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Risk management of energy communities with hydrogen production and storage technologies

The distributed integration of renewable energy sources plays a central role in the decarbonization of economies. In this regard, energy communities arise as a promising entity to coordinate groups of proactive consumers (prosumers) and incentivize investment on clean technologies. However, the unce...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied energy 2023-10, Vol.348, p.121494, Article 121494
Main Authors: Feng, Wenxiu, Ruiz, Carlos
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The distributed integration of renewable energy sources plays a central role in the decarbonization of economies. In this regard, energy communities arise as a promising entity to coordinate groups of proactive consumers (prosumers) and incentivize investment on clean technologies. However, the uncertain nature of renewable energy generation, residential loads, and trading tariffs pose important challenges, both at the operational and economic levels. We study how this management can be directly undertaken by an arbitrageur that, making use of an adequate price-based demand response (real-time pricing) system, serves as an intermediary with the central electricity market to coordinate different types of prosumers under risk aversion. In particular, we consider a sequential futures and spot market where the aggregated shortage or excess of energy within the community can be traded. We aim to study the impact of new hydrogen production and storage technologies on community operation and risk management. These interactions are modeled as a game theoretical setting in the form of a stochastic two-stage bilevel optimization problem, which is later reformulated without approximation as a single-level mixed-integer linear problem (MILP). An extensive set of numerical experiments based on real data is performed to study the operation of the energy community under different technical and economical conditions. Results indicate that the optimal involvement in futures and spot markets is highly conditioned by the community’s risk aversion and self-sufficiency levels. Moreover, the external hydrogen market has a direct effect on the community’s internal price-tariff system, and depending on the market conditions, may worsen the utility of individual prosumers. •The operation of an energy community with renewables and storage is modeled.•A price tariff system is effective to coordinate prosumers under risk aversion.•Forward trading is highly conditioned by the level of electrical self-sufficiency.•The mix of electricity and hydrogen markets may worsen the utility of prosumers.
ISSN:0306-2619
1872-9118
DOI:10.1016/j.apenergy.2023.121494