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PROSUMER (9) answer(s).
 
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ID:   169719


Aligning prosumers with the electricity wholesale market – The impact of time-varying price signals and fixed network charges on / Klein, Martin   Journal Article
Klein, Martin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract PV-battery systems are currently not operated in an energy system optimal way as their operation heuristic (maximization of self-consumption) is generally unaffected by competitive market signals. To evaluate potential regulatory intervention, we propose a market alignment indicator which measures the relative economic efficiency of a prosumer battery compared to a benchmark system that is completely responsive to wholesale market prices. Investigating the case of PV-battery systems in Germany, we find that scarcity signals transmitted to prosumers improve the market alignment of PV-battery systems while retaining similar levels of self-consumption and autarky rates. Both dynamic prices for generation (time-varying feed-in remuneration) and consumption (real-time electricity prices) can improve welfare, that is lowering consumer expenditures for electricity at the wholesale market. The effectiveness of the respective instrument mix depends on the relative levels of the feed-in tariff, the grid consumption to be saved and the solar generation costs. Accordingly, increasing fixed network charges can have a significant positive impact on the market alignment of prosumer batteries if combined with dynamic prices, as they change the relative composition of retail prices.
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2
ID:   171493


Attitudes, preferences, and intentions of German households concerning participation in peer-to-peer electricity trading / Hackbarth, Andre; Lobbe, Sabine   Journal Article
Hackbarth, Andre Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Based on a survey among customers of seven German municipal utilities, we estimate two regression models to identify the most prospective customer segments and their preferences and motivations for participating in peer-to-peer (P2P) electricity trading and develop implications for decision-makers in the energy sector and policy-makers for this currently relatively unknown product. Our results show a large general openness of private households towards P2P electricity trading, which is also the main predictor of respondents' intention to participate. It is mainly influenced by individuals’ environmental attitude, technical interest, and independence aspiration. Respondents with the highest willingness to participate in P2P electricity trading are mainly motivated by the ability to share electricity, and to a lesser extent by economic reasons. They also have stronger preferences for innovative pricing schemes (service bundles, time-of-use tariffs). Differences between individuals can be observed depending on their current ownership (prosumers) or installation probability of a microgeneration unit (consumers, planners). Rather than current prosumers, especially planners willing to install microgeneration in the foreseeable future are considered to be the most promising target group for P2P electricity trading. Finally, our results indicate that P2P electricity trading could be a promising niche option in the German energy transition.
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3
ID:   179689


Designing Pareto optimal electricity retail rates when utility customers are prosumers / Saumweber, Andrea   Journal Article
Saumweber, Andrea Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Electric retail rate design is relevant to utilities, customers, and regulators as retail rates impact the utility's revenue as well as the customers' electricity bills. In California, regulators approve rate proposals by privately owned vertical integrated utilities. Approval, however, is subject to compliance with multiple, potentially conflicting objectives such as economic or environmental objectives. Additionally, retail rates are price signals that affect how customers use electricity services. When utility customers change their usage, they also impact the ratemaking objectives to which rates have been designed. This suggests a feedback loop, which is particularly pronounced with prosumers, as they can systematically optimize their interactions with the electricity system. Prevalent ratemaking methods may not deliver retail rates that are optimal for multiple objectives when customers are prosumers. We propose a novel ratemaking method that formalizes the problem of designing retail rates as a multi-criteria optimization problem and accounts for prosumer reactions through a simulation-based optimization approach. Through a fictive case study, we found that the resulting Pareto frontiers are useful in recognizing and balancing tradeoffs among conflicting ratemaking objectives. Additionally, our results indicate that prevailing retail rates in California are not Pareto optimal.
Key Words Utility  Prosumer  Ratemaking  Rate Case  DER-CAM  Pareto Optimization 
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4
ID:   177380


Evaluating consumer investments in distributed energy technologies / Gissey, Giorgio Castagneto   Journal Article
Gissey, Giorgio Castagneto Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The adoption of solar photovoltaic and electrical energy storage by end users depends on their economic attractiveness, which is typically assessed with metrics of future cash flow such as Net Present Value (NPV). Yet analyses using NPV typically do not account for the evolution towards low-carbon electricity systems in the short and long term. We show this to be of critical importance for accurately calculating the profitability of these technologies.
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5
ID:   177437


Impact of distribution tariffs on prosumer demand response / Avau, Michiel   Journal Article
Avau, Michiel Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Distributed energy resources (DERs) may enable prosumers to deliver demand response under dynamic energy pricing schemes. Facing wholesale market prices, the DER scheduling of a profit-maximising prosumer minimises the total system energy cost as well. However, regulated electricity bill components, i.a., distribution tariffs for recovering grid costs, may distort these price signals. To study the impact of distribution tariff structures on DER scheduling, we develop a short-term linear optimisation model that determines the cost-optimal DER schedule based on wholesale electricity prices and a distribution tariff. We compare five distribution tariff structures for four combinations of PV, batteries, and heat pumps, and define two metrics to characterise the results: (i) the novel ‘relative flexibility value’, which quantifies energy cost inefficiencies, and (ii) ‘rate of self-consumption’. In a case study, we show how prosumers make trade-offs between energy and distribution costs, depending on the distribution tariff structure. We describe the mechanisms through which different distribution tariff structures alter DER operations, and quantify the tariffs' impact on the system energy cost. Generally, we find that tariff types which stimulate self-consumption increase the system energy cost and vice versa.
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6
ID:   190616


