Top Banner
Power System Economics Daniel Kirschen
16

Power System Economics

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

race

Power System Economics. Daniel Kirschen. Money. What about money?. Minimizing costs Operating costs Fuel, personnel, maintenance Investment costs Generators, lines, transformers, switching devices, … Maximizing profits Competitive electricity markets Maximizing utility or benefits - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Power System Economics

Power System Economics

Daniel Kirschen

Page 2: Power System Economics

Money© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 2

Page 3: Power System Economics

• Minimizing costs– Operating costs• Fuel, personnel, maintenance

– Investment costs• Generators, lines, transformers, switching devices, …

• Maximizing profits– Competitive electricity markets

• Maximizing utility or benefits– Consumer’s perspective

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 3

What about money?

Page 4: Power System Economics

Reliability© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 4

Page 5: Power System Economics

• Operational reliability– Withstand faults, failures, forecasting errors and

other common operational problems– Operate with a security margin

• Planning reliability– Ability to handle long term problems• Units on long-term maintenance• Droughts

– Build enough spare capacity

Reliability© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 5

What about reliability?

Page 6: Power System Economics

• Providing a security margin and spare capacity costs money– Run additional generating units to have some

operating reserve– Limit production of some generating units to avoid

problems in case of a sudden outage– Build additional generators and transmission lines

to improve long term reliability

Cost of reliability

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 6

Page 7: Power System Economics

Value of reliability

• Poor reliability cause consumer outages• Outages cause a loss of revenue or comfort • Measured using surveys– Estimate of cost of latest outages or– Willingness to pay extra to avoid outages

• Value of Lost Load (VoLL)– Average value of a MWh not delivered– Estimates range from $2,400 to $20,000• ~ 100 times larger than the cost of energy

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 7

Page 8: Power System Economics

Balancing the greed and the fear

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 8

Page 9: Power System Economics

How do we model this balance?

• Mathematical optimization problem– Cost minimization or profit maximization– Reliability introduced through constraints• Explicit costing of reliability is still controversial

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 9

Page 10: Power System Economics

Environmental impact

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 10

Page 11: Power System Economics

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 11

Page 12: Power System Economics

Three-way balancing

• More complex optimization problems• Some environmental effects can be monetized– Operating cost of renewable generation is

essentially zero– Carbon tax or carbon trading to reflect the effect

of CO2 emissions

• Others cannot be monetized– Effect of hydro generation on salmons– Modeled using additional operating constraints

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 12

Page 13: Power System Economics

Government energy policy

• Not “pure” economics– Markets and companies take a short term view

• Long term or strategic considerations– Reduce dependence on imports

• Introduction of competitive electricity markets• Choice of primary energy sources– Promotion of wind and photovoltaic in Germany– Nuclear power in France– Energy conservation in the Pacific Northwest

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 13

Page 14: Power System Economics

Course outline (1)

• Organization of the electricity supply industry– What are the major economic functions?– Who does what?

• Introduction to optimization– Optimization with continuous variables– Optimization with discrete variables

• Traditional power system economics problems– Economic dispatch– Unit commitment– Optimal power flow

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 14

Page 15: Power System Economics

Course outline (2)

• Basic concepts from economics• Organization of electricity markets• Participating in electricity markets• System security and ancillary services• Effect of transmission networks on markets

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 15

Page 16: Power System Economics

Textbook

© 2012 D. Kirschen & University of Washington 16

• A. Wood and B. Wollenberg, “Power Generation, Operation and Control”, Second Edition, Wiley-Interscience, 1996

• D. Kirschen and G. Strbac, “Fundamentals of Power System Economics”, Wiley, 2004