News Release

Assessing the impact of going off-grid on transmission charge and energy market outcomes

Researchers from Japan and USA shed light on the unintended consequences of distributed renewable energy resources using mathematical modeling

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tokyo University of Science

Understanding the influence of prosumers on energy market.

image: To understand the influence of distributed renewable energy sources and consumers going off-grid on the electricity market (prosumers), researchers from Japan and USA modeled it as an optimization problem based on market equilibrium theory. Their findings suggest that transmission charges do not always increase with the number of prosumers in the electricity market. However, by influencing their market power, strategic prosumers facilitate the creation of “death spirals,” whereby the rise in prosumers shifts the burden of transmission costs to traditional consumers. view more 

Credit: Ryuta Takashima from Tokyo University of Science, Japan

Efforts to combat climate change have contributed to the rise of renewable energy production through solar panels, windmills, and other technologies. Because of this, consumers have now become “prosumers,” capable of producing their own electricity. While the prosumers’ use of distributed renewable energy increases the energy sector’s resilience, their decreased reliance on the bulk electricity market has led to new and unintended consequences.

It is anticipated that these avenues will push traditional consumers to become prosumers, making it difficult to recover lumpsum infrastructure investments and routine costs. This, in turn, will push the energy transmission charges to traditional, grid-dependent consumers. A vicious cycle known as “death spiral” would be created, forcing the bulk energy producers to raise the transmission charge, affecting both market and consumer equilibrium. However, despite such concerns, the impact of prosumers on transmission charges and the market has not been investigated.

A team of researchers led by Professor Ryuta Takashima of the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the Tokyo University of Science, Japan recently addressed this issue. Their work was made available online on 14 December 2022 and published in Volume 332 of the Applied Energy journal on 15 February 2023.  The study involved the contributions of Professor Yihsu Chen from University of California Santa Cruz, USA and Professor Makoto Tanaka from the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Japan.

The team, in their study, extended the linear complementarity model of Nash–Cournot competition developed by Benjamin F. Hobbs to simulate bilateral markets. Prof. Takashima explains, “We explicitly considered the energy transmission network and optimization of various entities in the electricity market consumers, prosumers, producers, and independent system operators. We assumed that a prosumer, in a perfect or imperfect competition, chooses her own method of energy production and consumption.”

The researchers used the PATH complementarity solver to tackle the market equilibrium problem they defined using the Karush–Kuhn–Tucker conditions from the above mentioned optimization problems.

Unlike the commonly held belief, the team found that the transmission charge does not, in fact, always increase with the number of prosumers. Rather, prosumers behave as consumers when generating less electricity (e.g., 500 MWh), which actually lowers the transmission charge. However, when prosumers generate a sizeable amount of renewable energy (e.g., 2000 MWh), the transmission charge goes up as anticipated.

The team also observed that the likelihood of death spirals increases with the presence of strategic prosumers, who lower their energy consumption from the bulk electricity market in the presence of imperfect competition. Based on these findings, the team suggested that it is possible to reduce the possibility of death spirals occurring by levying a per-MWh tax on the electricity consumption of prosumers from the bulk market.

In summary, the research provides valuable insights into the innate connection between the proportion of renewable energy sources and the quantity and behavior of prosumers, as well as their combined impact on the transmission charges. Prof. Takashima remarks, “In light of the growing concern over death spirals in energy market, these findings add to the ongoing discussion about transmission costs in the presence of prosumers and shed light on death spirals. Moreover, since it is expected that such a phenomenon might occur in Japan in the future, the current research can be applied to the Japanese electricity market to offer suggestions for its aversion.”

Let us hope for a more robust electricity market with affordable transmission costs!

 

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Reference                     

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2022.120488

 

About The Tokyo University of Science

Tokyo University of Science (TUS) is a well-known and respected university, and the largest science-specialized private research university in Japan, with four campuses in central Tokyo and its suburbs and in Hokkaido. Established in 1881, the university has continually contributed to Japan's development in science through inculcating the love for science in researchers, technicians, and educators.

With a mission of “Creating science and technology for the harmonious development of nature, human beings, and society,” TUS has undertaken a wide range of research from basic to applied science. TUS has embraced a multidisciplinary approach to research and undertaken intensive study in some of today's most vital fields. TUS is a meritocracy where the best in science is recognized and nurtured. It is the only private university in Japan that has produced a Nobel Prize winner and the only private university in Asia to produce Nobel Prize winners within the natural sciences field.

Website: https://www.tus.ac.jp/en/mediarelations/

 

About Professor Ryuta Takashima from Tokyo University of Science

Ryuta Takashima is a Professor of engineering economics at the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering in Tokyo University of Science, Japan. He received his master’s and Ph.D. from the Graduate School of Engineering at The University of Tokyo. Prof. Takashima has authored nearly 50 research papers, besides contributing to conferences, chapters, and editorials. His research interests include energy economics, especially the application of operations research, finance, and economics methods to enable the investment and operation of power generation, and energy and environmental policy. He was felicitated with the ASCE Outstanding Reviewer award in 2015.

 

Funding information

The research is partially supported by a US National Science Foundation grant under the contract #1832683.


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