4.5 Article

Wind Energy: Forecasting Challenges for Its Operational Management

Journal

STATISTICAL SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 564-585

Publisher

INST MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
DOI: 10.1214/13-STS445

Keywords

Decision-making; electricity markets; forecast verification; Gaussian copula; linear and nonlinear regression; quantile regression; power systems operations; parametric and nonparametric predictive densities; renewable energy; space time trajectories; stochastic optimization

Funding

  1. EU Commission [ENK7-CT2008-213740]
  2. Danish Public Service Obligation (PSO) fund under RadarSea [2009-1-0226]
  3. Danish Strategic Research Council under '5s'-Future Electricity Markets [12-132636/DSF]

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Renewable energy sources, especially wind energy, are to play a larger role in providing electricity to industrial and domestic consumers. This is already the case today for a number of European countries, closely followed by the US and high growth countries, for example, Brazil, India and China. There exist a number of technological, environmental and political challenges linked to supplementing existing electricity generation capacities with wind energy. Here, mathematicians and statisticians could make a substantial contribution at the interface of meteorology and decision-making, in connection with the generation of forecasts tailored to the various operational decision problems involved. Indeed, while wind energy may be seen as an environmentally friendly source of energy, full benefits from its usage can only be obtained if one is able to accommodate its variability and limited predictability. Based on a short presentation of its physical basics, the importance of considering wind power generation as a stochastic process is motivated. After describing representative operational decision-making problems for both market participants and system operators, it is underlined that forecasts should be issued in a probabilistic framework. Even though, eventually, the forecaster may only communicate single-valued predictions. The existing approaches to wind power forecasting are subsequently described, with focus on single-valued predictions, predictive marginal densities and space time trajectories. Upcoming challenges related to generating improved and new types of forecasts, as well as their verification and value to forecast users, are finally discussed.

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