Relay Coordination & Protection Study for Water Facilities Upgrade Project
Validating protection performance prior to commissioning, ensuring correct fault isolation, and confirming compliance with applicable international standards for critical water infrastructure.
Project Overview
Power Projects was engaged to perform a Relay Coordination and Protection Study as part of a water facilities infrastructure upgrade project. The assignment formed part of a broader electrical system validation scope aimed at ensuring safe and reliable operation of the upgraded substation and distribution network.
The primary objective was to validate protection performance prior to commissioning, ensure correct fault isolation without impacting the wider system, and confirm compliance with applicable international standards. The scope of work was defined in the service order as a relay coordination study for water facilities upgrade, including detailed system studies using ETAP.
System Overview
The electrical network included a substation and downstream distribution system supplying critical water infrastructure. As defined in the service order, the study covered full protection verification across all major system components.
The study was carried out using ETAP software to ensure detailed modelling of protection coordination and system behaviour under fault conditions.
Study Scope
The study extended beyond a basic relay setting exercise and included complete electrical system analysis and protection coordination.
Electrical System Studies
- Load Flow Study (used as validated base case)
- Short Circuit Study for fault level verification
Protection Coordination Studies
- Time Current Coordination (TCC) analysis
- Relay grading between upstream and downstream protection devices
- Coordination between utility and plant protection systems
Relay Setting Calculations
Relay settings were developed and validated for:
Key Engineering Challenges
System Reliability in Water Infrastructure
In water facilities, uninterrupted operation is critical. Incorrect protection coordination can result in upstream tripping, complete shutdown of pumping systems, and service disruption to end users. The study therefore required precise selectivity across all protection levels.
Multi-Level Protection Coordination
The system included utility, substation, and feeder-level protection. Ensuring correct grading and coordination between these layers without overlap was a key requirement.
Diverse Equipment Protection Requirements
The network included motors, transformers, and capacitor banks, each requiring distinct protection characteristics. Incorrect coordination could result in equipment damage, unnecessary tripping, or loss of critical plant assets.
Scope Expansion During Execution
During the project execution phase, study revisions exceeded the initial limits and additional support was required for Unit Protection Study. This extended beyond the original scope and required additional engineering effort.
Engineering Approach
Key Outcomes
Technical Outcomes
Fully coordinated protection system across all voltage levels
Verified fault isolation strategy
Established relay grading hierarchy
Complete protection coverage for all critical equipment
Engineering Improvements
Improved selectivity between feeders and incomers
Reduced risk of nuisance tripping
Enhanced protection for motors and transformers
Operational Benefits
Reduced risk of plant-wide shutdown
Improved reliability of water infrastructure
Avoided commissioning rework
Supported smoother project execution despite scope variations
Project Delivery
The project followed a structured execution process including initial study submission, multiple revision cycles up to R3, and additional engineering support due to scope expansion.
Conclusion
Relay coordination plays a critical role in ensuring reliability and safety in utility-connected infrastructure systems.
This study demonstrated the importance of validating protection schemes across all operating scenarios and ensuring proper coordination across multiple voltage levels.
The outcome confirms that effective protection design must be based on verified system behaviour rather than assumptions.
Protect Your Critical Infrastructure
Power Projects delivers relay coordination studies, protection audits, and ETAP-based system validation for water, industrial, and utility-scale electrical networks worldwide.
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