1 Scope
This part of IEC 61970 forms part of the IEC 61907‑450 to 499 series that, taken as a whole, defines at an abstract level the content and
exchange mechanisms used for data transmitted between control centers and/or control
center components.
The purpose of this document is to rigorously define the subset of classes, class
attributes, and roles from the CIM necessary to execute state estimation and power
flow applications. The North American Electric Reliability Council (NERC) Data Exchange
Working Group (DEWG) Common Power System Modeling group (CPSM) produced the original
data requirements, which are shown in Annex C. These requirements are based on prior industry practices for exchanging power system
model data for use primarily in planning studies. However, the list of required data
has been extended to facilitate a model exchange that includes parameters common to
breaker-oriented applications. Where necessary this document establishes conventions,
shown in Clause 5, with which an XML data file must comply in order to be considered valid for exchange
of models.
This document is intended for two distinct audiences, data producers and data recipients,
and may be read from two perspectives.
From the standpoint of model export software used by a data producer, the document
describes a minimum subset of CIM classes, attributes, and associations which must
be present in an XML formatted data file for model exchange. This standard does not
dictate how the network is modelled, however. It only dictates what classes, attributes,
and associations are to be used to describe the source model as it exists. All classes,
attributes, and associations not explicitly labeled as recommended or conditionally
required should be considered required with the following caveat. Consider, as an
example, the situation in which an exporter produces an XML data file describing a
small section of the exporter’s network that happens to contain no breakers. The resulting
XML data file should, therefore, not contain an instance of the Breaker class. On
the other hand, if the section of the exporter’s network does contain breakers, the
resulting data file should contain instances of the Breaker class that include, at
a minimum, the attributes and roles described herein for Breakers. Furthermore, it
should be noted that an exporter may, at his or her discretion, produce an XML data
file containing additional class data described by the CIM RDF Schema but not required
by this document provided these data adhere to the conventions established in Clause 5.
From the standpoint of the model import used by a data recipient, the document describes
a subset of the CIM that importing software must be able to interpret in order to
import exported models. As mentioned above, data providers are free to exceed the
minimum requirements described herein as long as their resulting data files are compliant
with the CIM RDF Schema and the conventions established in Clause 5. The document, therefore, describes additional classes and class data that, although
not required, exporters will, in all likelihood, choose to include in their data files.
The additional classes and data are labeled as recommended or as not required to distinguish
them from their required counterparts. Please note, however, that data importers could
potentially receive data containing instances of any and all classes described by
the CIM RDF Schema.