazilian Power System
Giovani Vieira, University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil, Luís Felipe Lourenço, University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil, Mauricio Salles, University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil
12:22
05 GIW26-358
Tariff Design as a Flexibility Mechanism: Lessons from Brazil’s Time-of-Use Tariff Debate under High Distributed PV Penetration
Maurício B. C. Salles, Escola Politécnica, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Brazil
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 7
SESSION 4A – GRID-FORMING CAPABILITIES
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro II
11:10
01 GIW26-79
Investigation of a grid-following and grid-forming hybrid system with reference to overall grid-forming behaviour
Nelly Gorkow, Technische Universität Braunschweig - elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems, Germany, Timo Sauer, Technische Universität Braunschweig - elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems, Germany
11:28
02 GIW26-164
Characterisation of a Laboratory Setup for PHIL-Studies to investigate Power Grid interactions of Grid Forming controlled Systems
Stefanie Walujski, elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems - TU Braunschweig, Germany
11:46
03 GIW26-113
Resilient Grids with Grid-Forming Solution:Market Opportunities and Technical Pathways
Mahdi Takach, Sungrow Power Supply Co., Ltd, China
12:04
04 GIW26-244
Usage of the Jacobian Transfer Matrix Approach for Grid-Forming Applications
Hani Saad, ACDC transient, France
12:22
05 GIW26-269
Impact of Current Limitation and Power Prioritization Strategies of Grid-Forming Converters on Power System Stability
Christian Schöll, TransnetBW GmbH, Germany
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 7
SESSION 4B – HVDC
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro I
11:10
01 GIW26-54
Enhanced predictive grid forming control for converter-based HVAC transmission systems.
Alberto Bolzoni, Hitachi Energy Research, Switzerland
11:28
02 GIW26-157
Modelling and Coordination of Dynamic Braking Systems for Multi-vendor Multi-terminal HVDC Grids with DC Circuit Breakers
Julien Pouget, RTE, France
11:46
03 GIW26-368
Modeling and Operational Characteristics Simulation of Large-Scale New Energy Transmission via HVDC
Yiying Zhu, Shanghai Keliang Information Technology Co.,Ltd, China
12:04
04 GIW26-248
System requirements-based control design framework for grid-forming controlled Modular Multilevel Converters in Multi-Terminal HVDC systems
Sebastian Bauer, RWTH Aachen University - Institute of High Voltage Equipment and Grids, Digitalization and Energy Economics (IAEW), Germany
12:22
05 GIW26-221
Converter Design for Multi-Terminal HVDC Systems – Impact Factors and Sensitivity Analysis
Marius Kuhn, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 7
SESSION 4C – GRID CODE TESTING
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro III
11:10
01 GIW26-292
Power Hardware-in-the-Loop Emulation of Electrolyser Stacks for Cost-Efficient Grid Compliance Testing
Shahrouz Nayebossadri, Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, National Renewable Energy Centre, Offshore House, Albert Street, Blyth, United Kingdom, NE24 1LZ, United Kingdom
11:28
02 GIW26-13
Impact of Test Equipment on Low-Voltage-Ride-Through Testing of Grid-Following and Grid-Forming Inverters: A Comparative Analysis
Ziqian Zhang, Graz University of Technology, Austria
11:46
03 GIW26-335
Evaluation of a Novel Current Limitation Control Strategy for Grid-Forming Inverters Under European Grid Code Requirements
Nils Wiese, University of Kassel, Germany
12:04
04 GIW26-201
Space Vector Based Assessment of Grid-Forming and Grid-Following Converters in Theory, Simulation and PHIL Experiments
Philipp Hackl, Graz University of Technology, Austria
12:22
05 GIW26-189
Decoupling Grid Impedance Variations from Control Performance in Grid-Forming Converters Using Cascaded L1-Adaptive Controllers
Ismail El Hamzaoui, Institute of Smart Cities Public University of Navarre - Pamplona, Spain
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

13:00 - 14:00
LUNCH
Wed, 30 Sep | Foyer

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 8
SESSION 5D – TASK 19
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro V
14:00
01 GIW26-392
How Do Countries Deal with High PV Penetration ​ – Assessment of flexibility options, curtailment strategies and regulatory frameworks for power systems
Gerd Heilscher, TH Ulm University of Applied Sciences, Germany
14:18
02 GIW26-32
Increasing grid hosting capacity: an international comparison of DSO practices
Vincent Krakowski, Hespul, France
14:36
03 GIW26-212
Concepts of Control Strategies for Highly PV Overpowered Grids
Denis Mende, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Germany | University of Kassel, Germany
14:54
04 GIW26-330
Resilience Assessment of a University Microgrid Based on Real High-Resolution Monitoring Data and KPI Analysis
Andrés Honrubia Escribano, Renewable Energy Research Institute, and Department of Electrical, Electronic, Automatic and Communications Engineering, ETSII-AB, University of Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM) Albacete, Spain, Spain
15:12
05 GIW26-209
On Flexibility, Storage and Curtailment in High VRE Power Grids
Jan Remund, Meteotest, Switzerland
15:30
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 8
SESSION 5A – STABILITY ASPECTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro II
14:00
01 GIW26-37
A Comprehensive Review of Power System Stabilizer Design Methodologies
Lijun Cai, Institute of Electrical Power Engineering, University of Rostock, Germany
14:18
02 GIW26-56
Measurement-Based Impedance Investigation and Stability Analyses of PV Parks and Their Components
Franziska Hans, Fraunhofer Institut für Solare Energiesysteme, Germany
14:36
03 GIW26-324
System Stability Assessment under Varying Dispatch Conditions
Clemen Goh, Monash University, Australia
14:54
TBA
S. Ratajczak, C. Wirtz (FGH e.V., Germany), A. Kroggel, H. Jürgensen (Schleswig-Holstein Netz GmbH, Germany), S. Krahl (FGH e.V., Germany)
15:12
04 GIW26-48
Impact of outer-loop control on converter-driven stability
Frida Nordlund, Svenska kraftnät, Sweden
15:30
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 8
SESSION 5B – TRANSMISSION PLANNING
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro I
14:00
01 GIW26-389
Building the Future Grid: Strategic Transmission Planning to Achieve VRE at Scale
Amy Rose, Energynautics, Germany
14:18
02 GIW26-159
An Automated Framework for Optimal Placement of Grid Boosters for Maximizing Transmission Grid Utilization
Mohammed Abdaljawwad, Institute for Automation and Applied Informatics (IAI) - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany
14:36
03 GIW26-238
System Service-Aware Power System Planning with Data Centres under Renewable Energy Uncertainty
Fatemeh Rajaei Najafabadi, Imperial College London, United Kingdom, Mark O'Malley, Imperial College London, United Kingdom, Stephen Gord, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
14:54
04 GIW26-83
Energy resource data-driven constraints in long-term energy planning for energy transition
Darío Ferreira Martínez, INESC TEC, Portugal
15:12
05 GIW26-367
Understanding Internal Congestion in Germany: A Comparative Study of Zonal and Nodal Pricing with Future Grid Reinforcements
John Joe Padua, Brandenburg Technical University, Germany
15:30
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 8
SESSION 5C – OFFSHORE WIND HVDC
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro III
14:00
01 GIW26-282
Integrating OEM Wind-Park Controller Model with Existing HVDC Control Hardware-in-the-Loop Real-Time Test Environment – Experiences and Analysis.
Bessam Saleh, Siemens Energy, United Kingdom
14:20
02 GIW26-59
Small-Signal Modelling of Offshore Energy Hubs
Alban Jacques F Duvivier, DTU - Power and Energy Systems, Denmark
14:40
03 GIW26-119
Stability and Compliance Assessment of Converter-Dominated Offshore HVDC Systems: Linking Dynamic Phenomena to Test Procedures
Sergei Shcherbakov, Polytechnic University of Valencia Valencia, Spain, Spain
15:00
04 GIW26-186
Energy Dissipation in Offshore Energy Hubs Under Emergency Power Control
Matin Kamenica, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
15:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

