Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage

This paper estimates the impact of solar and wind power intermittency on wholesale prices, arbitrage opportunities and the profitability of storage. First, I use the short term randomness of wind and solar generation to estimate the hourly reductions in wholesale electricity market prices (merit-order effect) in Mexico. Second, since hydropower is already acting as battery storage by smoothing the hourly intermittency of wind and solar, I use lags to control for the reallocation, to estimate the appropriate dynamic merit-order effect and to project future wholesale prices for larger renewables capacities. Third, I use dynamic optimization to assess the profitability of energy arbitrage for a marginal storer. Storage profits based on market average wholesale prices for 2019 (10.6 GW of wind and solar) are lower than the levelized cost of batteries (LCOE). For the 2029 planned wind and solar capacities (30.9 GW), storage arbitrage profits would be within the range of its projected declining LCOE for a 4-hour battery. Nevertheless, for nodes with large price variances and not fully transmission congested, arbitrage storage would be within the range of the LCOE sooner by 2025 (25.4 GW). Pumped-storage hydro arbitrages power at a lower rate which make its profits lower than those of the batteries. The full value of storage can be larger if we consider other services (e.g. frequency regulation). Similar lessons will apply to grids/countries with increasing shares of renewables and non-dominant hydropower.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Miguel Castro Abril
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Energy Generation, Renewable Energy, Electricity, Solar Energy, Hydropower, Wind Power, Energy Storage, Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources, L94 - Electric Utilities, Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices, Q47 - Energy Forecasting, Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0002360
https://publications.iadb.org/en/intermittent-renewable-energy-hydropower-dynamics-and-the-profitability-of-storage-arbitrage
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spelling dig-bid-node-281222020-06-04T17:13:56ZIntermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage 2020-05-15T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0002360 https://publications.iadb.org/en/intermittent-renewable-energy-hydropower-dynamics-and-the-profitability-of-storage-arbitrage Inter-American Development Bank Energy Generation Renewable Energy Electricity Solar Energy Hydropower Wind Power Energy Storage Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources L94 - Electric Utilities Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices Q47 - Energy Forecasting Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect This paper estimates the impact of solar and wind power intermittency on wholesale prices, arbitrage opportunities and the profitability of storage. First, I use the short term randomness of wind and solar generation to estimate the hourly reductions in wholesale electricity market prices (merit-order effect) in Mexico. Second, since hydropower is already acting as battery storage by smoothing the hourly intermittency of wind and solar, I use lags to control for the reallocation, to estimate the appropriate dynamic merit-order effect and to project future wholesale prices for larger renewables capacities. Third, I use dynamic optimization to assess the profitability of energy arbitrage for a marginal storer. Storage profits based on market average wholesale prices for 2019 (10.6 GW of wind and solar) are lower than the levelized cost of batteries (LCOE). For the 2029 planned wind and solar capacities (30.9 GW), storage arbitrage profits would be within the range of its projected declining LCOE for a 4-hour battery. Nevertheless, for nodes with large price variances and not fully transmission congested, arbitrage storage would be within the range of the LCOE sooner by 2025 (25.4 GW). Pumped-storage hydro arbitrages power at a lower rate which make its profits lower than those of the batteries. The full value of storage can be larger if we consider other services (e.g. frequency regulation). Similar lessons will apply to grids/countries with increasing shares of renewables and non-dominant hydropower. Inter-American Development Bank Miguel Castro Abril application/pdf IDB Publications Mexico en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Energy Generation
Renewable Energy
Electricity
Solar Energy
Hydropower
Wind Power
Energy Storage
Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources
L94 - Electric Utilities
Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices
Q47 - Energy Forecasting
Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect
Energy Generation
Renewable Energy
Electricity
Solar Energy
Hydropower
Wind Power
Energy Storage
Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources
L94 - Electric Utilities
Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices
Q47 - Energy Forecasting
Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect
spellingShingle Energy Generation
Renewable Energy
Electricity
Solar Energy
Hydropower
Wind Power
Energy Storage
Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources
L94 - Electric Utilities
Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices
Q47 - Energy Forecasting
Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect
Energy Generation
Renewable Energy
Electricity
Solar Energy
Hydropower
Wind Power
Energy Storage
Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources
L94 - Electric Utilities
Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices
Q47 - Energy Forecasting
Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect
Inter-American Development Bank
Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
description This paper estimates the impact of solar and wind power intermittency on wholesale prices, arbitrage opportunities and the profitability of storage. First, I use the short term randomness of wind and solar generation to estimate the hourly reductions in wholesale electricity market prices (merit-order effect) in Mexico. Second, since hydropower is already acting as battery storage by smoothing the hourly intermittency of wind and solar, I use lags to control for the reallocation, to estimate the appropriate dynamic merit-order effect and to project future wholesale prices for larger renewables capacities. Third, I use dynamic optimization to assess the profitability of energy arbitrage for a marginal storer. Storage profits based on market average wholesale prices for 2019 (10.6 GW of wind and solar) are lower than the levelized cost of batteries (LCOE). For the 2029 planned wind and solar capacities (30.9 GW), storage arbitrage profits would be within the range of its projected declining LCOE for a 4-hour battery. Nevertheless, for nodes with large price variances and not fully transmission congested, arbitrage storage would be within the range of the LCOE sooner by 2025 (25.4 GW). Pumped-storage hydro arbitrages power at a lower rate which make its profits lower than those of the batteries. The full value of storage can be larger if we consider other services (e.g. frequency regulation). Similar lessons will apply to grids/countries with increasing shares of renewables and non-dominant hydropower.
author2 Miguel Castro Abril
author_facet Miguel Castro Abril
Inter-American Development Bank
topic_facet Energy Generation
Renewable Energy
Electricity
Solar Energy
Hydropower
Wind Power
Energy Storage
Q42 - Alternative Energy Sources
L94 - Electric Utilities
Q41 - Demand and Supply • Prices
Q47 - Energy Forecasting
Wind and Solar Power;Storage;Hydropower;Merit-order effect
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
title_short Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
title_full Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
title_fullStr Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
title_full_unstemmed Intermittent Renewable Energy, Hydropower Dynamics and the Profitability of Storage Arbitrage
title_sort intermittent renewable energy, hydropower dynamics and the profitability of storage arbitrage
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0002360
https://publications.iadb.org/en/intermittent-renewable-energy-hydropower-dynamics-and-the-profitability-of-storage-arbitrage
work_keys_str_mv AT interamericandevelopmentbank intermittentrenewableenergyhydropowerdynamicsandtheprofitabilityofstoragearbitrage
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