电力需求响应方案设计

Vishal V. Agrawal, Şafak Yücel
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在夏日午后的热浪中,公用事业公司可能会面临异常高的电力需求和采购成本。在这种情况下,需求响应事件发生,公司要求住宅用户减少他们的需求。这样的需求响应计划不仅降低了公司的采购成本,而且还可以通过减少排放密集型发电厂的发电量而对环境有益。在需求响应计划中,公用事业公司向客户支付每单位需求减少的回扣——客户需求与消费之间的差额。然而,需求的减少不能直接测量,因为企业不能观察到顾客的需求,而只能观察到它的消费。因此,公用事业公司通过从基线(通常设置为客户的平均历史需求)中减去消耗来估计需求减少。在本文中,我们首先研究了基线的存在如何影响客户的需求减少决策,以及它何时导致对实际需求减少的低估或高估。然后,我们分析了公用事业公司应该如何根据客户的平均需求调整基线。我们发现,如果事件期和非事件期之间的成本差异很大(很小),它应该膨胀(缩小)基线,即使这可能导致对客户需求减少的更大的高估(低估)。有趣的是,我们表明,基线的通货膨胀,人们期望减少需求对客户更有吸引力,实际上可能导致更小的需求减少,从而导致更高的排放。本文被运营管理专业的Vishal Gaur接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Design of Electricity Demand-Response Programs
During a heat wave on a summer afternoon, a utility firm may face unusually high demand and procurement cost for electricity. Under such conditions, a demand-response event occurs, and the firm asks residential customers to reduce their demand. Such a demand-response program not only reduces the firm’s procurement cost, but it can also be environmentally beneficial by reducing generation from emissions-intensive power plants. In a demand-response program, a utility firm pays a rebate to customers for each unit of their demand reduction—the difference between a customer’s demand and consumption. However, the demand reduction cannot be directly measured because the firm cannot observe the customer’s demand, but only its consumption. Accordingly, a utility firm estimates the demand reduction by subtracting the consumption from a baseline, which is typically set as a customer’s average historical demand. In this paper, we first investigate how the existence of a baseline influences a customer’s demand reduction decision and when it leads to under- or overestimation of the actual demand reduction. We then analyze how a utility firm should adjust the baseline from the customer’s average demand. We find that it should inflate (deflate) the baseline if the cost difference between event and non-event periods is large (small), even though this may lead to greater overestimation (underestimation) of the customer’s demand reduction. Interestingly, we show that inflation of the baseline, which one would expect to make reducing demand more attractive for a customer, can actually lead to a smaller demand reduction, resulting in higher emissions. This paper was accepted by Vishal Gaur, operations management.
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