15:40 - 16:10
COFFEE BREAK
Wed, 30 Sep | Foyer

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 9
SESSION 6A – POWER SYSTEM STABILITY AND FREQUENCY-DOMAIN MODELLING
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro II
16:10
01 GIW26-147
Comparison of methods for the assessment of small-signal sub-, supersynchronous and harmonic stability
Bernd Weise, DIgSILENT GmbH, Germany
16:30
02 GIW26-135
Evaluation of Frequency‑Domain Stability Methodologies for Large‑Scale Renewable Integration in the NSW CWO REZ
Sigrid Bolik, Siemens PTI, United Kingdom
16:50
03 GIW26-61
Damping of Electromechanical Oscillations via Modal-Based PSS Design in Grid-Forming Converter-Interfaced Generation
Lijun Cai, University of Rostock, Germany
17:10
04 GIW26-336
Different Control Structures – Similar System Responses: Observations on Damping and Frequency Behavior of Grid‑Forming Inverters
Boris Fischer, SMA Solar Technology AG, Germany
17:30
05 GIW26-337
On the Assessment of Damping and Passive Behavior of Grid-Forming Inverters in the Frequency Domain
Boris Fischer, SMA Solar Technology AG, Germany
17:50
06 GIW26-18
Detection and Mitigation of Subsynchronous Torsional Resonance Using a System-Level Immittance-Based Frequency-Domain Method
Ehsan Behrouzian, Power system specialist, Sweden
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 9
SESSION 6D – ELECTROLYZER SYSTEM MODELLING I
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro V
16:10
01 GIW26-277
An open source physical based RMS electrolyser model for power system stability studies
Jean Simoulin, RTE, France
16:30
02 GIW26-211
Grid Compliance verification and simulation model validation of a co-located generation and demand facility - a case of the Kassø PV + PtX plant
Nemanja Calic, Siemens Energy Global GmbH & Co. KG, Germany, Kaustubh Bhatnagar, European Energy A/S, Denmark
16:50
03 GIW26-29
Analytical frequency-domain impedance modelling of large converter-interfaced electrolyser for grid stability assessment
Patrick Ayivor, TENNET TSO BV, Netherlands
17:10
04 GIW26-346
Planning and Operational Validation of Electrolyzers in Renewable-Dominated Island Grids
Jonathan Riofrio, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
17:30
05 GIW26-364
Validation of a Transient 90-bar Alkaline Electrolysis Model: Lessons from Project PEACE
Hans Julian Wiggenhauser, Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e. V. (DLR), Germany
17:50
06 GIW26-251
Unlocking the Potential of Solid Oxide Electrolysis Cell (SOEC) Systems for Grid Ancillary Services and Renewable Energy Integration
René Lorenz, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Engineering Thermodynamics, Germany
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 9
SESSION 6B – SYNCHRONOUS CONDENSER APPLICATIONS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro I
16:10
TBA
NN, ANDRITZ Hydro GmbH, Austria
16:30
01 GIW26-47
Experience and Further Developments in Hybrid Synchronous Condenser Technology: Phoenix and Eccles
Richard Rivas, 1. Hitachi Energy, Sweden
16:50
02 GIW26-120
Dynamic Stability Comparison of Grid-Forming BESS and Synchronous Condensers in a Low-Inertia Island Grid: The Martinique Case
Kaan Ogruk, INESC TEC – Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Portugal | FEUP - Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Portugal
17:10
03 GIW26-195
Hybrid Synchronous Condenser – Battery Energy Storage System to Improve Dynamic Stability of a Wind-Powered Electrolyzer System in a Weak Grid
Mustafa Erdem Sezgin, ABB, Norway
17:30
04 GIW26-286
The impact of Synchronous Condenser Inertia in Critical Clearing Time: A Comparative Study with Synchronous Generators
Hesam Marzooghi, ACEREZ, Australia
17:50
05 GIW26-347
A Rotary Transformer Grid Interface for Hybrid Power Plants
Nigel Schofield, University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 9
SESSION 6C – GRID CODES ASPECTS FOR WIND POWER PLANTS
Wed, 30 Sep | Douro III
16:10
01 GIW26-329
The impact of legacy grid code requirements on grid robustness in grids with declining strength
Owen Curran, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy Limited, United Kingdom
16:30
02 GIW26-121
From VDE FNN Compliance Tests to LPV Dynamic Equivalents: Modeling Grid-Forming Wind Turbines for Large-Scale Frequency Stability Studies
Johannes Brunner, University of Applied Sciences (HTW Berlin), Germany
16:50
03 GIW26-331
Methodology and Project Experience - Measurement and Model Validation for Grid Integration of an Offshore Wind Farm with AC connection to the German High-Voltage Grid
Johannes Döll, FGH GmbH, Germany
17:10
04 GIW26-345
Grid Emulator System Performance in Interaction with Wind Energy Converters for Grid Compliance Testing
Mohsen Neshati, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, Germany
17:30
05 GIW26-293
Plant Simulator Supports Wind Farm FAT and SAT based on Tests from IEC 61400
shaojun huang, Vestas Wind A/S, Denmark
17:50
06 GIW26-80
POD-Q Function for Wind Power Plants Considering Communication Delays:System Design, Parameter Tuning, and Field Test Validation
Jiaqi Yang, Goldwind Science & Technology Co., Ltd, Beijing, China
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

18:45 - 22:30
WIND & SOLAR NETWORKING DINNER EVENT
Wed, 30 Sep | Taylor’s Port
18:45 - 22:30

Programme

  • 19:30 – 20:30 Guided Tour at Taylor’s Port
  • 20:30 – 22:30 Dinnerbuffet at Barão Fladgate Restaurant
    at Taylor’s Port
 
Transport Location
  • Meeting point: Lobby of conference hotel
  • Meeting time: 18:45
  • Departure of bus: 19:00
  • Event Start: 19:30
  • Return of bus: 22:00 & 22:30 (with Stopover at Campo 24 de Agosto in the city centre)

Taylor’s Port
Rua do Choupelo 250
4400-088 Vila Nova de Gaia
Portugal

 

 

 

 


 
Thu, 1 Oct
09:00 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 10
SESSION 7A – HYBRID SYSTEMS AND GRID FORMING
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro II
09:00
01 GIW26-192
Operation of a Grid Forming BESS in a Medium Voltage Grid in the SUREVIVE Project
Roland Singer, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE, Germany
09:20
02 GIW26-266
Hybrid Wind + Grid-Forming BESS: Giga-Scale Grid Integration
Roozbeh Kabiri, Vestas, Australia, Connor Jackson, Vestas, Australia, Caro Schwarz, Vestas, Australia
09:40
03 GIW26-311
Grid Code Requirements for Connecting a Hybrid Power Plant including Storage Units. An overview of current legislation and recommendations for future requirements
Björn Andresen, Aarhus University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Denmark
10:00
04 GIW26-376
POWER SYSTEM INTEGRATION OF THE HYBRID RENEWABLE PLANTS WITH GRID-FORMING BATTERY STORAGES
Slavomir Seman, Huawei Technologies GmbH, Germany
10:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

09:00 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 10
SESSION 7B – POWER QUALITY ASPECTS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro I
09:00
01 GIW26-274
Power Quality Analysis and Methodology in Hydrogen Power Plants
Alberto de Andres, Power Consulting at Hitachi Energy, Spain
09:20
02 GIW26-22
Effect of Grid Forming Inverters on Harmonics in the grid
Till Garn, TU Braunschweig elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems, Germany
09:40
03 GIW26-178
Evolving TSO Requirements for Wind Turbine Harmonic Models: Resolution Effects, Methodology Considerations, and Paths Toward Standardization
Bruno F. Exposto, Vestas Wind Systems, Denmark
10:00
04 GIW26-15
Fast Simulation Methods for Harmonic Compliance Assessment of Inverter-Based Resources: Achieving High Accuracy
Maria Iversen, AFRY, Denmark
10:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

