Forward-looking dynamic network tariffs: an efficient solution for price-responsive customers
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2024-09-01Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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Electricity network tariffs intend to recover network costs and adhere to economic efficiency and equity principles. Most network tariffs in real-world systems focus on cost recovery, implicitly assuming non-responsive customers. This article proposes a forward-looking dynamic network tariff that could be implemented in real-world electricity systems. First, when considering the entire network, consumers and generators must be clustered into subsystems by voltage levels, enabling the calculation of the network utilization levels; this is the so-called cascade model. After, per voltage level, the network tariff needs to be computed. The forward-looking tariff consists of a peak-coincident energy charge, which is symmetric for injections and withdrawals, a per-kWh component for energy losses, and a fixed residual network charge. This tariff design incentivizes shifting flexible loads to off-peak hours and aligns individual customer incentives with expected system benefits, reducing future network investments. In addition, the symmetric nature of the proposed tariff enables a level playing field for active customers providing flexible services. The Slovenian regulator has considered the designed tariff for future implementation. This article summarizes the findings of [1] by the same authors. Electricity network tariffs intend to recover network costs and adhere to economic efficiency and equity principles. Most network tariffs in real-world systems focus on cost recovery, implicitly assuming non-responsive customers. This article proposes a forward-looking dynamic network tariff that could be implemented in real-world electricity systems. First, when considering the entire network, consumers and generators must be clustered into subsystems by voltage levels, enabling the calculation of the network utilization levels; this is the so-called cascade model. After, per voltage level, the network tariff needs to be computed. The forward-looking tariff consists of a peak-coincident energy charge, which is symmetric for injections and withdrawals, a per-kWh component for energy losses, and a fixed residual network charge. This tariff design incentivizes shifting flexible loads to off-peak hours and aligns individual customer incentives with expected system benefits, reducing future network investments. In addition, the symmetric nature of the proposed tariff enables a level playing field for active customers providing flexible services. The Slovenian regulator has considered the designed tariff for future implementation. This article summarizes the findings of [1] by the same authors.
Forward-looking dynamic network tariffs: an efficient solution for price-responsive customers
Tipo de Actividad
Capítulos en librosMaterias/ categorías / ODS
Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT)Palabras Clave
Electricity tariffs, decarbonization, network tariffs, active customer response, distributed energy resources, long-term marginal costs, residual costs, electric vehiclesElectricity tariffs, decarbonization, network tariffs, active customer response, distributed energy resources, long-term marginal costs, residual costs, electric vehicles