Abstract

The invent of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) opens the door for a comprehensive analysis of consumers consumption patterns including energy theft studies, which were not possible beforehand. This study proposes a fraud detection methodology using data mining techniques such as hierarchical clustering and decision tree classification to identify abnormalities in consumer consumption patterns and further classify the abnormality type into the anomaly, fraud, high or low power consumption based on rule-based learning. The proposed algorithm uses real-time dataset of Nana Kajaliyala village, Gujarat, India. The focus has been on generalizing the algorithm for varied practical cases to make it adaptive towards non-malicious changes in consumer profile. Simultaneously, this study proposes a novel validation technique used for validation, which utilizes predicted profiles to ensure accurate bifurcation between anomaly and theft targets. The result exhibits high detection ratio and low false-positive ratio due to the application of appropriate validation block. The proposed methodology is also investigated from point of view of privacy preservation and is found to be relatively secure owing to low-sampling rates, minimal usage of metadata and communication layer. The proposed algorithm has an edge over state-of-the-art theft detection algorithms in detection accuracy and robustness towards outliers.

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