Understanding the Role of Fast Frequency Response (FFR) in Modern Power Grids
Blog Post | 17.04.2026 | 9 min read
Blog Post | 17.04.2026 | 9 min read
Frequency in a power grid is determined by the balance between active power generation and demand. This relationship is governed by the swing equation, which describes the dynamics of a synchronous machine's rotor.
When the mechanical power input to a single generator equals the electrical power being drawn from it, the rotor spins at a constant speed, and because grid frequency is directly proportional to rotor speed, the frequency remains stable at its nominal value (50 or 60 Hz). In a power system with many synchronous machines, this principle applies collectively. System frequency reflects the aggregate balance between total mechanical input and total electrical demand.
When the grid’s power supply and demand are in balance, all rotors remain locked at a common speed and the system frequency stays constant. However, if the balance is disturbed (i.e., due to a sudden load increase or decrease, variable renewable fluctuation or generator trip), a power deficit or oversupply occurs, which causes a change in system frequency.
To ensure that frequency remains within acceptable levels, power grids rely on three primary layers of stability mechanisms, each acting at different timescales and through different physics or controls:
This article focuses primarily on FFR and its role in maintaining stability in modern power networks.
Understanding the growing importance of FFR requires first examining the role inertia plays in power systems.
Conventional synchronous generators, including coal, gas, nuclear, and large hydro plants, contain large rotating masses that are physically coupled to the grid. When frequency begins to fall, these machines naturally release kinetic energy stored in their spinning rotors. This inertial response is instantaneous and limits the rate of change of frequency (RoCoF), providing valuable time for governor action and automatic generation control (AGC) to stabilize the system.
In grids where inverter-based resources (e.g., wind, solar PV) are increasingly replacing synchronous generation, inertia is declining, impacting the grid’s natural ability to resist rapid frequency changes. During a disturbance, a lack of inertia can result in an excessively high RoCoF, causing protection systems on generators to trip. If frequency drops far enough, under-frequency load shedding schemes may activate, disconnecting customers to prevent system collapse. In extreme cases, disturbances can cascade and lead to widespread disruptions.
Importantly, modern converters coupled with an active power source, such as battery energy storage systems (BESS), supercapacitors, or an HVDC link, can be designed to provide “synthetic” or “virtual” inertia. Synthetic inertia emulates the inertial response of synchronous machines by detecting rapid changes in frequency (df/dt) and injecting or absorbing power accordingly, with near instantaneous reaction times. It mimics the physical effect of a rotating mass and is a control‑based function, governed by converter capabilities and energy availability.
FFR takes place following the inertial response and refers to the rapid injection or absorption of active power into the grid within a very short timeframe. The primary objective is to arrest the frequency decline before load shedding is triggered and limit the depth of the frequency nadir, which is a key reliability metric.
Unlike inertia, which is a RoCoF-driven response, FFR initiates and delivers a defined active power response after frequency crosses a preset trigger (i.e., level). It behaves as a system‑level function, implemented in overarching plant automation and typically activates in under 100 milliseconds (see Figure 1 below).
Figure 1. FFR initiates to arrest RoCoF after frequency crosses a preset level
Even after the initial arrest of a disturbance, the system must still restore and maintain frequency at its nominal value. This is done through frequency regulation, which operates across several coordinated control layers.
Primary control – often called frequency containment reserve (FCR) – acts within seconds to stabilize frequency deviations. Secondary control, usually implemented through AGC or Frequency Restoration Reserve (FRR), follows over tens of seconds to minutes to bring frequency back toward nominal and rebalance scheduled power flows. Finally, tertiary control involves dispatch adjustments and reserve activation over minutes to hours to restore operating margins and prepare the system for future disturbances.
Together, these layers restore the supply–demand balance after the rapid stabilizing actions of inertia and FFR. They prevent long-term frequency drift and ensure that grid resources are coordinated efficiently as system conditions evolve. While inertia and FFR address the first critical seconds after a disturbance, sustained frequency regulation is essential to fully stabilize the system. Without primary, secondary, and tertiary controls, frequency could oscillate, operating reserves could become depleted, and the grid would remain vulnerable to subsequent events.
FFR is a relatively recent addition to the “family” of grid stability services. It does not appear in traditional power system theory, textbooks or legacy grid operation practices. For most of history, high synchronous inertia naturally limited RoCoF, making sub-second active power response unnecessary.
One of the first formal and clearly documented introductions of FFR as an ancillary service category appears in ERCOT’s FAST Workshop, dated March 28, 20141.
In this document, ERCOT:
This represented the first explicit recognition by a transmission system operator (TSO) that traditional primary frequency response was no longer sufficient under low-inertia conditions. Following ERCOT’s work, other system operators progressively introduced FFR-like services as their grids began experiencing higher RoCoF and deeper frequency nadirs.
NERC later incorporated FFR concepts into broader North American reliability guidance, and the Global Power System Transformation (G-PST) Consortium formalized its relevance within modern frequency stability frameworks2. By the early to mid-2020s, TSOs in regions with high renewable penetration, such as the Nordics, Ireland, and Australia, integrated FFR into their stability toolkits, marking global normalization of the service.
Converters based on modern semiconductors are currently the only devices that can provide the sub-second, shaped power injection needed to arrest frequency before primary reserves are initiated. Within Hitachi Energy’s Grid-enSure® portfolio—which comprises existing and next-generation power electronics technologies and advanced control systems— FFR can be provided by:
As power systems continue to transition toward renewable and inverter-based generation, maintaining frequency stability is becoming increasingly complex. The natural inertia that slows frequency deviations is steadily declining, placing a greater importance on power electronics technologies capable of responding rapidly to disturbances. Amidst the shift, FFR has emerged as a critical complement to traditional stability mechanisms, helping to limit the rate and depth of frequency excursions during the initial moments following a contingency.
To be effective at a system level, FFR must respond deterministically, repeatedly, and in full compliance with grid code requirements across a wide range of operating conditions. Achieving predictable converter behavior under all possible scenarios requires rigorous engineering, where control strategies are systematically qualified before deployment.
As a global leader in grid technologies, Hitachi Energy applies this disciplined design approach across its entire Grid‑enSure® portfolio, validating FFR applications under realistic grid conditions to ensure predictable and robust performance. Doing so enables customers to deploy frequency support solutions with confidence, knowing that the service will perform as intended when the system needs it most.
For more information on advanced power electronic solutions for FFR, visit the Grid-enSure webpage.