SYAILGNov 6, 2024

Predicting and Publishing Accurate Imbalance Prices Using Monte Carlo Tree Search

arXiv:2411.04011v210 citationsh-index: 14Applied Energy
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a crucial problem for transmission system operators and energy market participants in Western Europe by reducing price uncertainty and encouraging participation, though it is a pioneering but incremental application of existing methods to a specific domain.

The paper tackles the challenge of accurately predicting and publishing imbalance prices in electrical grids with renewable energy, proposing a Monte Carlo Tree Search method that improves price accuracy by 20.4% under ideal conditions and 12.8% in realistic scenarios.

The growing reliance on renewable energy sources, particularly solar and wind, has introduced challenges due to their uncontrollable production. This complicates maintaining the electrical grid balance, prompting some transmission system operators in Western Europe to implement imbalance tariffs that penalize unsustainable power deviations. These tariffs create an implicit demand response framework to mitigate grid instability. Yet, several challenges limit active participation. In Belgium, for example, imbalance prices are only calculated at the end of each 15-minute settlement period, creating high risk due to price uncertainty. This risk is further amplified by the inherent volatility of imbalance prices, discouraging participation. Although transmission system operators provide minute-based price predictions, the system imbalance volatility makes accurate price predictions challenging to obtain and requires sophisticated techniques. Moreover, publishing price estimates can prompt participants to adjust their schedules, potentially affecting the system balance and the final price, adding further complexity. To address these challenges, we propose a Monte Carlo Tree Search method that publishes accurate imbalance prices while accounting for potential response actions. Our approach models the system dynamics using a neural network forecaster and a cluster of virtual batteries controlled by reinforcement learning agents. Compared to Belgium's current publication method, our technique improves price accuracy by 20.4% under ideal conditions and by 12.8% in more realistic scenarios. This research addresses an unexplored, yet crucial problem, positioning this paper as a pioneering work in analyzing the potential of more advanced imbalance price publishing techniques.

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