Title :
Impact of unit commitment constraints on generation expansion planning with renewables
Author :
Palmintier, Bryan ; Webster, Mort
Author_Institution :
Eng. Syst. Div., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
Growing use of renewables pushes thermal generators against operating constraints - e.g. ramping, minimum output, and operating reserves - that are traditionally ignored in expansion planning models. We show how including such unit-commitment-derived details can significantly change energy production and optimal capacity mix. We introduce a method for efficiently combining unit commitment and generation expansion planning into a single mixed-integer optimization model. Our formulation groups generators into categories allowing integer commitment states from zero to the installed capacity. This formulation scales well, runs much faster (e.g. 5000×) than individual plant binary decisions, and makes the combined model computationally tractable for large systems (hundreds of generators) at hourly time resolutions (8760 hours) using modern solvers on a personal computer. We show that ignoring these constraints during planning can result in a sub-optimal capacity mix with significantly higher operating costs (17%) and carbon emissions (39%) and/or the inability to meet emissions targets.
Keywords :
integer programming; power generation dispatch; power generation planning; power generation scheduling; renewable energy sources; emissions target; energy production; expansion planning model; generation expansion planning; integer commitment state; mixed integer optimization model; optimal capacity; renewable energy; time 8760 hour; unit commitment constraint; Capacity planning; Carbon dioxide; Computational modeling; Generators; Load modeling; Mathematical model; Planning; Carbon tax; Integer linear programming; Power generation dispatch; Power generation planning; Power system analysis computing; Power system modeling; Unit commitment; Wind energy;
Conference_Titel :
Power and Energy Society General Meeting, 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1000-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1944-9925
DOI :
10.1109/PES.2011.6038963