09:00 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 10
SESSION 7D – HYDROGEN ASPECTS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro V
09:00
01 GIW26-273
Dynamic Modelling of Thyristor-Based Rectifiers for Hydrogen Applications
Lucia Beloqui, Power Consulting at Hitachi Energy, Spain
09:20
02 GIW26-297
A framework for online monitoring of EIS data through DRT to understand and model electrolyser degradation
Irati Echarri-Legarra, University of the Basque Country (EHU), Spain | Tekniker, Basque Research and Technology Alliance, Spain
09:40
03 GIW26-118
Adaptive current-controlled single-stage Current-Source Rectifier for PEM Electrolyzers with Ancillary Service and Fault Ride-Through Capability
Abdelrahman M. Elhawash, Centre for Power and Energy Systems, INESC TEC, Portugal | Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
10:00
04 GIW26-250
The Impact of Hydrogen Valleys on the Iberian Power System
Rita Martinho, NOVA School of Science and Technology, Portugal | CENSE - Center for Environmental and Sustainability Research, Portugal | INESC-TEC Porto, Portugal
10:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

09:00 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 10
SESSION 7C – BLACKSTART WITH WIND POWER PLANTS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro III
09:00
01 GIW26-314
Modeling Considerations for Black Starting an Offshore Wind Farm using Grid Forming Turbines
Denis Kho, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Curtis Fox, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Mobolaji Bello, Electric Power Research Institute, United States
09:20
02 GIW26-231
Optimal Grid-Forming Penetration for Power System Restoration from Offshore Wind Farms
Lindsay McGrow, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
09:40
03 GIW26-361
String Energisation of Offshore Wind Power Plants Using Grid-Forming Wind Turbines for Blackstart Restoration
Leonel Noris, DTU, Denmark
10:00
04 GIW26-320
A Model-Based Workflow for Assessing Black-Start Capability of Offshore Wind Farms Connected Through VSC-HVDC Systems
Sid Ahmed Attia, The MathWorks GmbH, Germany, Miguel Alonso, The MathWorks, S.L., Spain
10:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:40 - 11:10
COFFEE BREAK
Thu, 1 Oct | Foyer

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 11
SESSION 8A – CERTIFICATION ACCORDING TO GERMAN GRID CODE
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro II
11:10
01 GIW26-26
From Guideline to Practice: Verifying Grid-Forming Inertia Provision for Extra-High-Voltage Grid Connections
Frederik Kalverkamp, FGH GmbH, Germany
11:28
02 GIW26-363
From Guideline to Practice: Grid-Forming Testing of a MW-Scale BESS according to VDE FNN at Fraunhofer IWES
Pouya Mostashar, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy Systems IWES, Germany
11:46
03 GIW26-27
Experimental Evaluation of Grid-Forming Requirements Based on the German VDE FNN Guidelines of Grid-Forming Capabilities
Tobias Erckrath, Fraunhofer-Institut für Energiewirtschaft und Energiesystemtechnik IEE, Germany
12:04
04 GIW26-3
TBA: Development of a generic model for Grid-Forming unit certification according to German grid connection requirements
Daniel Masendorf, Energynautics, Germany
12:22
05 GIW26-77
From Guideline to Automation: Implementing the FNN requirements for Grid Forming Units in an Automated Compliance Testing Tool
Christian Bendfeld, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 11
SESSION 8B – HYBRID POWER PLANTS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro I
11:10
01 GIW26-95
Repowering and Hybridization of Existing Wind and Solar Plants in Europe: Unlocking Latent Grid Capacity and Enhancing System Stability
Alberto Pico, EPRI EUROPE, Ireland
11:28
02 GIW26-280
Renewable Baseload Power with DC-Coupling
Gian Schelling, Hitachi Energy, Switzerland
11:46
03 GIW26-130
Designing Co-located Wind–Solar–Storage Systems for Constant Power Output
Megha Gupta, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
12:04
04 GIW26-184
Interoperability and Control Aspects for Hybrid Power Plants Providing Voltage Control and POD-Q Services
Lennart Petersen, Vestas Wind Systems, Denmark
12:22
05 GIW26-188
Comparing Battery Degradation Estimates in Hybrid Wind Power Plants: From Sizing to Operation
Elahe Ghanaee, ETSI Caminos, Canales y Puertos Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 11
SESSION 8C – ANCILLARY SERVICES FROM WIND POWER PLANTS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro III
11:10
01 GIW26-334
Pilot project on FCR provision by a Portuguese wind farm
Nuno Taveira, ENERCON, Portugal
11:28
02 GIW26-326
Exploring the potential of HVDC systems in enabling inertial contribution of DC-connected wind farms (WFs)
Roberto Rosso, Siemens Energy Global GmbH & Co. KG, Germany
11:46
03 GIW26-365
Flexible Inertia Provision Control Framework for Master-Slave Grid-Forming MMC-MTDC Systems
Zhangcan Xu, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
12:04
04 GIW26-202
Type 5 Wind Turbine Synchronous Compensator Capability: the synergies with solar PV to stabilise voltage and avoid the root causes of recent blackouts
Geoff Henderson, SyncWind Power Ltd, New Zealand
12:22
05 GIW26-348
A Co‑Simulation Approach for the Investigation of Electromechanical Interactions in Wind Turbine‑Generator Systems for future Grid-Control concepts
Keno Ohrmann, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy Systems IWES, Germany
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 13:00
Parallel sessions 11
SESSION 8D – BATTERY STORAGE OPERATION
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro V
11:10
01 GIW26-268
Value of Energy Storage of different storage duration: Analysis and Implications.
Kazuhiko Ogimoto, The University of Tokyo, Japan
11:28
02 GIW26-53
Economic dispatch optimization of a hybrid power plant considering turbine loads and battery degradation
Fanning Zheng, Technical University of Munich, Germany
11:46
03 GIW26-93
Unlocking Latent Grid Support Capabilities in Existing Renewable and BESS Assets: A System-Level Pathway from Compliance-Based to Capability-Enabled Operation
Alberto Pico, EPRI EUROPE, Ireland
12:04
04 GIW26-263
Co-Location of Grid-Forming Battery Storage Systems with Wind and PV Generation: Techno-Economic Analysis on Synergy Effects and Inertia Provision
Merle Ferk, Technical University Braunschweig, Germany
12:22
05 GIW26-213
Bilevel Energy Management System for REC Promoters
Jose Villar, INESC TEC, Campus da FEUP Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465, Porto, Portugal
12:40
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

