Abstract
In this paper, the potential benefits of a Wide Area Control System for coordinated power oscillation damping control is investigated for the Nordic power system, with an overall motivation to facilitate increased power transfer limits. Several approaches to the design of power system stabilizers making use of phasor measurements from a wide area monitoring system are presented and compared with conventional stabilizers using locally measured control feedback signals. Linear analysis and time domain simulations illustrate the performance of these PSS designs when applied to selected SVCs in the Norwegian power transmission grid. Utilizing remote signals available recently through wide area monitoring systems enables selection of the best feedback control signal with highest modal observability of the modes of interest. Preliminary conclusions indicate that this leads to a higher performance and robustness of the power system stabilizer control. Copyright IEEE