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Ahead of Print article · Journal article

Exogenous Cost Allocation in Peer-to-Peer Electricity Markets

From

École normale supérieure de Rennes1

Energy Analytics and Markets, Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark2

Center for Electric Power and Energy, Centers, Technical University of Denmark3

Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark4

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

The deployment of distributed energy resources, combined with a more proactive demand side management, is inducing a new paradigm in power system operation and electricity markets. Within a consumer-centric market framework, peer-to-peer approaches have gained substantial interest. Peer-to-peer markets rely on multi-bilateral negotiation among all agents to match supply and demand.

These markets can yield a complete mapping of exchanges onto the grid, hence allowing to rethink the sharing of costs related to the use of common infrastructure and services. We propose here to attribute such costs through exogenous network charges in several alternative ways i.e. uniformly, based on the electrical distance between agents and by zones.

This variety covers the main grid physical and regulatory configurations. Since attribution mechanisms are defined in an exogenous manner to affect each P2P trade, they eventually shift the market issue to cover the grid exploitation costs. It can even be used to release the stress on the grid when necessary.

The interest of our approach is illustrated on a test case using the IEEE 39 bus test system, underlying the impact of attribution mechanisms on trades and grid usage.

Language: English
Publisher: IEEE
Year: 2019
Pages: 2553-2564
ISSN: 15580679 and 08858950
Types: Ahead of Print article and Journal article
DOI: 10.1109/TPWRS.2019.2896654
ORCIDs: 0000-0001-9652-0382 , Pinson, Pierre and 0000-0001-5870-8640

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