Title |
Evaluating the role of waste-to-energy and cogeneration units in district heatings and electricity markets |
ID_Doc |
22850 |
Authors |
Allevi, E; De Giuli, ME; Dominguez, R; Oggioni, G |
Title |
Evaluating the role of waste-to-energy and cogeneration units in district heatings and electricity markets |
Year |
2023 |
Published |
Computational Management Science, 20.0, 1 |
DOI |
10.1007/s10287-023-00437-3 |
Abstract |
This paper investigates the activity of a multi-utility that uses Waste-to-Energy (WtE) and cogeneration (COG) plants to provide services in the heat and in the elec-tricity markets. We assume that it employs WtE and COG units to participate in the day-ahead and real-time electricity markets and, with the support of heat-only units, it satisfies the heat demand of local district heating areas (DHAs). We use sto-chastic programming to develop three linked problems that describe the sequence of the decision process regarding the operation of WtE and COG facilities: (i) the first problem considers the point of view of the multi-utility that defines the day-ahead and the real-time heat scheduling of its plants and the maximum amount of electric-ity that WtE and COG units can offer in the day-ahead electricity market, taking into account the uncertainty of the real-time heat demand; (ii) the second problem models the day-ahead electricity market cleared by the Power Exchange, where the electricity dispatch of WtE and COG units is limited by the maximum power offers defined in step (i); and (iii) given the heat and power schedules respectively deter-mined in steps (i) and (ii), the last problem describes the activity of theTransmission System Operator that re-dispatches WtE and COG outputs and decides their partici-pation in the reserves and the real-time electricity markets, incorporating uncertain electricity demand and renewable power generation. Italian data are taken to investi-gate the operation of the WtE and COG plants under different assumptions. A refer-ence analysis shows that these facilities obtain stable revenues from the heating mar-ket, but those from the electricity markets are very variable and mainly derives from reserve procurement. In addition, we perform two sensitivity analyses: in the first one, where we consider high natural gas and CO2 prices, the use of WtE and COG units increases to substitute gas-fueled plants with a consequent increase of their profits; in the second one, which describes an electricity market with a high renew-able penetration, the activity of these facilities becomes more irregular because of the augmented penetration of intermitted renewable generation. |
Author Keywords |
Waste-to-energy; District heating; Circular economy; Heat and power dispatch; Stochastic programming |
Index Keywords |
Index Keywords |
Document Type |
Other |
Open Access |
Open Access |
Source |
Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) |
EID |
WOS:000935655100002 |
WoS Category |
Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods |
Research Area |
Mathematical Methods In Social Sciences |
PDF |
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