4.5 Article

Numerical Weather Prediction and Artificial Neural Network Coupling for Wind Energy Forecast

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14020338

Keywords

numerical weather prediction; artificial neural network; wind power forecasting; complex terrain

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss Federal Office of Energy [SI/502135-01]
  2. Swiss Innovation Agency [1155002544]
  3. Swiss Centre for Competence in Energy Research on the Future Swiss Electrical Infrastructure (SCCER-FURIES)

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The study proposed two hybrid NWP and ANN models for wind power forecasting over complex terrain, where one directly predicts wind power and the other predicts wind speed first and then converts it to power. Model 2 performed well, showing lower error rates compared to other models in the same category.
In the past two decades, wind energy has been under fast development worldwide. The dramatic increase of wind power penetration in electricity production has posed a big challenge to grid integration due to the high uncertainty of wind power. Accurate real-time forecasts of wind farm power outputs can help to mitigate the problem. Among the various techniques developed for wind power forecasting, the hybridization of numerical weather prediction (NWP) and machine learning (ML) techniques such as artificial neural networks (ANNs) are attracting many researchers world-wide nowadays, because it has the potential to yield more accurate forecasts. In this paper, two hybrid NWP and ANN models for wind power forecasting over a highly complex terrain are proposed. The developed models have a fine temporal resolution and a sufficiently large prediction horizon (>6 h ahead). Model 1 directly forecasts the energy production of each wind turbine. Model 2 forecasts first the wind speed, then converts it to the power using a fitted power curve. Effects of various modeling options (selection of inputs, network structures, etc.) on the model performance are investigated. Performances of different models are evaluated based on four normalized error measures. Statistical results of model predictions are presented with discussions. Python was utilized for task automation and machine learning. The end result is a fully working library for wind power predictions and a set of tools for running the models in forecast mode. It is shown that the proposed models are able to yield accurate wind farm power forecasts at a site with high terrain and flow complexities. Especially, for Model 2, the normalized Mean Absolute Error and Root Mean Squared Error are obtained as 8.76% and 13.03%, respectively, lower than the errors reported by other models in the same category.

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