Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5451024 | Solar Energy | 2016 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Simulating a CST plant operating in the Australian National Electricity Market for one year showed that using 1-h forecasts increases financial value by $1.04-1.13Â million and reduces EFOR by 20-21% points for a 50 Megawatt (MW) CST plant with 7.5Â h of storage, and increases financial value by $0.7-$0.9Â million and reduces EFOR by 20-23% points for a 50Â MW CST plant without storage. Reduced RG costs contributed towards 76-98% of the financial value increase for both CST plants. A CST plant without storage that uses 1-h forecasts achieves an EFOR of 10-11%, whereas a CST plant with storage that does not use 1-h forecasts achieves an EFOR of 21-22%, so using 1-h forecasts may improve reliability more than adding storage to a CST plant without storage. Using 1-h forecasts does not achieve the same total net value as a perfect 48-h forecast, but it achieves close to maximum value per unit electricity generated. Overall, CST plants should use short-term forecasts if permitted under local electricity market regulations because they can achieve higher financial value and reliability. Future studies should use short-term forecasts when allowed by the local electricity market to more accurately demonstrate the value of CST plants.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
Edward W. Law, Merlinde Kay, Robert A. Taylor,