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      Long-term impact of variable generation and demand side flexibility on thermal power generation

      research-article
      , ,
      IET Renewable Power Generation
      The Institution of Engineering and Technology
      gas turbine power stations, power generation planning, demand side management, power generation dispatch, power generation scheduling, power generation economics, wind power plants, photovoltaic power systems, solar power stations, variable generation long-term impact, demand side flexibility, thermal power generation, future power system, generation planning model, unit commitment, economic dispatch model, combined cycle gas turbines, open cycle GT, gas engines, wind power, solar photovoltaic, thermal unit ramping frequency, thermal unit ramp rates, thermal power plants, electricity prices

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          Abstract

          This study presents the potential role of thermal power generation in a future power system with high shares of variable generation while considering different sources of demand side flexibility such as heat pumps and heat storages in district heating, demand response from industries and electric vehicles. The study was carried out using a generation planning model combined with a unit commitment and economic dispatch model. The results from the planning model show a strong shift away from combined cycle gas turbines to open cycle gas turbines and gas engines as the share of wind power and solar photovoltaic increases. Demand side flexibility measures pushed this trend further. The results from the unit commitment and economic dispatch model demonstrate that the flexibility measures decrease the ramping frequency of thermal units, while the ramp rates of thermal units remain largely unchanged or increased. This indicates that the flexibility measures can cover smaller ramps in the net load more cost-effectively but that thermal power plants are still valuable for larger ramps. Impacts on emissions and electricity prices are also explored.

          Most cited references16

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          Stochastic Optimization Model to Study the Operational Impacts of High Wind Penetrations in Ireland

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            Evaluating and Planning Flexibility in Sustainable Power Systems

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              The impact of sub-hourly modelling in power systems with significant levels of renewable generation

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                IET-RPG
                IET Renewable Power Generation
                IET Renew. Power Gener.
                The Institution of Engineering and Technology
                1752-1416
                1752-1424
                25 January 2018
                22 February 2018
                30 April 2018
                : 12
                : 6
                : 718-726
                Affiliations
                Smart Energy and Transport Solutions, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland , Espoo, Finland
                Article
                IET-RPG.2017.0107 RPG.2017.0107.R3
                10.1049/iet-rpg.2017.0107
                312b7c8e-fb90-4cee-8e7d-e9416db960ce

                This is an open access article published by the IET under the Creative Commons Attribution -NonCommercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/)

                History
                : 15 February 2017
                : 16 January 2018
                : 23 January 2018
                Page count
                Pages: 0
                Funding
                Funded by: Tekes
                Award ID: CLIC Innovation Ltd research program FLEXe
                Funded by: Strategic Research Council at the Academy of Finland
                Award ID: 293437
                Categories
                Research Article

                Computer science,Engineering,Artificial intelligence,Electrical engineering,Mechanical engineering,Renewable energy
                power generation dispatch,demand side management,wind power plants,power generation planning,solar photovoltaic,photovoltaic power systems,solar power stations,gas turbine power stations,wind power,variable generation long-term impact,electricity prices,gas engines,demand side flexibility,thermal power generation,open cycle GT,future power system,combined cycle gas turbines,generation planning model,unit commitment,economic dispatch model,thermal power plants,thermal unit ramp rates,power generation scheduling,power generation economics,thermal unit ramping frequency

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