Abstract
We study prosumer decision-making in the smart grid in which a prosumer must decide whether to make a sale of solar energy units generated at her home every day or hold (store) the energy units in anticipation of a future sale at a better price. Specifically, we enhance a Prospect Theory (PT)-based behavioral model by taking into account bounded temporal horizons (a time window specified in terms of the number of days) that prosumers implicitly impose on their decision-making in arriving at “hold” or “sell” decisions of energy units. The new behavioral model for prosumers assumes that in addition to the framing and probability weighting effects imposed by classical PT, humans make decisions that will affect their lives within a bounded temporal horizon regardless of how far into the future their units may be sold. Modeling the utility of the prosumer with parameters such as the offered price on a day, the available energy units on a day, and the probabilities of the forecast prices, we fit the PT-based proposed behavioral model with bounded temporal horizons to prosumer data collected over 10 weeks from 57 homeowners who generated surplus units of solar power and had the opportunity to sell those units to the local utility at the price set that day by the utility or hold the units for sale in the future. For most participants, a model with a bounded temporal horizon in the range of 1–6 days provided a much better fit to their responses than was found for the traditional EUT-based model, thus validating the need to model PT effects (framing and probability weighting) and bounded temporal horizons imposed in prosumer decision-making.
Highlights
The evolution of the smart grid has made end-user participation an essential characteristic of future energy-management processes
The new behavioral model assumes that in addition to the framing and probability weighting effects imposed by classical prospect theory (PT), prosumers make decisions that will affect their lives within a bounded temporal horizon regardless of how far into the future their units may be sold
We studied prosumer decision-making in the smart grid in which a prosumer had to decide whether to make a sale of solar energy units generated at her home every day or hold the energy units in anticipation of a future sale at a better price
Summary
The evolution of the smart grid has made end-user participation an essential characteristic of future energy-management processes. The main contribution of this paper is an enhancement to the PT-based behavioral model by taking into account bounded temporal horizons (in terms of the number of days) that prosumers implicitly impose on their decision-making in arriving at “hold” or “sell” decisions of energy units. We investigated the behavior of homeowners in a realistic smart-grid scenario in which their hypothetical solar panels generated surplus electric power which they could choose to sell to the power utility We recorded their daily sell/hold decisions over the course of a 10-week study in which energy prices varied probabilistically from day to day. The Appendix A contains proofs of the theorems in the paper
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