13:00 - 14:00
LUNCH
Thu, 1 Oct | Foyer

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 12
SESSION 9A – GRID FORMING MODELLING
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro II
14:00
01 GIW26-205
Impact of Grid-Forming Inverters on Power Systems: Automated EMT Study Framework
Jurian Ferry, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany | Universität Kassel, Germany
14:20
02 GIW26-259
Fast Fault Current Response of GFM-VSCs Under Symmetrical and Asymmetrical Faults
Liang Zhao, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
14:40
03 GIW26-318
Use of a Dynamic Estimation Model for Improved Small-Signal Stability in Current-Controlled Grid-Forming Converters.
Emmanuel Ebinyu, Univ. Lille, Arts et Metiers Institute of Technology, Centrale Lille, Junia, ULR 2697 - L2EP, F 59000 Lille, France
15:00
04 GIW26-105
Frequency dependent impedance of grid forming and grid following photovoltaic and type-4 wind power plants
Heinrich Ellmann, FGH e.V., Germany
15:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 12
SESSION 9B – POWER SYSTEM STABILITY NEEDS ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro I
14:00
ENERGYNAUTICS/AGORA
NN, Energynautics, Germany
14:20
01 GIW26-267
A Comparison of System Strength Metrics in IBR-Dominated Power Systems
Ambuj Gupta, Imperial College London, United Kingdom, Balarko Chaudhuri, Imperial College London, United Kingdom, Mark O'Malley, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
14:40
02 GIW26-319
Determining System Needs for Transient Stability in IBR-Rich Power Systems: An Early Termination Approach for Efficiently Quantifying Dynamic Metrics
LUIS PABON, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
15:00
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 12
SESSION 9C – SIF BLADE
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro III
14:00
01 GIW26-222
SIF BLADE - Exploring the Performance of HVDC-Connected Offshore Wind Farms in GB Restoration under Grid Following and Grid Forming Control Strategies
Adam Scott, The National HVDC Centre, United Kingdom
14:20
02 GIW26-214
SIF BLADE– unlocking black start from offshore wind through regulatory and market evolution
James Inkpen, The Carbon Trust, United Kingdom, Robert Keast, The Carbon Trust, United Kingdom, Gordon McFadzean, TNEI Services Ltd, United Kingdom
14:40
03 GIW26-173
SIF BLADE- Future Black Start Restoration from Low Carbon Technologies
Daniel Barlow, SPENergyNetworks, United Kingdom
15:00
04 GIW26-179
SIF BLADE - System Restoration Pathways Enabled by Offshore Wind and BESS in Scotland
Mazher Syed, WSP UK and Ireland, United Kingdom
15:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

14:00 - 15:40
Parallel sessions 12
SESSION 9D –POWERING THE ENERGY TRANSITION: BUILDING EU–CENTRAL ASIA RESEARCH PARTNERSHIPS FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY AND REGIONAL GRID INTEGRATION
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro V
14:00
01 GIW26-386
Introduction of EURECA & Central Asian Energy sector
Bettina Löwentraut-Duran, GIZ Uzbekistan, Uzbekistan
14:15
02 GIW26-122
Flexibility Challenges in Central Asian Power Systems: Evidence from Dispatch Modeling of Large-Scale Wind and Solar Integration in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
Ruslan Isaev, GIZ, EURECA Project, Uzbekistan, Abdurashid Mirzaev, Coordinating Dispatch Center “Energia”, Uzbekistan
14:30
03 GIW26-387
Drivers and Needs of Central Asia – EU Research Cooperation
Rohan Modi, GIZ Tajikistan, Tajikistan
14:45
04 GIW26-391
Opportunities for EU based research institutes in Central Asia
Manfred Spiesberger, ZSI - Zentrum für Soziale Innovation GmbH, Austria
15:00
Central Asian Universities Network and Research capacities
NN, Satbayev University & Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan
Central Asian Universities Network and Research capacities
15:15
<strong>OPEN&nbsp; &nbsp;FLOOR / DISCUSSION</strong>

15:40 - 16:10
COFFEE BREAK
Thu, 1 Oct | Foyer

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 13
SESSION 10A – GRID FORMING VALIDATION
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro II
16:10
01 GIW26-49
OptiTransient: Framework and Key Findings for Transient Performance of Grid-Forming Assets
Roland Singer, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE, Germany, Sven Ratajczak, Forschungsgemeinschaft für elektrische Anlagen und Stromwirtschaft, Germany
16:30
02 GIW26-232
A P-HIL-Based Certification Approach of the FNN Fictitious Island Test for Grid-Forming Units
Ron Brandl, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology, Germany | Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, Germany | European Distributed Energy Resources Laboratories e.V., Germany
16:50
03 GIW26-236
High-Resolution Frequency Tracking via Extended Kalman Filter for Grid-Forming Inverter Reserve Validation under Non-Ideal Grid Conditions
Stefan Klöpping, TU Braunschweig, Germany
17:10
04 GIW26-64
Evaluating Converter Transient Behavior during Asymmetric Fault Ride Through
Gregor Schöpf, Institute of Electrical Power Systems Graz University of Technology, Austria
17:30
05 GIW26-66
Experimental validation of islanding detection failure induced by grid-forming inverters
Wiebke Dirksen, German Aerospace Center (DLR) - Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Germany
17:50
06 GIW26-144
Grid Integration Study: Operation of Grid-Forming Inverters in a Medium Voltage Distribution Grid
Tobias Weinmann, Technische Hochschule Augsburg, Germany
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 13
SESSION 10B – OSCILLATIONS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro I
16:10
01 GIW26-175
Pinpointing Root Cause of Oscillations: Case Studies with Real Oscillation Events in Australia and Denmark
Youhong Chen, Imperial College London, United Kingdom | The University of Bath, United Kingdom
16:30
02 GIW26-235
A Digital Twin for Early Warning of IBR-Induced Oscillations
Gabriel Covarrubias Maureira, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
16:50
03 GIW26-145
Real-World Application of Dissipating Energy Functions for Tracking and Mitigation of Sub-Synchronous Oscillations in the Scottish Transmission System
Callum Henderson, ScottishPower Energy Networks, United Kingdom
17:10
04 GIW26-92
Subsynchronous Oscillations and Damping Torque Assessment of SGs Interacting with Gird-Forming STATCOMs
Yousef Khayat, Department of Energy, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark, Denmark
17:30
05 GIW26-247
Power Oscillation Damping at the Plant Level through Power Plant Control
Seyedehniloofar Kamalhosseini, Institute of Electrical Energy Systems, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), Germany | Grid Consulting, Siemens Energy, Germany
17:50
06 GIW26-89
Wide‑Band Oscillation Detection in PEID‑Dominated Power Systems Using Waveform Measurements
Carl Carlsson, Svenska kraftnät, Sweden
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 13
SESSION 10C – OFFSHORE WIND CONNECTIONS
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro III
16:10
01 GIW26-278
Transmission System Design and Grid Integration of GW-Scale Offshore Wind Farms
Hossein Khalilnezhad, Energy Infrastructure Department, Vattenfall, Netherlands
16:28
02 GIW26-226
Connecting Offshore-Wind Farms to Shore through a Grid Intertie based on a Low Frequency AC Transmission regulated by Static Frequency Converters
Mattia Rossi, Hitachi Energy Ltd, Switzerland, Miodrag Basic, Hitachi Energy Ltd, Switzerland
16:46
03 GIW26-57
Distance Protection Assessment in Offshore Wind Power Plant Collector Systems
Alexander Novikov, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy A/S, Denmark | Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
17:04
04 GIW26-176
Control and protection enabling subsea substation for HVAC-connected floating wind farms
Qian Long, ABB AS, Norway, Yuanyuan Liu, ABB AS, Norway, Johannes-Bedos Ulvin, ABB AS, Norway
17:22
05 GIW26-156
Combined operation of hydrogen electrolyzers, grid-forming wind turbines, and HVDC within an offshore energy hub
Thomas Heynen, IAEW, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
17:40
06 GIW26-390
The rapid uptake of BESS in Australia: the good, the bad and the extraordinary impact on the market!
Jonathon Dyson, AZZO, Australia
17:58
07 GIW26-183
Influence of Electrolyzer Degradation on Power Dispatch And Ancillary Services in Offshore Energy Hubs
Nikita Taranin, Danish Technical University, Wind and Energy Systems department, Denmark
18:16
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

