Economies of Scope for Electricity Storage and Variable Renewables

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Abstract

In this paper, we investigate whether and under which conditions jointly owning a variable renewable source of electricity (VRES) and an electricity storage generates economies of scope in competitive electricity markets. Using a simple stochastic optimization model that assumes frictionless markets, we analytically show that no economic benefit arises from combining the two assets. This finding is in contradiction to large parts of the literature, which claim that it is in the economic interest of owners of VRES to additionally own electricity storage. We also identify circumstances where our argument does not hold and the combination of storage and VRES could theoretically make economic sense on the level of individual agents. In the last part of the paper, we demonstrate in a numerical case study of the German market that even in cases where our theoretical results do not hold, tying together storage and VRES may produce suboptimal results.

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Terca, G., & Wozabal, D. (2021). Economies of Scope for Electricity Storage and Variable Renewables. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 36(2), 1328–1337. https://doi.org/10.1109/TPWRS.2020.3022823

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