How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

28
How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution D. P. Chassin Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

description

How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution. D. P. Chassin Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Overview. Introduction to real-time capacity markets Purpose, theory, basic examples, issues Examine Olypen market design/results Objectives, implementation, results, insights - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Page 1: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

D. P. ChassinPacific Northwest National Laboratory

Page 2: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Overview

Introduction to real-time capacity marketsPurpose, theory, basic examples, issues

Examine Olypen market design/results– Objectives, implementation, results, insights

• Preview AEP NE Columbus RTP-DA rate– Rate design and valuation process

Page 3: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Purpose of Retail Real-Time Pricing

• Discover retail price of energy– Time-varying value of (constrained) supply– Incorporates time-varying value of demand response– Addresses 3 major distribution issues:

Load growth, distributed resource control, demand response

Page 4: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Markets as optimizers

• Auctions solve allocation problem – Computationally efficient (parallelizable)– Equilibrium assignment of buyers and sellers– Interative (either explicit or implicit)

• Linear program discovers price– Maximizes total benefit (primal)– Minimize local costs (dual)

• Price solution is Pareto optimal

See DP Bertsekas , Linear Network Optimization: Algorithms and Codes, MIT Press, 1991

Page 5: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Buyer surplus

Seller surplus

Retail Capacity Market

Power [MW]

Energy price [$/MWh]

Cleared price

Cleared load

Page 6: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Incorporate Day-Ahead Schedule

Day-aheadPrice is low

Real-timeprice is high

RTP customers’actual response

Retail price between DA and RT

Load (MW)

Pric

e ($

/MW

h)

ScheduledLoad

MaximumLoad

UnresponsiveLoad

Cleared price

Page 7: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Some potential issues/FAQs

• Should utility be allowed to own/coordinate distributed resources (analog to generation/transmission conflict)?

• How to ensure costs are not double-embedded?• How is seller surplus from feeder congestion used?• How does utility fairly compensate consumers?• Are there any subsidies built into the rate scheme?• How is misbid/misresponse handled?• What kind of security is really needed?• How is rebound managed?

Page 8: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Rebound peaks occur with load control

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24

Tota

l Hou

rly E

nerg

y Co

nsum

ption

(kW

h)

Hour of Day

Load Shape for Single-Family (Gas) Homes on 7-18-2006

Fixed_A TOU_A_Group_1Fixed price Time-of-use price

Page 9: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Complex pricing strategies mitigate rebound

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24

Tota

l Hou

rly E

nerg

y Co

nsum

ption

(kW

h)

Hour of Day

Load Shape for Single-Family (Gas) Homes on 7-18-2006

TOU_A_Group_1 TOU_A_Group_2 TOU_A_Group_3

TOU_A_Group_4 TOU_A_Group 5 TOU_A_Group 6

Time-of-use group 1Time-of-use group 4

Time-of-use group 2Time-of-use group 5

Time-of-use group 3Time-of-use group 6

Page 10: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

At some point a capacity market is easier

0

100200

300

400

500

600

700800

900

1000

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

Tota

l Hou

rly E

nerg

y Con

sum

ption

(kW

h)

Hour of Day

Load Shapes for Single-Family (Gas) Homes on 7-18-2006Fixed TOU/CPPReal-time priceFixed price

Page 11: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

11

GridWise Testbed ParticipantsBonneville Power Administration IBMPacificorp Whirlpool/Sears KenmorePortland General Electric Clallum County Public Utility DistrictCity of Port Angeles Municipal Utility

Pacific NW GridWise™ Testbed Projects

Page 12: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Virtual Distribution Utility Operation

12

Invensys

JohnsonControls

IBM

$

MW

MarketMarket

Internet broadband communications

Page 13: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Olympic Peninsula RTP Market

Page 14: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Customer participation

$35

ComfortEconomy

Page 15: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

15

Economic Cooling Response

k

TmaxTmin

k

Temperature

Pric

e

Tcurrent

Pbid

Pavg

Pclear

Tset Tdesired

User sets: Tdesired, comfort (based on occupancy calendar)

These imply: Tmax, Tmin, k (price response parameters)

Price is expressed as std. deviation from mean (over a short period, e.g., 24 hrs)

Page 16: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

16

Managing Constraints

DG required above feeder limit

Market failed to cap demand for one 5-min. interval in 12 months of operation

Price ($/MWh)

Load (kW)

Hour

Page 17: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

17

Load Shifting RTP Customers

• Winter peak load shifted by pre-heating

• Resulting new peak load at 3 AM is non-coincident with system peak at 7 AM

• Illustrates key finding that a portfolio of contract types may be preferred – i.e., we don’t want to just create a new peak

Page 18: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Mixing rates also manages uncertainty

18

It is impossible to choose a portfolioin this white region because no combinationof contracts can yield such risk/return

Page 19: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Peak energy uncertainty

19

Page 20: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Gross margin volatility

20

Page 21: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

21

Response Manages New Resources

normal fluctuations in loadDemand management to a capacity cap with real-time prices eliminated load fluctuations for 12 hours!