16:10 - 18:30
Parallel sessions 13
SESSION 10D – COUNTRY STUDIES
Thu, 1 Oct | Douro V
16:10
01 GIW26-198
How has Scotland been able to accommodated wind? - Past, current and future trends of curtailment and flexibility potential in Scottish grid.
Yoh Yasuda, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
16:30
02 GIW26-9
Atlantic Canada Offshore Wind Grid Integration and Transmission Study
Sven Scholtysik, Net Zero Atlantic, Canada
16:50
03 GIW26-384
Replacing or Augmenting Coal? Opportunities and Barriers for VRE Integration in Indonesia
Peter-Philipp Schierhorn, Energynautics, Germany
17:10
04 GIW26-276
Power System Stability Assessment of Thermal Power Plant Decommissioning in Angola: A Huíla Case Study with Renewable Energy Integration Using PSS®E
Euclides Luis, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola, José Inácio, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola
17:30
05 GIW26-23
Enhancing Grid Integration of Solar PV through Battery Energy Storage for Open Access Consumers under Time-Varying Tariff and Deviation Constraints: A Real-Time Study from Tamil Nadu
NALLASIVAN CHENNIAPPAN, The Tamil Nadu Power Distribution Corporation Limited, India | RESEARCH SCHOLAR, CENTRE FOR RESEARCH, ANNA UNIVERSITY, India
17:50
06 GIW26-151
Grid Expansion Planning for Renewable Energy Integration and Emerging Load Centres: A Case Study of Andhra Pradesh
Harikrishna Kasuvuganahally Venkateshreddy, Center for Study of Science, Technology and Policy (CSTEP), India
18:10
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

