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SAIFI
Measure of frequency of electric power interruptions
Measure of frequency of electric power interruptions
The System Average Interruption Frequency Index (SAIFI) is commonly used as a reliability index by electric power utilities. This index measures the average number of times that a system customer experiences an outage during the year or during a given time period.
SAIFI is normally calculated on either yearly or monthly basis. SAIFI is calculated as:
\mbox{SAIFI} = \frac{\sum{\lambda_i N_i}}{\sum{N_i}}
where \lambda_i is the failure rate and N_i is the number of customers for location i. In other words,
\mbox{SAIFI} = \frac{\mbox{total number of customer interruptions}}{\mbox{total number of customers served}}
Many factors cause power interruptions, including weather, vegetation patterns, and utility practices. Utilities can report interruption duration values with major events (such as snowstorms or hurricanes), without major events, or both.
SAIFI is measured in units of interruptions per customer.
According to IEEE Standard 1366-1998 the median value for North American utilities is approximately 1.10 interruptions per customer.
References
Sources
References
- (2004). "Electric System Reliability Indices".
- (2020-11-06). "U.S. Power Customers Experienced an Average of Nearly Five Hours of Interruptions in 2019".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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