Journal of Energy Markets

Risk.net

Optimal electricity distribution pricing under risk and high photovoltaics penetration

Maxim Bichuch, Benjamin Hobbs, Xinyue Song and Yijiao Wang

  • Given tariff scheme, consumers' optimal PV capacity admits a Nash equilibrium.
  • The game between the regulator and consumers has a joint equilibrium.
  • Volatile demand tends to incur high PV penetration and possibly a death spiral.
  • The regulator can protect utilities from perils by smartly designing tariffs.

We model a hierarchical Stackelberg game in a competitive power market under high behind-the-meter photovoltaics penetration and demand-side uncertainty, with emphasis on the feedback loop between distributed generation via photovoltaics and power prices. The Stackelberg leader, who is the government regulator, attempts to define a set of network tariffs that results in maximal overall system net benefits with respect to consumer utility, cost recovery and renewable energy promotion. The Stackelberg followers, who are rational consumers of electricity, choose their individual photovoltaics investments in order to maximize their personal utilities. With the consumers’ demand evolution described by a discretized Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process, we find a closed-form approximation to the consumer’s utility, and the existence of a game equilibrium between all the consumers and the regulator. Numerical results are calibrated to PJM power market data, and illustrate the market participants’ coupled decisions. Our results suggest that consumers tend to rely more on photovoltaics when the market demand is more volatile, with potential risks of the utility death spiral where the high electricity retail price resulting from increased distributed generation incentivizes further photovoltaics investment.

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