Quantifying the value of improved wind energy forecasts in a pool-based electricity market

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Abstract

This work illustrates the influence of wind forecast errors on system costs, wind curtailment and generator dispatch in a system with high wind penetration. Realistic wind forecasts of different specified accuracy levels are created using an auto-regressive moving average model and these are then used in the creation of day-ahead unit commitment schedules. The schedules are generated for a model of the 2020 Irish electricity system with 33% wind penetration using both stochastic and deterministic approaches. Improvements in wind forecast accuracy are demonstrated to deliver: (i) clear savings in total system costs for deterministic and, to a lesser extent, stochastic scheduling; (ii) a decrease in the level of wind curtailment, with close agreement between stochastic and deterministic scheduling; and (iii) a decrease in the dispatch of open cycle gas turbine generation, evident with deterministic, and to a lesser extent, with stochastic scheduling.

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Mc Garrigle, E. V., & Leahy, P. G. (2015). Quantifying the value of improved wind energy forecasts in a pool-based electricity market. Renewable Energy, 80, 517–524. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.renene.2015.02.023

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