Claims
- 1. A computer power trading and forecasting process for forecasting spot-market prices of electric power and trading transactions at different delivery points comprising the steps of:
- inputting maximum generating capacities of each utility competing within the market, price functions at which a utility is willing to sell its power at a given time period, a weather forecast, and a transmission cost and transmission capacity in different power lines of the electrical system;
- using probabilistic distributions of electric load and the price function of each utility and transmission cost and transmission capacity between different utilities to build probabilistic distributions for the spot-market prices and for electric trades in the system; and
- outputting probabilistic distributions for spot prices and trades at a plurality of time periods of a planning horizon and for a plurality of delivery points to enable a power broker to effectively manage risk in buying and selling electric power with different suppliers and consumers.
- 2. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 1 wherein the maximum generating capacity of each utility changes under different scenarios.
- 3. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 1 further comprising the step of using the input weather forecast to create a probabilistic distribution of load forecasts for each utility of interest.
- 4. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 3 wherein the input price functions are derived implicitly from production plus profit margin.
- 5. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 4 wherein a price function of a utility is approximated by a quadratic function which is convex, positive and increasing.
- 6. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 3 wherein the input price functions are given explicitly as a cost function of the generating units.
- 7. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 3 wherein probabilistic distribution of the transmission costs and capacities of power lines are created from historical data.
- 8. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 3 wherein the probabilistic distribution for the spot-market prices and for electric trades in the system are created by sampling from electric-load, price functions and cost distributions to create a sequence of deterministic models.
- 9. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 8 further comprising the steps of:
- minimizing a cost of operating an electric utility system under each sampled set of price functions, transmission costs and electric loads; and
- storing a resulting output.
- 10. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 9 wherein sampling from electric-load, transmission costs and cost distributions is performed using a random number generator.
- 11. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 3 wherein the probabilistic distributions for spot prices and trades is performed by a bucketing process.
- 12. The computer power trading and forecasting process recited in claim 11 wherein the bucketing process comprises the steps of:
- creating ranges of spot prices;
- counting a number of spot prices that fall within each range and normalizing the counted numbers to obtain a probability for each range; and
- generating a histogram of the probabilities of each range as an approximation of a probability distribution of the marginal cost at each delivery point at a given time.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is related in subject matter to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/869,561 (IBM Docket YO997-032) filed Jun. 5, 1997, by Samer Takriti for "RISK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR ELECTRIC UTILITIES" and assigned to a common assignee. The disclosure of application Ser. No. 08/869,561 is incorporated herein by reference.
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
Robert F. Engle, Scott J. Brown and Gary Stern, A Comparison of Adaptive Structural Forecasting Methods for Electricity Sales, Journal of Forecasting, vol. 7, 149 172 (1988). |
Michael R. Veall, On Estimating the Effects of Peak Demand Pricing, Journal of Applied Econometrics, vol. 1, No. 1, 1986. |