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Assessing the resilience of Malawi’s power grid to the 2022 tropical cyclone Ana using a combination of the AFLEPT metric framework and resilience capacities

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posted on 2025-06-30, 14:14 authored by Joyce Chivunga, Zhengyu LinZhengyu Lin, Francisco Gonzalez-LongattFrancisco Gonzalez-Longatt, Richard BlanchardRichard Blanchard

While power system resilience studies continue to grow due to the criticality of electrical infrastructures, the challenge of inconsistencies in evaluation frameworks remains. Furthermore, the desire for researchers to contribute towards the development of practical assessment frameworks continues to grow. In addition, the locality of resilience issues has challenged researchers to find context-based resilience solutions. This paper addresses these by proposing an assessment framework, which evaluates the five phases of the resilience trapezoid: preventive, absorptive, adaptive, restorative, and transformative. This framework presents metrics for measuring preventive indicators for the anticipating system status, frequency of functionality degradation, how low functionality drops, extension in a degraded state, the promptness of recovery, and system transformation—the AFLEPT model. The AFLEPT framework is applied, with its resilience indicators and capacities, to evaluate the resilience of Malawi’s transmission network to the 2022 Tropical Cyclone Ana (TCA). DigSILENT PowerFactory 2023 SP5 was utilised to support this research. The results indicate significant resilience challenges, manifested by an inadequate generation reserve, significant decline in grid functionality, extended total grid outage hours, longer restoration times, and a lack of transformation. Eight percent of key transmission lines and eighteen percent of power generation infrastructure were completely damaged by the TCA, which lasted up to 25 days and 16 months to, respectively, before restoration. Thus, the analysis reveals gaps in preventive, absorptive, adaptive, restorative, and transformative resilience capacities. The results underscore the need for context-based infrastructural and operational resilience enhancement measures, which have been discussed in this paper. Directions for further research have been proposed, which include exploring multiple grid improvement measures and an economic modelling of these measures.

Funding

Commonwealth Scholarship Commission

The Future Fellowship

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Published in

Energies

Volume

18

Issue

12

Publisher

MDPI AG

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Author(s)

Publisher statement

This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Acceptance date

2025-06-05

Publication date

2025-06-16

Copyright date

2025

ISSN

1996-1073

eISSN

1996-1073

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Richard Blanchard. Deposit date: 16 June 2025

Article number

3165

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