Pathway for electricity prosumption in Ghana / Peprah,Forson   Journal Article
Peprah,Forson Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The shortfall of the feed-in-tariff (FiT) mechanism led to net metering and net billing, seen as the comprehensive instrument for developing electricity prosumption globally. Following the global trend, Ghana has adopted net metering for its electricity sustainability development. Despite adopting the net metering scheme in Ghana, prosumption faces many challenges. The paper explores the key factors influencing prosumer deployment in Ghana from policy, regulatory and people's perspectives and suggests a better pathway for Ghana's prosuming path. This study reveals several challenges that prosumers face that discourage many people from investing in photovoltaic installations in Ghana. Among the challenges are policy and regulatory gaps, inelastic electricity tariff structure and the unwillingness of distribution system operators to accept prosumers into the grid with the perception of losing the prosumers as consumers.
Key Words Economy  Renewable Energy  Policy  Net Metering  Electricity Tariff  Prosumer 
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7
ID:   191218


Peer-to-Peer energy trading, independence aspirations and financial benefits among Nigerian households / Adewole, Ayooluwa   Journal Article
Adewole, Ayooluwa Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper demonstrates how preferences for energy trading are influenced by autarky aspirations and possible financial benefits from energy trading in the form of lower energy expenses and additional income. It presents findings from a survey on preferences for energy trading on a community-based platform within a residential estate setting. The survey included a choice experiment of hypothetical home choices with the possibility of energy trading on a peer-to-peer (P2P) energy trading platform. It also distinguished between preferences for buying and selling. Participants were 649 residents of housing estates in Ibadan, a Nigerian city. According to our logistic regression analysis, willingness to participate in energy trading was influenced by autarky aspirations and financial benefits. The financial benefits that interest respondents include gaining additional income from P2P energy trading and reducing overall power expenses. The autarky benefit that drives interest in P2P is “reduced reliance” on the grid for electricity. Real estate developers could therefore capitalise on consumers' high levels of interest in the benefits of homes with P2P energy trading capabilities. Nigerian energy policymakers should put in place structures that support P2P because P2P energy trading can unlock the additional value of solar PV for residential consumers.
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8
ID:   166350


Self-consumption choice of residential PV owners under net-metering / Gautier, Axel   Journal Article
Gautier, Axel Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper studies the decision to synchronize household electricity consumption and production. While this behavior is beneficial for the energy system as a whole, it is not encouraged by a net-metering system. Relying on a large-scale survey conducted among households with solar PV in Wallonia, we investigate the factors impacting their decision to self-consume. As many as forty percent of our respondents declare to do so, notwithstanding the lack of incentives. The multivariate regression analysis shows that female and older residents, who tend to spend more time at home during daytime, are more likely to adapt their electricity usage by displacing their load. Prosumers with high environmental motives tend to synchronize more no matter the size of their installation. We conclude that prosumers will be further encouraged to self-consume by (1) setting monetary incentives to make consumption at the time of production more attractive, by (2) providing information to prosumers relative to their consumption/production profile and (3) by encouraging the adoption of smart devices that facilitate load shifting. These policies would lead to a higher degree of synchronization that would be beneficial for the energy system.
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9
ID:   177318


What is needed for citizen-centered urban energy transitions: Insights on attitudes towards decentralized energy storage / Bögel, Paula Maria; Upham, Paul; Shahrokni, Hossein   Journal Article
Upham, Paul Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper aims to fill a research gap in the area of consumer-citizen attitudes to business models for decentralized energy storage, at the level of households and buildings. The study focuses on the interaction of such attitudes and their underlying motivation factors with socio-cultural, contextual factors. Self-determination theory (SDT) is used as a theoretical framework, to connect interpersonal and contextual factors, addressing the question of how contexts influence the motivation to support energy storage. Drawing on SDT, this study examines the role of autarky (independence from the energy system), autonomy (control over energy management) and relatedness (degree of sharing required) in this regard, embedded and interpreted in the socio-cultural local context of two demonstration sites in Sweden and Portugal. A mixed method approach is used. Quantitative survey data provides information on local social and cultural dimensions, followed by stakeholder consultation workshops that elicit participants’ views on different models of decentralized energy storage. The findings raise questions of how to improve autarky and autonomy for prosumers, while keeping the need for time investment low and provide flexibility regarding the required degree of interaction between prosumers. Implications for business models and policy support for citizen-centered sustainable urban energy systems are derived.
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