DocumentCode
2590715
Title
An Analytical Framework for Short-Term Resource Adequacy in Competitive Electricity Markets
Author
Ruiz, Pablo A. ; Gross, George
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL
fYear
2006
fDate
11-15 June 2006
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
Short-term resource adequacy, a key component of system reliability, is the ability of a system with a fixed resource mix to meet the load at all times. In the competitive environment, the interaction of markets and reliability has raised this issue to new prominence. Market design influences significantly the behavior of market players, which, in turn, impacts the capacity adequacy of the system. The extent of such impacts is well illustrated by the California market experience during the 2000-2001 crisis. Current resource adequacy tools fail to explicitly consider the interactions between market design, the behavior of market players and system reliability. We construct an analytical framework for short-term resource adequacy that explicitly considers the interactions between markets and reliability. The framework models both the physical world by representing the resources and the load demand, and the market world, by including the market design, the market players´ behavior and their interactions with the physical world. We use the framework to assess the impacts of market player behavior on various test systems. Representative results are provided
Keywords
energy resources; power markets; power system reliability; supply and demand; California electricity markets; analytical framework; load demand; market players behavior; power system reliability; short-term resource adequacy; Aggregates; Electricity supply industry; Energy consumption; Load forecasting; Power system analysis computing; Power system reliability; Security; System testing; Tellurium; Uncertainty; capacity gaming; electricity markts; reliability; resource adequacy; strategic behavior;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Probabilistic Methods Applied to Power Systems, 2006. PMAPS 2006. International Conference on
Conference_Location
Stockholm
Print_ISBN
978-91-7178-585-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PMAPS.2006.360227
Filename
4202239
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