3.8 Article

A scalable solution framework for stochastic transmission and generation planning problems

期刊

COMPUTATIONAL MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
卷 12, 期 4, 页码 491-518

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10287-015-0229-y

关键词

Transmission planning; Generation planning; Stochastic mixed-integer; programming; Progressive Hedging

资金

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Applied Mathematics program through the Project Multifaceted Mathematics for Complex Energy Systems [KJ0401000]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-AC04-94-AL85000]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Current commercial software tools for transmission and generation investment planning have limited stochastic modeling capabilities. Because of this limitation, electric power utilities generally rely on scenario planning heuristics to identify potentially robust and cost effective investment plans for a broad range of system, economic, and policy conditions. Several research studies have shown that stochastic models perform significantly better than deterministic or heuristic approaches, in terms of overall costs. However, there is a lack of practical solution techniques to solve such models. In this paper we propose a scalable decomposition algorithm to solve stochastic transmission and generation planning problems, respectively considering discrete and continuous decision variables for transmission and generation investments. Given stochasticity restricted to loads and wind, solar, and hydro power output, we develop a simple scenario reduction framework based on a clustering algorithm, to yield a more tractable model. The resulting stochastic optimization model is decomposed on a scenario basis and solved using a variant of the Progressive Hedging (PH) algorithm. We perform numerical experiments using a 240-bus network representation of the Western Electricity Coordinating Council in the US. Although convergence of PH to an optimal solution is not guaranteed for mixed-integer linear optimization models, we find that it is possible to obtain solutions with acceptable optimality gaps for practical applications. Our numerical simulations are performed both on a commodity workstation and on a high-performance cluster. The results indicate that large-scale problems can be solved to a high degree of accuracy in at most 2 h of wall clock time.

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