Reserve Requirements in Ancillary Markets Using Consensus-Based Cooperative Model Considering Renewable Resources

Abstract

From an economic point of view, a common criterion for assessing the merits of a reserve investment is its impacts on social welfare. The underlying assumption in using this criterion is that side payments may be used to distribute the social gains among all market players. In reality, however, since the impacts of an electricity reserve project on different players may vary, such side payments are rather difficult to implement. We present a three-stage scenario-based programming model for committing reserves in power markets with large amounts of wind power. We describe wind power generation in terms of a representative set of appropriately weighted scenarios, and we present a dual decomposition algorithm for solving the resulting stochastic program. We test our scenario generation methodology on a model of 118 bus system, and we show that the stochastic programming unit commitment policy outperforms common reserve rules.

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