IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

Electric Power Grids Under High-Absenteeism Pandemics: History, Context, Response, and Opportunities

  • Benjamin Wormuth,
  • Shiyuan Wang,
  • Payman Dehghanian,
  • Masoud Barati,
  • Abouzar Estebsari,
  • Tiago Pascoal Filomena,
  • Mohammad Heidari Kapourchali,
  • Miguel A. Lejeune

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3041247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 215727 – 215747

Abstract

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Widespread outbreaks of infectious disease, i.e., the so-called pandemics that may travel quickly and silently beyond boundaries, can significantly upsurge the morbidity and mortality over large-scale geographical areas. They commonly result in enormous economic losses, political disruptions, social unrest, and quickly evolve to a national security concern. Societies have been shaped by pandemics and outbreaks for as long as we have had societies. While differing in nature and in realizations, they all place the normal life of modern societies on hold. Common interruptions include job loss, infrastructure failure, and political ramifications. The electric power systems, upon which our modern society relies, is driving a myriad of interdependent services, such as water systems, communication networks, transportation systems, health services, etc. With the sudden shifts in electric power generation and demand portfolios and the need to sustain quality electricity supply to end customers (particularly mission-critical services) during pandemics, safeguarding the nation's electric power grid in the face of such rapidly evolving outbreaks is among the top priorities. This paper explores the various mechanisms through which the electric power grids around the globe are influenced by pandemics in general and COVID-19 in particular, shares the lessons learned and best practices taken in different sectors of the electric industry in responding to the dramatic shifts enforced by such threats, and provides visions for a pandemic-resilient electric grid of the future.

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