Or. Admin. Code § 860-082-0030 - Construction, Operation, Maintenance, and Testing of Small Generator Facilities
(1) IEEE
1547. An interconnection customer or applicant must construct, operate, and
maintain a small generator facility and its associated interconnection
equipment in compliance with IEEE 1547 and 1547.1. New interconnection
applicants will be required to use IEEE 1547-2018 compliant equipment by no
earlier than June 1, 2024. For purposes of OAR
860-082-0030, capitalized terms
not otherwise defined in Division 082 have the meaning set forth in IEEE 1547.
(a) Small generator facilities compliant with
IEEE 1547 must conform with the following minimum requirements:
(A) Abnormal performance requirements:
Category III Ride-Through capabilities must be supported for inverter-based
small generator facilities. Rotating small generator facilities must meet
Category I Ride-Through capabilities, at minimum.
(B) Normal performance requirements:
Inverter-based small generator facilities must meet reactive power requirements
of IEEE 1547 Category B. Rotating small generator facilities must meet Category
A, and may meet Category B.
(C)
Inverter-based interconnection equipment will be tested to and certified as
being compliant with UL 1741 Third Edition, Supplement SB, by a NRTL. Equipment
that is not certified by a NRTL may require additional evaluation and
commissioning testing to confirm compliance with IEEE 1547.
(b) Interconnection requirements
handbook. Each public utility must post an interconnection requirements
handbook on its public website. Prior to revising its handbook, a utility must
provide public notice on its website and use best efforts to notify
organizations representing interconnection customers as specified and
periodically updated in the handbook. The utility must provide a minimum of 30
days for interested persons to comment, and the utility must respond within 30
days to any comments received and make its responses public.
(c) Preferred default settings. A public
utility must allow small generator facilities to interconnect using the public
utility's preferred default settings, except when the application reviewed
under Tier 4, OAR 860-082-0060, or the application
fails the Tier 1, Tier 2, or Tier 3 approval criteria in OAR
860-082-0045(2),
OAR 860-082-0050(2),
or OAR 860-082-0055(2).
Interconnection requirements handbooks must include preferred default settings.
As applicable, the following must be identified in the interconnection
requirements handbook:
(A) Voltage and
frequency trip settings;
(B)
Frequency droop settings;
(C)
Activated reactive power control function and default settings;
(D) Voltage active power (volt-watt) mode
activation and default setting; and
(E) Communication protocols and ports
requirements.
(2) The applicant must provide written notice
to the interconnecting public utility 10 business days before beginning
operation of an approved small generator facility.
(3) Before beginning operation of a small
generator facility, an interconnection customer or applicant must receive
approval of the facility under the small generator interconnection rules and
must execute an interconnection agreement with the interconnecting public
utility. Applicants or interconnection customers are entitled to a 20-year term
for an interconnection agreement, or if the interconnection customer and the
public utility have entered a separate Power Purchase Agreement for a specified
period of time, to a term that coincides with the length of such Power Purchase
Agreement.
(4) A small generator
facility must be capable of being isolated from the interconnecting public
utility's transmission or distribution system. An interconnection customer may
not disable an isolation device without the prior written consent of the
interconnected public utility.
(a) For a small
generator facility interconnecting to a primary line, the interconnection
customer or applicant must use a lockable, visible-break isolation device
readily accessible to the public utility.
(b) For a small generator facility
interconnecting to a secondary line, the interconnection customer or applicant
must use a lockable isolation device that is readily accessible by the public
utility. The status of the isolation device must be clearly indicated. An
exception from the requirement to use a lockable isolation device is allowed
for a small generator facility that has a maximum total output of 30 amperes or
less; is connected to a secondary line; uses lab-tested, inverter-based
interconnection equipment; and is interconnected to the distribution system
through a metered service owned by the interconnected public utility. In this
limited case, the meter base may serve as the required isolation device if it
is readily accessible to the public utility.
(A) A draw-out type circuit breaker with the
provision for padlocking at the draw-out position can be considered an
isolation device.
(B) The
interconnection customer or applicant may elect to provide the public utility
access to an isolation device that is contained in a building or area that may
be unoccupied and locked or not otherwise readily accessible to the public
utility. The interconnection customer or applicant must provide a lockbox
capable of accepting a lock provided by the public utility that provides ready
access to the isolation device. The interconnection customer or applicant must
install the lockbox in a location that is readily accessible by the public
utility and must affix a placard in a location acceptable to the public utility
that provides clear instructions to utility personnel on how to access the
isolation device.
(c)
Other than the exception in (4)(b), all isolation devices must be installed,
owned, and maintained by the interconnection customer or applicant; must be
capable of interrupting the full load of the small generator facility; and must
be located between the small generator facility and the point of
interconnection.
(5) An
interconnecting public utility must have access to an interconnection
customer's or an applicant's premises for any reasonable purpose related to an
interconnection application or an interconnected small generator facility. The
public utility must request access at reasonable hours and upon reasonable
notice. In the event of an emergency or hazardous condition, the public utility
may access the interconnection customer's or applicant's premises at any time
without prior notice, but the public utility must provide written notice within
five business days after entering the interconnection customer's or applicant's
premises that describes the date of entry, the purpose of entry, and any
actions performed on the premises.
(6) When a small generator facility undergoes
maintenance or testing in compliance with the small generator interconnection
rules, IEEE 1547, or IEEE 1547.1, the interconnection customer must retain
written records for at least seven years documenting the maintenance and the
results of testing. The interconnection customer must provide copies of these
records to the interconnected public utility upon request.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 183, ORS 756 & ORS 757
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 756.040 & ORS 756.060
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.