DocumentCode
3861831
Title
Designing incentive compatible contracts for effective demand management
Author
M. Fahrioglu;F.L. Alvarado
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI, USA
Volume
15
Issue
4
fYear
2000
Firstpage
1255
Lastpage
1260
Abstract
Demand relief from customers can help a utility (or any "load serving entity") solve a variety of problems. There exist all sorts of different demand management programs that utilities use. A critical issue is the incentive paid to the customer to participate in demand management programs and provide load relief. The utility has to design cost effective yet attractive demand management contracts. The main goal is to get load relief when needed, and to do so in a cost effective way. Customers sign up for programs when the benefits they derive in the form of up front payments, demand discounts and interruption payments exceed their cost of interruption. In order to design such contracts, mechanism design with the revelation principle is adopted from game theory and applied to the interaction between a utility and its customers. The idea behind mechanism design is to design an incentive structure that encourages customers to sign up for the right contract and reveal their true value of power (and thus, the value of power interruptibility).
Keywords
"Contracts","Game theory","Pricing","Power system management","Energy management","Disaster management","Cost function","Load management","Power system security"
Journal_Title
IEEE Transactions on Power Systems
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8950
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/59.898098
Filename
898098
Link To Document