Scenario Partitioning Methods for Two-Stage Stochastic Generation Expansion Under Multi-Scale Uncertainty

Generation Expansion Planning (GEP) can inform regulation, electricity market design, and regional system planning by identifying adaptive investment strategies. Relevant uncertainties include hourly variability in load and renewable generation and decadal-scale uncertainty in technology, markets, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on power systems 2022-05, Vol.37 (3), p.2371-2383
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Bining, Bukenberger, Jesse, Webster, Mort
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Generation Expansion Planning (GEP) can inform regulation, electricity market design, and regional system planning by identifying adaptive investment strategies. Relevant uncertainties include hourly variability in load and renewable generation and decadal-scale uncertainty in technology, markets, and regulation. A multi-stage and multi-scale stochastic GEP model that represents these uncertainties at sufficient resolution becomes intractable. We present an approach for representing this multi-scale uncertainty, and compare it to existing methods, applied to a two-stage stochastic GEP model with a cumulative carbon emission target. For long-term uncertainty, we compare partitioning methods, which reduce the number of decision variables but retain all scenarios, to representative scenario methods, which retain only a subset of the original scenarios. For short-term uncertainty, we compare methods that select representative weeks based on distance metrics in the parameter space to methods that use the covariance of outcomes across feasible decisions to select weeks. We find that scenario reduction methods struggle to find the appropriate investment levels for variable renewable generation and consequently produce more costly plans than scenario partitioning methods. While simple approximating methods perform well with larger models, covariance-based approximations have the best performance overall.
ISSN:0885-8950
1558-0679
DOI:10.1109/TPWRS.2021.3121369