18:30 - 20:00
Parallel sessions 14
POSTER RECEPTION
Thu, 1 Oct | Foyer

18:30 - 20:00
Parallel sessions 14
POSTER SESSION
Thu, 1 Oct | Foyer
01 GIW26-17
Sustainability Assessment of Manufacturing Materials for the Hydraulic Variable Inertia Flywheel
Lisanne Reese, Flensburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
02 GIW26-20
ENERGY EFFICIENT OF WIND POWER BY STUDYING DIFFERENT PARAMETERS ESTIMATION METHODS OF WEIBULL DISTRIBUTION: CASE OF BURUNDI
Prime Niyongabo, Burundi Military Academy: ISCAM, Burundi, Onesime Nibitegeka, Burundi Military Academy: ISCAM, Burundi
03 GIW26-25
Comparative analysis of PV–PEM, PV–SOEC and PV–CSP–SOEC systems for solar hydrogen production
Hajar Rati, Al Akhawayn University, Morocco
04 GIW26-31
Conflicts and Synergies in Renewable Energy Transition: An Analysis of Taiwan’s "Fishery and Electricity Symbiosis" Policy
Ming-You Lin, Green Energy and Environment Research Laboratories, Industrial Technology Research Institute, Taiwan
05 GIW26-34
Zonal Active Power Ramping Control Strategy for Improving the Outbound Transmission Stability of Renewable Energy Bases
Cuidi Qin, China Datang Technology Innovation Co., Ltd., China
06 GIW26-38
Event-Driven Energy System Sizing for Self-Sufficient Electrified Container Terminals
Adrian Galvez, INESC TEC, Portugal
07 GIW26-39
GIS-Integrated Machine Learning Framework for Spatial Prediction and Scenario-Based Estimation of Large-Scale Solar Power Expansion
Mohamad koubar, Uppsala university, Sweden
08 GIW26-41
Evaluation of system strength in a converter dominated power system
Fabian Hohn, Svenska kraftnät, Sweden
09 GIW26-42
Comparative Analysis of a Matching Control Method and a Synchronverter Based on VDE FNN Requirements for Grid-Forming Units
Linus Hertle, KIT - Instititute of Electric Energy Systems and High-Voltage Technology (IEH), Germany
10 GIW26-43
A Hybrid Grid–Coordinate Approach for Wind Farm Layout Optimization Considering Initial Grid Geometry
Faisal Al-Otaibi, King Abdulaziz University, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Saudi Arabia
11 GIW26-44
ASSESSMENT OF ROTATIONAL ENERGY AND AVAILABLE ACTIVE RESERVE OF A FUTURE NORDIC POWER SYSTEM
Lakshmi Vidusala Kumari Wedikkara Arachchige, Department of Electrical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology., Sweden
12 GIW26-50
Negative Electricity Prices: Regulatory Drivers in the Context of Germany’s Wind Onshore Energy Expansion
Kristian Platta, BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany
13 GIW26-51
Towards More Accurate High-Resolution Renewable Generation Datasets for Energy Market Modeling
Florian Maurer, FH Aachen, Germany
14 GIW26-55
Deterministic and Heuristic Optimisation of the Q(U)-Characteristic Curve’s Parameters of Decentralized Renewable Energies in Distribution Networks
Gerald Gebhardt, elenia Institute for High Voltage Technology and Power Systems | Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany
15 GIW26-58
From Marine Propulsion to Grid-Scale Storage: Quantifying the Efficiency-Degradation Trade-off in PV-Integrated Second-Life BESS via Optimal Scheduling
Fazal Ur Rehman, University of L'Aquila, L'Aquila, Italy, Italy | University of Southern Denmark (SDU), Sønderborg, Denmark, Denmark
16 GIW26-68
Assessing the Accuracy of Small-Signal Analyses under Limited IBR Model Knowledge
Nicolae Darii, Denmark Technical University, Denmark | Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, Denmark
17 GIW26-71
Modeling Considerations for Grid-forming Capable Devices in Modern Power Systems
Mohammad Moradzadeh, Elia Group, Belgium
18 GIW26-72
Design and Dynamic Simulation of Liquid Hydrogen Transfer Assisted by Compressed Boil-off Hydrogen Gas
euichan lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea, Republic of (South)
19 GIW26-73
Elastic wave velocity measurements to quantify sample disturbance of thin-walled tube samples
Junbong Jang, Dong-A University, Korea, Republic of (South)
20 GIW26-74
Efficient Parametrization of Generic Type IV Wind Turbine Models for Transient Stability: A Julia-Based Approach
Javier Jimenez-Ruiz, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM), Spain
21 GIW26-85
Renewable Energy Integration and Operational Flexibility in Wastewater Treatment Plants: A Techno-Economic Assessment
Marten Herzog, john becker ingenieure, Germany | University of Bremen, Germany
22 GIW26-90
Spatio-Temporal Intelligence for Future Energy Systems
Jan Dobschinski, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Kassel, Germany | University of Kassel, Department of Sustainable Electrical Energy Systems, Germany
23 GIW26-91
Solar Energy Systems Installation in Closed Areas of Hebron: Strengthening Resilience and Economic Independence through PV Solutions
Abeer Alnazer, Hebron Electric Power Company/ Hebron Municipality, Other
24 GIW26-96
Timing Electricity Procurement for Large-Scale Heat Pumps in District Heating Systems under Market Uncertainty
Verena Köppl, Hochschule Weihenstephan-Triesdorf, Germany
25 GIW26-99
A Two-Stage Stochastic Programming Framework for Redispatch Planning under Uncertainty in the German Transmission System
Veli Ünlü, FGH e.V., Germany
26 GIW26-100
A Data-Driven Market Module for Scenario-Dependent Conventional Dispatch Adaptation under Renewable Forecast Uncertainty
Antoni Chajan, FGH e.V., Germany
27 GIW26-102
Stochastic Multi-Period Security-Constrained Optimal Power Flow via Approximated Chance Constraints
Micael Simões, INESC TEC, Portugal | FEUP, Portugal, Diogo Reis, INESC TEC, Portugal | FEUP, Portugal
28 GIW26-103
Short-term forecasting of imbalance volume and position for intraday flexibility management
Diya Achi, CSEM, Switzerland
29 GIW26-104
Beyond Market Noise: Graph Neural Networks for Interzonal Flow Forecasting in Zonal Electricity Markets
Rafael Carrillo, CSEM, Switzerland
30 GIW26-108
Comparison of Optimization Tools for Integrating Renewable Energy into Large-Scale Co-located Industrial Clusters
Diptish Saha, Aalborg University, Denmark
31 GIW26-109
Impedance models of medium-voltage grid simulator
Glib Chekavskyy, ABB Poland, Corporate Technology Center, Poland
32 GIW26-111
Structured Modal-Energy Dissipation for Inter-Area Oscillations in Low-Inertia Power Systems
Stephan Kohlhaas, Chair of Automatic Control Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI) Technical University of Munich Boltzmannstrase 15, 85748 Garching, Germany, Germany
33 GIW26-114
Analysis of Transformer Inrush Current during a Grid Black Start by a Three-Terminal HVDC System Connected to an Offshore Wind Farm
Tadashi Shinno, Tokyo City University, Japan
34 GIW26-115
Hardware-in-the-Loop Simulation-Based Evaluation of a Supply-and-Demand Balancing Scheme Using Biogas Power Plants with Reused EV Batteries in Rural Microgrids
Masaki Motohashi, Tokyo City University, Japan, Atsushi Hayashida, Hokkaido Research Organization, Japan, Tastuhito Nakajima, Tokyo City University, Japan
35 GIW26-116
One-week Simulation Evaluation of V2X System Operation in Community Microgrids with Solar and Biogas Power Plants, EVs, and On-Site Reused EV Battery Storage
Taiyo Ishikawa, Tokyo City University, Japan
36 GIW26-117
Evaluation of a Supply-Demand Balancing Scheme for Rooftop Solar Power and Battery Storage using Weather Forecasting and Inter-household Coordinated Operation
Haruki Keino, Tokyo City University, Japan
37 GIW26-123
The feasibility of using impedance-based methods for assessing the subsynchronous interaction risk of Type-3 wind power in a meshed series compensated transmission network
Joona Kittilä, Fingrid, Finland
38 GIW26-124
Evaluation of Dynamic Input-Output Characteristics of Frequency Meters for Fast Frequency Response Control of Grid-Following Inverters
Ayami Yamada, Tokyo City University, Japan
39 GIW26-125
Overcurrent Suppression Method for Grid-Forming Inverters Using Virtual Resistance and Active Power Reference Control Based on Operating Conditions
Tatsuya Shioya, Tokyo City University, Japan
40 GIW26-126
Improved IDFT-Based Frequency Measurement for Fast Frequency Response Control of Grid-Following Inverters in Battery Energy Storage Systems
ZHIQIANG LI, Tokyo City University, Japan
41 GIW26-127
Ammonia Cracking Process with Molten salt-based Thermal Energy Storage for Green Hydrogen Supply Chain via Ammonia: Case Study of South Korea
Hyunjick Kim, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea, Republic of (South)
42 GIW26-137
Optimal Sizing of Liquid Air Energy Storage Integrated with a Wind Turbine for Microgrid Power Applications
Milica Ašćerić, Go2Power Consulting, Serbia | School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Serbia
43 GIW26-139
Investigation of the Mechanical Loading of Wind Turbines with Grid Forming Capabilities Under Disturbances
Rita Kastrati, Deutsches Zentrum für Luft-Raumfahrt, Germany
44 GIW26-141
Assessment of the Effects of Flexibility Enhancement in Conventional Power Plants; A Case Study of Korea
Yong-Sik Kim, Korea Power Exchange, Korea, Republic of (South)
45 GIW26-142
Development of a Methodology for Estimating Offshore Wind Generation Profiles: A Case Study of Korea
HYEONHAK JEONG, Korea Power Exchange, Korea, Republic of (South)
46 GIW26-143
Field Test Results of Frequency Control Mode Compliance: Synchronous Engine Power Plants under High Dynamic Response Requirements
Aleksandre Piranishvili, Piller Germany GmbH & Co. KG, Germany
47 GIW26-146
A Multi-Source Hierarchical Framework for Probabilistic Forecasting of Net Load and Self-Consumption for Distributed Grid Planning
Adrian Carrillo-Galvez, INESC TEC, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
48 GIW26-148
Stability Limits and Interoperability Criteria for Grid-Forming Inverters
Rebekka Denninger, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems, Germany
49 GIW26-158
Low Carbon Buildings: Investigating the Adoption of Building Integrated Photovoltaics in Ghana’s Building Skin
Francis Kyere, Hunan University, China, Fan Zijie, Hunan University, China, Agyemang Kwasi Sampene, Hunan University, China
50 GIW26-160
Hierarchical RMS–EMT Stability Assessment of Inverter-Dominated Power Systems Supplying Hydrogen Electrolysers
Todor Siljegovic, Go2Power Consulting, Serbia
51 GIW26-165
Influence of Grid-Forming Converter Share, Grid Strength, and Topology on Distribution Grid Frequency Stability
Jakob Ungerland, Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE, Germany
52 GIW26-167
Transient Effects of Faults in High-Voltage Grids Considering Operational and Deployment Concepts of Grid-Forming Generation
Sven Ratajczak, FGH e.V., Germany
53 GIW26-170
Performance and Techno-Economic Evaluation of Second-Life Batteries in Photovoltaic-BESS Applications
Fazal Ur Rehman, University of L'Aquila, Italy, Italy | University of Southern Denmark (SDU), Sønderborg, Denmark, Denmark
54 GIW26-182
Economic evaluation of electrolyser participation in ancillary services market
Md Rizwan, Group Research and Development, DNV AS, Veritasveien 1, 1363, Høvik, Norway
55 GIW26-193
Quantifying the Quiet Creep: Degradation of 15,000 Wind Turbines in Germany
Diego Alejandro Prieto Melo, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus–Senftenberg, Germany
56 GIW26-199
Metaheuristic-based Planning of Energy Communities with Flexibility Market Support
José Villar, INESC TEC - Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
57 GIW26-203
Hybrid PSP-PV-BESS participation in day-ahead and intraday markets
David Reis, INESC TEC, Portugal
58 GIW26-204
A Comparative Study of Modeling Approaches for Stability Analysis of Converter-based Technologies
