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Electricity Spot Market Design 2030-2050

Authors :
Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT) > Other [research center]
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF), Germany [sponsor]
Novirdoust, Amir Ashour
Bichler, Martin
Bojung, Caroline
Buhl, Hans Ulrich
Fridgen, Gilbert
Gretschko, Vitali
Hanny, Lisa
Knörr, Johannes
Maldonado, Felipe
Neuhoff, Karsten
Neumann, Christoph
Ott, Marion
Richstein, Jörn C.
Rinck, Maximilian
Schöpf, Michael
Schott, Paul
Sitzmann, Amelie
Wagner, Johannes
Wagner, Jonathan
Weibelzahl, Martin
Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT) > Other [research center]
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF), Germany [sponsor]
Novirdoust, Amir Ashour
Bichler, Martin
Bojung, Caroline
Buhl, Hans Ulrich
Fridgen, Gilbert
Gretschko, Vitali
Hanny, Lisa
Knörr, Johannes
Maldonado, Felipe
Neuhoff, Karsten
Neumann, Christoph
Ott, Marion
Richstein, Jörn C.
Rinck, Maximilian
Schöpf, Michael
Schott, Paul
Sitzmann, Amelie
Wagner, Johannes
Wagner, Jonathan
Weibelzahl, Martin
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Driven by the climate conference in Paris in December 2015 countries worldwide are confronted with the question of how to shape their power system and how to establish alternative technologies to reduce harmful CO2 emissions. The German government plans that even before the year 2050, all electricity generated and consumed in Germany should be greenhouse gas neutral [1]. To successfully integrate renewable energies, a future energy system must be able to handle the intermittent nature of renewable energy sources such as wind and solar. One important means to address such electricity production variability is demand-side flexibility. Here, industry plays a major role in responding to variable electricity supply with adequate flexibility. This is where the Kopernikus project SynErgie comes in with more than 80 project partners from academia, industry, governmental, and non-governmental organizations as well as energy suppliers and network operators. The Kopernikus project SynErgie investigates how to best leverage demand-side flexibility in the German industry. The current electricity market design in Germany is not well suited to deal with increasing levels of re- newable energy, and it does not embrace demand-side flexibility. Almost 6 GW of curtailed power in 2019 provide evidence that changes are needed with respect to the rules governing electricity markets. These rules were designed at a time when electricity generation was concentrated on a few large and dispatchable conventional power plants and demand was considered inelastic. The SynErgie Cluster IV investigates how a future-proof electricity market design should be organized. The corresponding Work Package IV.3.1 more specifically deals with analyzing and designing allocation and pricing rules on electricity spot markets. The resulting design must be well suited to accommodate demand-side flexibility and address the intermittent nature of important renewable energy sources. This whitepaper is the result of

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1295790081
Document Type :
Electronic Resource