Regulation: one or more fast-responding power plants continually throttle to match normal fluctuations in load

• Highest cost generation in markets (zero net energy sales, wear & tear, fuel consumption)

• Intermittency of wind output can exceed regulation capability and reduces cost effectiveness of wind

Hour

Load (kW)

Page 22: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

AEP NE Columbus Project

• Many tariffs are planned• Fixed Rate (standard)• Interruptible Tariff (direct load control)• 2-Tier Time of Use (2-TOU)• 3-Tier Time of Use (3-TOU)• Real Time Price Double Auction (RTPDA)

• Each tariff enable a difference kind of response

Page 23: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

RTP Rate Design

• Determine RTP-DA pricing method– PJM DA Hourly LMP– 5-minute RTP LMP– Customer bids (Heating, AC, hotwater)– Feeder constraints (physical limits)– System limits not expressed in LMP

• Residential (exc. RR1), small commercial– May include special terms (e.g., 1 yr harmless)

• May also include other resources TBD• PUCO approval required

Page 24: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

System requirements

• Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI)• Home Energy Manager (HEM)• Advanced equipment controls

– Heating systems (electric only)– Air-conditioning system– Hotwater heaters (electric only)

• Resource control (e.g., CES strategies)• Smart Grid Dispatch engine

Page 25: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

RTP-DA Valuation

• Values included– Wholesale energy

production– Generation capacity– Ancillary services (regulation

and reserves)– Transmission congestion– Distribution congestion

• Values excluded– Scarcity pricing– Subtrans. constraints– Environment constraints– Wind/bundling/firming– Reactive power– Emergency/reliability– Financial transmission rights

Determine costs/benefits of RTP-DA

Page 26: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

How Does RTPDA work?

MDM

MACSS MAINFRAME

CustomerAEP.COM

AEP OHIO BATTELLE RTP PROJ ECT

ccs

CALCULATIONWATCHDOG

ENGINE

Send Register Reads

2/23/2010

BATTELLEApplication

Circuit loads(80) Usage Summarized

Dai

ly S

et-U

p F

ile D

ata

Send Bill Trigger Data & Retrieve Summary Level

Changes

Data Store

Interval Usage

Interval Rate

Interval Amount* =

Interval Usage

Interval Amount

Cirucuit Loads

Detail View for each

5 minute interval

Summary View Marginal Energy

Cost

Circuit Load View

Appliance Loads

Appliance Load View

DynamicPrices

RepositoryDynamic Prices

Repository

Summary Detail

RTP Display Data

Graph

RTP Display Data

AEP - DAS

M

M

PJM LMP

Transm. Node

ApplianceLoad

(14 Nodes)

DISTLMP

D Nodes(80 Nodes)

H

AMIHead-END Interval Data

Demand Input

Home AreaNetwork

Meter

Enterprise Integration (EI)

Deliver AEP Zone LMP’s

Source ServicesEI Broker

Day Ahead

Real Time(Both 5 Min & Hourly)

Daily Settled

Target Services

Day Ahead

5 Min RT

Hourly RT

Settled

GuaranteedDelivery

Real TimeReal TimeRetrieve Real Time LMP Prices

Retrieve Day Ahead (Projected) LMP Prices

Retrieve Daily (Settled) LMP Prices

OPC Scheduler(Mainframe)

OPC Scheduler(Mainframe)

ftp://ftp.pjm.com/pub/account/lmp InvokeSettled

InvokeDay Ahead

CSP Web Services

Daily Settled

Hourly RT

5 Min RT

Day AheadDay Ahead

5 Min RT

Hourly RT

SettledAEP Firewall

Internet

RT

DA

S

FTP Server

DA

eDataFeed (XML API)

eMarket (XML API)

Common SolutionPlatform (CSP)

Integ

Key: DA=Day Ahead, RT=Real Time, S=Settled

Interval Data

Send RTP

Prices

Page 27: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Conclusions

• Retail capacity markets – Energy price of Pareto-optimal allocation

• Olypen project a simple/full example– Demonstrated basic concept– Showed important of enabling technology

• AEP NE Columbus project – Significant scaling up of implementation– Stronger integration into wholesale operations

Page 28: How Retail Markets Can Optimize Electricity Distribution

Questions/Comments

Contact:David P. Chassin

Pacific Northwest National [email protected]