Saman Armand, Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
59 GIW26-207
Metaheuristic Approach for Optimal Sizing of Distributed Energy Resources in Energy Communities
José Villar, INESC TEC – Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
60 GIW26-208
Improving Frequency Support Capability of Hybrid Power Plants in Weak Grids Using Grid-Forming Control
Kaushik Das, Department of Wind and Energy Systems, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
61 GIW26-216
Analysis of the impact of wind power plant active power output ramp limitation controls on WTG blade and pitching system operation
Ignacio León Alonso, Vestas Wind Systems A/S, Denmark
62 GIW26-217
Modelling the influence of building integrated photovoltaics on operations and investments in the electricity system at the national level to assess its environmental impact
Joseph Brisson, CEA, Liten, Campus Ines, France
63 GIW26-219
Impact of Measured vs. Virtual Current Feedback on the Stability and Operation of Grid-Forming Inverters
Daniel Bohnet Millan, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) - IEH, Germany
64 GIW26-220
Dynamic Simulation and Optimal Control of E-Methanol Production: Evaluating Forecast Horizon in Renewable Integration
Carlos Cabrera, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile | HIF Global, Germany
65 GIW26-225
Grid-Aware Sizing of Battery Energy Storage Systems in Seaport Microgrids: A High-Granularity Optimization Framework for the Port of Sines
Adrian Carrillo-Galvez, INESC TEC, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
66 GIW26-227
Forecasting electricity consumption time series at NUTS-3 level in Germany
Ann-Katrin Goldmaier, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology (Fraunhofer IEE), Germany
67 GIW26-233
Practical Experience with Laboratory Determination of Wind Turbine Thevenin Equivalents following IEC 61400‑21‑4 Annex E
Florian Hans, Fraunhofer Institute for Wind Energy Systems IWES, Germany
68 GIW26-241
Real-Time Elliptical Trajectory Approximation: Maintaining Estimation Accuracy in Weak and Distorted Grid Conditions
Heinrich T. Eickhoff, Silicon Austria Labs GmbH, Austria
69 GIW26-242
Economic Impact of Forecast Errors on BESS Participation in Day-Ahead electricity and Reserve Markets
Mahan Ebrahimi, Department of Electric Power Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
70 GIW26-243
Waveform Based Dynamic State Estimation of Power Systems Using Cubature Kalman Filtering
SEYED MASOUD Mohseni-Bonab, Hydro Québec, Canada
71 GIW26-246
Assessment of Energy Complementarity and Techno-Economic Performance of Hybrid Renewable Systems: A Case Study in Uruguay
María Victoria Arduino, Universidad Tecnologíca de Uruguay, Uruguay, Matías Loinaz, Universidad Tecnologíca de Uruguay, Uruguay
72 GIW26-252
Early‑Stage Power System Studies for Virtual Power Plant Integration in a 138 kV Subtransmission Network
Vanessa Guedes, Cepel, Brazil
73 GIW26-253
Coordinated Current Control for Wind Turbine Generators with Multiple Parallel Power Converters
Florian Aust, University of Rostock, Germany
74 GIW26-261
AI for the energy system – Review of a joint workshop by IEA Wind Tasks 51 and 63
Gregor Giebel, DTU Wind, Denmark
75 GIW26-262
An Evaluation of Black-box IBR Modeling Methods
Slobodan Matic, GE Vernova, United States
76 GIW26-264
Adaptive Droop Control for Hotel Load Inverters in Hybrid Ferry Microgrids
Henrique Rocha, Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Portugal | Systec, Portugal
77 GIW26-265
Dynamic-Inversion ADRC with Cascaded Extended State Observer for DC-Voltage Regulation of Point-to-Point MMC-HVDC Systems
Ning Yang, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
78 GIW26-275
Impacts of Hydrogen Blending on Dynamic Frequency Responses of Gas Turbines under Disturbance Events
Saikrishna Vallabhaneni, DLR, Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Oldenburg, Germany, Germany
79 GIW26-283
Grid Compliance Studies Optimisation: Parallel Computing
Nuno Gonçalves, Opoura, Denmark, Pedro Cardoso, Opoura, Denmark, Pedro Zulaica, Opoura, Denmark
80 GIW26-284
Spatial optimization of solar PV–battery hybrid microgrids for railway and mining infrastructure: The Lobito Corridor case
Abreu Liliano, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola, Debs Tavares, Instituto Superior Politécnico de Tecnologias e Ciências - ISPTEC, Angola
81 GIW26-285
Decarbonizing Industrial Processes: A Global Techno-economic Analysis of Off-Grid Solar Energy and Thermal Battery Storage for Manufacturing Facilities
Anna Yuen, University of California, Berkeley. Energy and Resource Group., United States | University of California, Berkeley. India Enery and Climate Center, United States
82 GIW26-287
Time-Dependent Degradation and Risk Evolution in Utility-Scale Photovoltaic Systems: Evidence From Long-Term Operational Data
Kajal Sheth, New York Tech, United States, Dhvanil Patel, Texas A&M University, United States
83 GIW26-288
Extended Genetic Algorithms for AC-Exact Topology Optimization in Transmission Grids
Pawel Lytaev, University of Kassel, Germany
84 GIW26-289
Analyzing industrial flexibility participation in Day-ahead and Intra-day markets of Nordic Countries: Electrified Asphalt Production Process as an example case
Saba Norouzi, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland, Finland
85 GIW26-298
Techno-Economic and Socioeconomic Evaluation of Solar PV Energy Storage Systems in Saudi Arabia
Malakah Alnabhani, Effat University, Saudi Arabia
86 GIW26-303
Impacts of Local Energy Communities on Low Voltage Distribution Networks
venkata suryakiran Bhamidipati, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden
87 GIW26-304
APPLICATION OF SMALL CLOSED-LOOP PUMPED STORAGE HYDROPOWER PLANTS FOR BALANCING AND ENERGY MANAGEMENT OF RENEWABLE-BASED MICROGRIDS IN HILLY REGIONS
Milica Ašćerić, School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Serbia | Go2Power Consulting, Serbia
88 GIW26-306
Cost surfaces for joint export-technology and substation-position decisions in offshore wind
Stephen Hardy, Enersynt BV. Geldenaaksevest 2, 3000 Leuven, Belgium., Belgium
89 GIW26-308
Attention-Based Soft-Weight Combination of Power Forecasts
Alexander Lipskij, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Germany
90 GIW26-309
Safety-Aware Optimal Operation for Hydrogen Integration in the Glass Industry Decarbonisation
Lorenzo Bruno, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), Spain
91 GIW26-316
Optimal Black Start Restoration using Offshore Wind Farm
Denis Kho, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Curtis Fox, Electric Power Research Institute, United States, Mobolaji Bello, Electric Power Research Institute, United States
92 GIW26-322
Flexibility resource, service and product definition
Alex Kanerva, Tampere university, Finland
93 GIW26-339
Negative-Sequence Compensation in DFIG-Based Wind Energy Conversion Systems
Johann Krenn, Silicon Austria Labs GmbH, Austria
94 GIW26-341
Grid Operation considering ensemble forecasts: A case study for the Transmission System of Germany
Yannic Harms, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology, Germany
95 GIW26-349
Characterization of Wind Power Ramps in the Brazilian Interconnected System
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
96 GIW26-350
Hybrid Passive–Active Harmonic Filtering for Power-to-X Plants: Grid-Connected Power-to-Hydrogen Systems
Arman Arman Fathollahi, Aarhus University, Denmark
97 GIW26-351
Evaluation of Peak Power-Based Grid Tariffs for Solar Prosumers with Battery Storage in Sweden
Reza Fachrizal, Mälardalen University, Sweden
98 GIW26-354
Economic impact of transmission failures on wind and solar curtailment in the Brazilian Interconnected System: a maintenance-strategy framework based on public data
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
99 GIW26-355
Distributed green hydrogen from renewable curtailment: a techno-economic study for decarbonizing heavy-duty road freight in Southeast Brazil
Giovani Giulio Tristão Thibes Vieira, Escola Politécnica (EP-USP), Power Systems Innovation Hub (RCGI-InnovaPower), University of São Paulo, Brazil
100 GIW26-359
Secure Smart Meter Infrastructure as Grid Intelligence Layer: NILM-Based Disaggregation and Modular HEMS Integration in a Live German Grid State Monitoring Deployment
Andre Hoffmann, Arvato Systems, Germany
101 GIW26-369
Automatic Voltage Regulator (AVR)-Integrated Integral Sliding Mode Control for Intelligent Vehicle-to-Grid Support via Coordinated Active and Reactive Power Loops
Hemant Kumar, Punjab Engineering College Chandigarh, India
102 GIW26-371
From GFL to GFM: Technical Behaviors, Operator Concerns and Evolving Compliance Frameworks
Óscar Alonso Sádaba, SiG coop, Spain
103 GIW26-372
Sensitivity Analysis for Frequency Stability Studies in High-Penetration Renewable Grids under Low-Inertia and Low-Damping Paradigms
Susana Martín-Arroyo, University of Zaragoza, Spain
104 GIW26-379
Carbon Emission Intensity of Electricity Demand in GB: A Comparison of Zonal and Nodal Estimates
Elina Spyrou, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
105 GIW26-382
Offshore Wind Development Over Time: Stylised Facts and Structural Trends
Abubakar Bagudo Muhammad, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
Fri, 2 Oct
08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 15
SESSION 11A - POWER SYSTEM OPERATIONAL ASPECTS
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro II
08:45
01 GIW26-150
Impact of heterogenous inertia distribution on the dynamics of the Continental Europe power system
Rossano Musca, University of Palermo, Italy
09:03
02 GIW26-152
Spatial Variability and Parameter Sensitivity of RoCoF Following System Splits in Low-Inertia Power Systems
Simon Eberlein, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
09:21
03 GIW26-174
Generator Control Settings and Their Impact on Voltage Stability Operational Case Studies and Contributions to Modern Power Systems
Etienne MONNOT, EDF, France, Laurent CHATONNET, EDF, France
09:39
04 GIW26-12
Security-Constrained Unit Commitment considering reactive constraints
Marco Giuntoli, Hitachi Energy Research, Germany
09:57
Advanced Production Simulation and Unit Commitment in PyPSA
R. Alsayyed, Energynautics, Germany
10:15
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 15
SESSION 11C – TITLE TBA
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro III
08:45
01 GIW26-7
Early‑Warning Signals of Cascading Failures in System‑of‑Systems Power Grids: A Multi‑Layer Entropy–Centrality Framework
Nickie Menemenlis, Hydro-Quebec, Research Institute, Canada
09:03
02 GIW26-197
Neural-Network-Based Short-Term Congestion Forecasting with Uncertainty Quantification for Enhanced Redispatch Management in Medium-Voltage Grids
Henning Schlachter, German Aerospace Center, Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Germany
09:21
03 GIW26-239
Co-Optimising Stability and AI Data Centre Demand in IBR-Dominated Power Systems
Ying Yu, Imperial College London, United Kingdom, Wangkun Xu, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
09:39
04 GIW26-154
Investigation of the equivalence of instantaneous reserve provision from the low-voltage and transmission grid within a simulation-based grid study
Marlene Pape, TU Braunschweig, Germany
09:57
05 GIW26-21
Reactive Power Provision from Utility-Scale PV Plants: Field Measurements and Loss Modeling
Robin Grab, Fraunhofer ISE, Germany
10:15
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

