Flexibility Modeling, Management, and Trading in Bottom-up Cellular Energy Systems

被引:9
|
作者
Siksnys, Laurynas [1 ]
Pedersen, Torben Bach [1 ]
Aftab, Muhammad [1 ]
Neupane, Bijay [1 ]
机构
[1] Aalborg Univ, Aalborg, Denmark
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Cellular energy systems; FlexOffers; Energy flexibility;
D O I
10.1145/3307772.3328296
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
Accelerated local deployments of renewable energy sources and energy storage units, as well as increased overall flexibility in local demand and supply through active user involvement and smart energy solutions, open up new opportunities (e.g., self-sufficiency and CO2 neutrality through local renewables) and yet pose new challenges (e.g., how to maintain the security of supply and get the best yield) to market players in the lower parts of the energy system (including prosumers, energy communities, aggregators, and distribution system operators (DSOs)). One way to cope with the challenges requires "logical" reorganization of the energy system bottom-up as a number of nested (maximally) self-sufficient and interacting cells with their own local (i.e. within a cell) energy management and trading capabilities. This change necessitates effective IT-based solutions. Towards this goal, we propose a unified Flexibility Modeling, Management, and Trading System (FMTS) that generalizes flexibility modeling, management, and intra-cell trading in such cellular energy systems. Our system offers different flexibility provisioning options (Machine Learning based, and Model Predictive Control based), activation mechanisms (indirect and direct device-control), and trading schemes (e.g. flexibility contracts, market-based trading) and suits different cellular system use-cases. In this paper, we introduce the FMTS, overview its core functionality and components, and explain how it practically manages, prices, and trades flexibility from a diverse variety of loads. We then introduce the real-world FMTS instances developed in the GOFLEX project1 and present experimental results that demonstrate significantly increased flexibility capacities, user gains, and balance between demand and supply when an FMTS instance is used in the simulated cellular energy system setting.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:170 / 180
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Reducing energy consumption and CO2 emissions by energy efficiency measures and international trading: A bottom-up modeling for the US iron and steel sector
    Karali, Nihan
    Xu, Tengfang
    Sathaye, Jayant
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2014, 120 : 133 - 146
  • [32] Bottom-Up Approach to Energy Services Platform
    McKeever, P.
    Monti, A.
    2016 IEEE INTERNATIONAL ENERGY CONFERENCE (ENERGYCON), 2016,
  • [33] Flexibility Modeling and Trading in Renewable Energy Communities
    Agrela, Joao
    Rezende, Igor
    Soares, Tiago
    Gouveia, Clara
    Silva, Ricardo
    Villar, Jose
    2023 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE EUROPEAN ENERGY MARKET, EEM, 2023,
  • [34] Bottom-Up Design Patterns and the Energy Web
    Carreras, Iacopo
    Miorandi, Daniele
    Saint-Paul, Regis
    Chlamtac, Imrich
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS MAN AND CYBERNETICS PART A-SYSTEMS AND HUMANS, 2010, 40 (04): : 815 - 824
  • [35] Bottom-up Management: People Working Together
    Cross, Jesse Edward
    LIBRARY JOURNAL, 1949, 74 (21) : 1824 - 1824
  • [36] SUPPORTING BOTTOM-UP WATER MANAGEMENT LEADERSHIP
    MOSHER, CD
    WATER RESOURCES BULLETIN, 1993, 29 (02): : R3 - R4
  • [37] The impact of electricity tariffs on residential demand side flexibility: results of bottom-up load profile modeling
    Hayn M.
    Zander A.
    Fichtner W.
    Nickel S.
    Bertsch V.
    Energy Systems, 2018, 9 (03) : 759 - 792
  • [38] Bottom-Up Transformation of Agriculture and Food Systems
    Sandhu, Harpinder
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (04) : 1 - 13
  • [39] Social attributes can drive or deter the sustainability of bottom-up management systems
    Rivera, Antonella
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Garcia-Florez, Lucia
    Luis Acuna, Jose
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 690 : 760 - 767
  • [40] Bottom-up pressures on intensive livestock systems
    vanderPloeg, JD
    LIVESTOCK FARMING SYSTEMS: RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT SOCIO-ECONOMICS AND THE LAND MANAGER, 1996, (79): : 37 - 49