Abstract

Isolated power systems present high levels of Renewable Energy Sources (RES) curtailment as intermittency and isolation impose challenging difficulties regarding the integration of this energy into the electrical grid. The recent developments in electrical vehicles have decreased the kWh cost of lithium-ion batteries below a threshold value that was previously prohibitive for grid-scale applications. Therefore, the integration of RES considering the installation of a Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) into an isolated power grid is an up-to-date research topic and is assessed in this paper. The BESS is inserted into the Unit Commitment and Economic Dispatch (UC + ED) platform and regarded as another dispatchable generator. To keeps the costs down, the BESS is mainly used to provide a portion of the spinning reserve needs and secondly to alleviate the load of the thermal generators, using the free modules. The BESS configurations that maximises the economic viability and minimises the RES curtailment are presented. The results suggest that the investment in this technology may be profitable and considerably decreases the levels of RES curtailment.

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