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Journal article

Heat load forecasting using adaptive temporal hierarchies

In Applied Energy 2021, Volume 292, pp. 116872
From

Dynamical Systems, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark2

Lund University3

University of Iceland4

CITIES - Centre for IT-Intelligent Energy Systems, Centers, Technical University of Denmark5

Heat load forecasts are crucial for energy operators in order to optimize the energy production at district heating plants for the coming hours. Furthermore, forecasts of heat load are needed for optimized control of the district heating network since a lower temperature reduces the heat loss, but the required heat supply at the end-users puts a lower limit on the temperature level.

Consequently, improving the accuracy of heat load forecasts leads to savings and reduced heat loss by enabling improved control of the network and an optimized production schedule at the plant. This paper proposes the use of temporal hierarchies to enhance the accuracy of heat load forecasts in district heating.

Usually, forecasts are only made at the temporal aggregation level that is the most important for the system. However, forecasts for multiple aggregation levels can be reconciled and lead to more accurate forecasts at essentially all aggregation levels. Here it is important that the auto- and cross-covariance between forecast errors at the different aggregation levels are taken into account.

This paper suggests a novel framework using temporal hierarchies and adaptive estimation to improve heat load forecast accuracy by optimally combining forecasts from multiple aggregation levels using a reconciliation process. The weights for the reconciliation are computed using an adaptively estimated covariance matrix with a full structure, enabling the process to share time-varying information both within and between aggregation levels.

The case study shows that the proposed framework improves the heat load forecast accuracy by 15% compared to commercial state-of-the-art operational forecasts.

Language: English
Year: 2021
Pages: 116872
ISSN: 03062619 and 18729118
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.116872
ORCIDs: Bergsteinsson, Hjörleifur G. , Møller, Jan Kloppenborg , 0000-0003-4705-9942 , 0000-0002-4048-3508 , Guericke, Daniela and Madsen, Henrik

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