4.8 Article

A Green Hydrogen Energy System: Optimal control strategies for integrated hydrogen storage and power generation with wind energy

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2022.112744

Keywords

Green hydrogen; Wind energy; Markov decision process; Control strategy; Inventory management; Power purchase agreements; Market price uncertainty; Hydrogen offtake agreements

Funding

  1. Fuel Cells and Hydrogen 2 Joint Undertaking [875090]
  2. HEAVENN -Hydrogen Energy Applications in Valley Environments for Northern Netherlands
  3. European Union

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The intermittent nature of renewable energy resources can lead to mismatches in the power network. Hydrogen production and storage can increase flexibility within the system. Using Markov decision process theory, this research explores optimal strategies for operating integrated energy systems with hydrogen storage. The results show significant gains in operational revenues and emphasize the importance of hydrogen offtake agreements.
The intermittent nature of renewable energy resources such as wind and solar causes the energy supply to be less predictable leading to possible mismatches in the power network. To this end, hydrogen production and storage can provide a solution by increasing flexibility within the system. Stored hydrogen as compressed gas can either be converted back to electricity or it can be used as feed-stock for industry, heating for built environment, and as fuel for vehicles. This research is the first to examine optimal strategies for operating integrated energy systems consisting of renewable energy production and hydrogen storage with direct gas-based use-cases for hydrogen. Using Markov decision process theory, we construct optimal policies for day-to-day decisions on how much energy to store as hydrogen, or buy from or sell to the electricity market, and on how much hydrogen to sell for use as gas. We pay special emphasis to practical settings, such as contractually binding power purchase agreements, varying electricity prices, different distribution channels, green hydrogen offtake agreements, and hydrogen market price uncertainties. Extensive experiments and analysis are performed in the context of Northern Netherlands where Europe's first Hydrogen Valley is being formed. Results show that gains in operational revenues of up to 51% are possible by introducing hydrogen storage units and competitive hydrogen market-prices. This amounts to a e126,000 increase in revenues per turbine per year for a 4.5 MW wind turbine. Moreover, our results indicate that hydrogen offtake agreements will be crucial in keeping the energy transition on track.

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