1. A comparison between central- and self-dispatch storage management principles in island systems.
- Author
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Psarros, Georgios N., Dratsas, Pantelis A., and Papathanassiou, Stavros A.
- Subjects
- *
MIXED integer linear programming , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *PARETO optimum , *HYBRID power - Abstract
• Alternative BES management concepts are analyzed to support high RES penetrations. • Suitable sizing of BES components benefits system costs and increase RES penetration. • Central dispatch concept is more cost-effective in supporting high RES penetrations. This paper presents a comparative evaluation of central and self-dispatch management concepts for battery energy storage (BES) facilities in island power systems with a high renewable energy source (RES) penetration. BES facilities deployed to support the integration of additional wind capacity can be either centrally dispatched by the island System Operator or they can be self-dispatched within a Virtual Power Plant entity comprising renewables and storage, called a Hybrid Power Station (HPS). To explore the anticipated benefits of each BES management paradigm, annual simulations are performed for an example island system, employing a three-layer mixed integer linear programming (MILP) method to simulate the unit commitment and economic dispatch processes. The levelized cost of energy (LCOE) of combined BES and renewables investments is calculated and the achieved RES penetration levels and island system generation cost are evaluated, allowing the identification of Pareto optimal storage configurations, leading to lowest LCOE for a given RES penetration target. Overall, the centrally dispatched BES systems prove to be substantially more cost-effective, compared to the self-dispatched alternative, for achieving similar RES penetration levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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