Abstract

The viability of Variable Renewable Energy (VRE)-investment strategies depends on the response of dispatchable producers to satisfy the net load. We lack a simple research tool with sufficient complexity to represent major phenomena associated with the response of dispatchable producers to the integration of high shares of VRE and their impact on system costs. We develop a minimization of the system cost allowing one to quantify and decompose the system value of VRE depending on an aggregate dispatchable production. Defining the variable cost of the dispatchable generation as quadratic with a coefficient depending on macroeconomic factors such as the cost of greenhouse gas emissions leads to the simplest version of the model. In the absence of curtailment, and for particular parameter values, this version is equivalent to a mean-variance problem. We apply this model to France with solar and wind capacities distributed over the administrative regions of metropolitan France. In this case, ignoring the wholesale price effect and variability has a relatively small impact on optimal investments, but leads to largely underestimating the system total cost and overestimating the system marginal cost.

Highlights

  • Because we focus on the role of the variability of the renewable energy resource in the Variable Renewable Energy (VRE) value and adequacy costs, we only deal with the central-planning problem and leave the distributed market problem for future works

  • After a description of the behavior of the model, we focus on the wholesale price effect and the role of variability as well as on the system value of VRE and adequacy costs

  • To ease the interpretation of the figure, α in abscissa is replaced by the STC without VRE, i.e., the expected dispatch variable cost E(STC(0)) = T0 hαL2 i for the French national load

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Increasing the penetration of VREs in electricity systems poses major challenges [1] and calls for the development of modeling tools to evaluate the technical feasibility and the economic viability of these objectives, as reviewed by Ringkjob et al [2]

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call