Bichler M, Grimm V, Kretschmer S, Sutterer P (2020)
Publication Language: English
Publication Type: Journal article, Original article
Publication year: 2020
Book Volume: 92
Article Number: 104904
URI: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140988320302449?via=ihub
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2020.104904
Auctions are widely used to determine the remuneration for renewable energies. They typically induce a high concentration of renewable energy plants at very productive sites far-off the main load centres, leading to an inefficient allocation as transmission line capacities are restricted but not considered in the allocation, resulting in an inefficient system configuration in the long run. To counteract these tendencies effectively, we propose a combinatorial auction design that allows to implement regional target capacities, provides a simple pricing rule and maintains a high level of competition between bidders by permitting package bids. By means of extensive numerical experiments we evaluate the combinatorial auction as compared to three further RES auction designs, the current German nationwide auction design, a simple nationwide auction, and regional auctions. We find that if bidders benefit from high enough economies of scale, the combinatorial auction design implements system-optimal target capacities without increasing the average remuneration per kWh as compared to the current German auction design. The prices resulting from the combinatorial auction are linear and anonymous for each region whenever possible, while minimal personalised markups on the linear prices are applied only when necessary. We show that realistic problem sizes can be solved in seconds, even though the problem is computationally hard.
APA:
Bichler, M., Grimm, V., Kretschmer, S., & Sutterer, P. (2020). Market design for renewable energy auctions: An analysis of alternative auction formats. Energy Economics, 92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2020.104904
MLA:
Bichler, Martin, et al. "Market design for renewable energy auctions: An analysis of alternative auction formats." Energy Economics 92 (2020).
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