Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model

A reliable and cost-effective electricity system transition requires both the identification of optimal target states and the definition of political and regulatory frameworks that enable these target states to be achieved. Fundamental optimization models are frequently used for the determination of...

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Main Authors: Laura Torralba-Díaz, Christoph Schimeczek, Matthias Reeg, Georgios Savvidis, Marc Deissenroth-Uhrig, Felix Guthoff, Benjamin Fleischer, Kai Hufendiek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/15/3920
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spelling doaj-3f0057bd176a4ffb9c4da726728a88d42020-11-25T03:49:58ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-07-01133920392010.3390/en13153920Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation ModelLaura Torralba-Díaz0Christoph Schimeczek1Matthias Reeg2Georgios Savvidis3Marc Deissenroth-Uhrig4Felix Guthoff5Benjamin Fleischer6Kai Hufendiek7Stuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyStuttgart Research Initiative on Integrated Systems Analysis for Energy (STRise), 70569 Stuttgart, GermanyA reliable and cost-effective electricity system transition requires both the identification of optimal target states and the definition of political and regulatory frameworks that enable these target states to be achieved. Fundamental optimization models are frequently used for the determination of cost-optimal system configurations. They represent a normative approach and typically assume markets with perfect competition. However, it is well known that real systems do not behave in such an optimal way, as decision-makers do not have perfect information at their disposal and real market actors do not take decisions in a purely rational way. These deficiencies lead to increased costs or missed targets, often referred to as an “efficiency gap”. For making rational political decisions, it might be valuable to know which factors influence this efficiency gap and to what extent. In this paper, we identify and quantify this gap by soft-linking a fundamental electricity market model and an agent-based simulation model, which allows the consideration of these effects. In order to distinguish between model-inherent differences and non-ideal market behavior, a rigorous harmonization of the models was conducted first. The results of the comparative analysis show that the efficiency gap increases with higher renewable energy shares and that information deficits and policy instruments affect operational decisions of power market participants and resulting overall costs significantly.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/15/3920efficiency gapmodel couplingelectricity systempower marketagent-baseduncertainty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Torralba-Díaz
Christoph Schimeczek
Matthias Reeg
Georgios Savvidis
Marc Deissenroth-Uhrig
Felix Guthoff
Benjamin Fleischer
Kai Hufendiek
spellingShingle Laura Torralba-Díaz
Christoph Schimeczek
Matthias Reeg
Georgios Savvidis
Marc Deissenroth-Uhrig
Felix Guthoff
Benjamin Fleischer
Kai Hufendiek
Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
Energies
efficiency gap
model coupling
electricity system
power market
agent-based
uncertainty
author_facet Laura Torralba-Díaz
Christoph Schimeczek
Matthias Reeg
Georgios Savvidis
Marc Deissenroth-Uhrig
Felix Guthoff
Benjamin Fleischer
Kai Hufendiek
author_sort Laura Torralba-Díaz
title Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
title_short Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
title_full Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
title_fullStr Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
title_full_unstemmed Identification of the Efficiency Gap by Coupling a Fundamental Electricity Market Model and an Agent-Based Simulation Model
title_sort identification of the efficiency gap by coupling a fundamental electricity market model and an agent-based simulation model
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-07-01
description A reliable and cost-effective electricity system transition requires both the identification of optimal target states and the definition of political and regulatory frameworks that enable these target states to be achieved. Fundamental optimization models are frequently used for the determination of cost-optimal system configurations. They represent a normative approach and typically assume markets with perfect competition. However, it is well known that real systems do not behave in such an optimal way, as decision-makers do not have perfect information at their disposal and real market actors do not take decisions in a purely rational way. These deficiencies lead to increased costs or missed targets, often referred to as an “efficiency gap”. For making rational political decisions, it might be valuable to know which factors influence this efficiency gap and to what extent. In this paper, we identify and quantify this gap by soft-linking a fundamental electricity market model and an agent-based simulation model, which allows the consideration of these effects. In order to distinguish between model-inherent differences and non-ideal market behavior, a rigorous harmonization of the models was conducted first. The results of the comparative analysis show that the efficiency gap increases with higher renewable energy shares and that information deficits and policy instruments affect operational decisions of power market participants and resulting overall costs significantly.
topic efficiency gap
model coupling
electricity system
power market
agent-based
uncertainty
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/15/3920
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