Abstract

Accurately forecasting the output of grid connected wind and solar systems is critical to increasing the overall penetration of renewables on the electrical network. This includes not only forecasting the expected level, but also putting error bounds on the forecast. The National Electricity Market (NEM) in Australia operates on a five minute basis. We used statistical forecasting tools to generate forecasts with prediction intervals, trialing them on one wind and one solar farm. In classical time series forecasting, construction of prediction intervals is rudimentary if the error variance is constant—Termed homoscedastic. However, if the variance changes—Either conditionally as with wind farms, or systematically because of diurnal effects as with solar farms—The task is much more complicated. The tools were trained on segments of historical data and then tested on data not used in the training. Results from the testing set showed good performance using metrics, including Coverage and Interval Score. The methods used can be adapted to various time scales for short term forecasting.

Highlights

  • In 2018, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) announced a funding scheme

  • There are a number of stages of the wind farm at Snowtown and the one we are using has a capacity of 98 MW, while the Broken Hill solar farm has a capacity of 54 MW

  • There are significant differences between the approaches for wind farms versus solar farms. These mainly result from the fact that the wind farm output studied, common to other wind farms in Australia that we have examined, does not exhibit any significant seasonality

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Summary

Introduction

The way the NEM works is that there are three types of generators. Scheduled generators submit a bid stack every five minutes detailing how much electricity they can supply in the subsequent five minutes at each of ten price bands from AUD-1000–AUD14000 per MW. Renewable energy generators with capacity between 30 and 100 MW are termed semi-scheduled generators. They do not submit bids, but can be curtailed and are termed price takers. Generators of any type under 30 MW are non-scheduled and cannot be curtailed

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