UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A Penn State researcher is a part of a multi-university team that received a $513,000 grant to study the decision-making process that governs how people in the U.S. receive electricity. Seth Blumsack, professor in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences and director of the Center for Energy Law and Policy, is co-leading an interdisciplinary team investigating how the rules for the power grid are made and how they affect the real world.
“Electricity is the platform for our economy and is tightly connected to people’s well-being,” said Blumsack, a cofunded faculty member in the Institutes of Energy and the Environment, who has been studying the electric power industry for more than 20 years. “These rules that govern the grid are critical elements for changing the way we produce electricity.”
According to Blumsack, the rules have important implications for the grid and society, such as grid reliability, cost to customers, environmental impact and technology.
“The rules are not always very kind to new technology,” he said. “This is one of the reasons that adoption of new technology has not been as rapid as it could be.”
A prime area of interest for Blumsack is investigating who creates the rules.
“Many of these rules are not made by government officials,” said Blumsack. “Instead, they are made by organizations that are connected to running the grid, including utilities, energy generation companies, wind and solar developers and banks. So, you have solar developers voting on rules that will affect coal plants and vice versa.”
These rules are created under the umbrella of Regional Transmission Organizations (RTO), which Blumsack calls “the most important organizations that nobody understands.” He considers the whole system to be an ambiguous quasi-democratic process.