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John G. DeSteese

Researcher at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Publications -  16
Citations -  906

John G. DeSteese is an academic researcher from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electric power & Distributed generation. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 16 publications receiving 872 citations.

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Pacific Northwest GridWise™ Testbed Demonstration Projects; Part I. Olympic Peninsula Project

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the implementation and results of a field demonstration wherein residential electric water heaters and thermostats, commercial building space conditioning, municipal water pump loads, and several distributed generators were coordinated to manage constrained feeder electrical distribution through the two-way communication of load status and electric price signals.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the use of energy storage technologies for regulation services in electric power systems with significant penetration of wind energy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate several utility-scale energy storage technology options for their usage as regulation resources and select flywheels, pumped hydro electric power (or conventional hydroelectric power) plant and sodium sulfur or nickel cadmium batteries as candidate technologies for the Wide Area Energy Management System (WAEMS) project.
ReportDOI

Electric Power Interruption Cost Estimates for Individual Industries, Sectors, and the U.S. Economy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address two key factors relating to this question: 1) characteristics of existing power supply reliability, and 2) costs resulting from supply interruptions characteristic of the existing power grid.
ReportDOI

Wide-Area Energy Storage and Management System to Balance Intermittent Resources in the Bonneville Power Administration and California ISO Control Areas

TL;DR: In this article, a wide area energy storage and management system (WAEMS) is proposed to mitigate additional intermittency and fast ramps that occur at higher penetration of intermittent resources, including wind genera-tion, in the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) and the California Independent Sys-tem Operator (California ISO) control areas.
ReportDOI

GridWiseTM: The Benefits of a Transformed Energy System

TL;DR: This report presents a preliminary scoping assessment conducted to envision the general magnitude of several selected benefits the GridWise™ concept could offer when applied nationally.