08:45 - 10:40
Parallel sessions 15
SESSION 11D – POWER SYSTEM FORECASTING
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro V
08:45
01 GIW26-65
Tokenized Time Series Representations for Variable Renewable Energy Forecasting with Exogenous Predictors
Milan Wanek, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
09:03
02 GIW26-69
Integrating drift detection and continual learning into wind and photovoltaic power forecasting
Tobias Westmeier, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
09:21
03 GIW26-177
Weather-driven large-scale AI forecast time series simulation for long-term planning
Alexandre MATHIEU, Denmark Technical University, Denmark
09:39
04 GIW26-229
Weather-based alert tool for balancing reserves activation in near 100% renewable power systems
Ana Estanqueiro, LNEG – Laboratório Nacional de Energia e Geologia, I.P., Portugal
09:57
05 GIW26-296
Quantize forecasting uncertainty & deviation in current power systems due to perfect forecast models
Natnael Kidane, TransnetBW GmbH, Germany
10:15
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

09:00 - 10:40
SESSION 11B – STATCOM ASPECTS
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro I
09:00
01 GIW26-161
Technical assessment of GFM E-STATCOM and GFL Offshore Windfarm as combined solution for weak grid connections
Venkata Satya Gowtham Tammana, The National HVDC Centre, United Kingdom
09:20
02 GIW26-357
E STATCOM as a Stability Anchor for Multi-IBR Renewable Networks
Sonam Gupta, GE Vernova, India
09:40
03 GIW26-98
High-Frequency Characterization of Supercapacitors for E-STATCOM Integration Studies
Richard Rivas, Hitachi Energy, Sweden
10:00
04 GIW26-84
Feasibility of an energy storage STATCOM from the Finnish transmission system operator’s perspective
Sampo Stranden, Fingrid Oyj, Finland
10:20
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

10:40 - 11:00
COFFEE BREAK
Fri, 2 Oct | Foyer

11:10 - 12:40
Parallel sessions 16
SESSION 12A – EMT MODELLING
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro II
11:10
01 GIW26-327
Systematic EMT Modelling of Large Power Networks for High Solar/Wind Integration Studies - Network Reduction Based Approach
Phurailatpam Chitaranjan Sharma, University College Dublin, Ireland
11:28
02 GIW26-352
Hybrid RMS-EMT models for Small Signal Stability Studies
Claudia Zanabria, Réseau de Transport d'Electricité (RTE), France
11:46
03 GIW26-370
Lessons Learned from Reproducing a Voltage Oscillation Event in High-IBR Area using Electromagnetic Transients Models
Aung Thant, North American Electric Reliability Corporation, United States
12:04
04 GIW26-33
Performance Evaluation of a Phasor-Domain Series Capacitor–MOV Model Through EMT Benchmarking
José Gómez, DIgSILENT GmbH, Germany
12:22
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 12:40
Parallel sessions 16
SESSION 12B – TITLE TBA
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro I
11:10
01 GIW26-343
Innovative Grid Operation Methods Across Voltage Levels: Accelerating the Integration of Wind and Solar
Andrea Schoen, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology IEE, Germany | University of Kassel, Germany
11:28
02 GIW26-240
Heterogeneous System Services for IBR-Dominated Power Systems
Agnes Nakiganda, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
11:46
03 GIW26-255
An Interoperability Gateway for Integrating DER Assets
Vasco Melo, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal, Gil Sampaio, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal, Pedro Pascoal, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
12:04
Market Assessment on Integration of Offshore Bidding Zones under Advanced Hybrid Coupling
A. Hösl, Energynautics, Germany; P. Schierhorn, Energynautics, Germany
Market Assessment on Integration of Offshore Bidding Zones under Advanced Hybrid Coupling
12:22
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 12:40
Parallel sessions 16
SESSION 12C – TITLE TBA
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro III
11:10
01 GIW26-388
Supporting Caribbean Utilities: A Technical Assessment of PV Integration in Island Grids
Hannah Rühle, Energynautics, Germany
11:28
02 GIW26-234
Methodology on integration and operation of renewable hybrid systems on port areas
Elizabeth Giraut, ITG | National Technology Centre, Spain
11:46
03 GIW26-258
A Distributed Edge-Computing Platform for ADMM-Based Voltage Control in Smart Grids
Gil Samplaio, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal, Vasco Melo, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal, Pedro Pascoal, INESCTEC- Instituto de Engenharia de Sistemas e Computadores, Tecnologia e Ciência, Portugal
12:04
04 GIW26-149
Renewable-Integrated Port Microgrid Energy Management with Modular Asset Modeling and Storage Dispatch
Adrian Carrillo Galvez, INESC TEC, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Portugal
12:22
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

11:10 - 12:40
Parallel sessions 16
SESSION 12D – PV FORECASTING
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro V
11:10
01 GIW26-134
Seasonal Forecasting of Photovoltaic Energy Generation in Germany Using Ensemble Climate Predictions
Alina Happ, Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology, Germany
11:28
02 GIW26-302
A Sugeno Integral‑Based Machine Learning Framework for Accurate Hourly Solar PV Forecasting
ABDERRAHMANE MENDYL, Independent Researcher, Netherlands
11:46
03 GIW26-356
Hybrid Quantum-Classical Neural Networks for Solar Power Forecasting Using Variational Quantum Circuits
Arif Sarwat, Florida International University, United States
12:04
04 GIW26-281
Improving Aggregated PV Power Forecasting via Zero-Shot Learning: Handling Unmeasured and Poor-Quality Parks
Silvia Beddar-Wiesing, Fraunhofer IEE, Germany
12:22
OPEN   FLOOR / DISCUSSION

12:40 - 12:50
SHORT BREAK
Fri, 2 Oct | Foyer

12:50 - 13:50
SESSION 13 – CLOSING SESSION / PANEL DISCUSSION
Fri, 2 Oct | Douro II

13:50 - 14:50
LUNCH
Fri, 2 Oct | Foyer