Promoting the System Integration of Renewable Energies - Toward a Decision Support System for Incentivizing Spatially Diversified Deployment.

authored by
Jan-Hendrik Piel, Julian F. H. Hamann, André Koukal, Michael H. Breitner
Abstract

The system integration of intermittent renewable energies (RE) poses an important challenge in the transition toward sustainable energy systems. Their intermittency introduces variability into electricity generation, leading to high ancillary service costs and technical issues impairing grid stability and supply reliability. These issues can be mitigated through spatially diversified capacity deployment, as RE intermittency can be geographically smoothed over sufficiently large regions. Following a design science research approach, we develop a model for the quantification of location-based investment incentives in RE support mechanisms to foster spatially diversified capacity deployment. We evaluate the modeling approach in a simulation study with focus on diversifying wind energy deployment in Mexico under an idealized auction mechanism and demonstrate how location-based investment incentives reduce resource-dependent competition among projects. Our research contributes a nascent design theory that combines the kernel theories for identifying favorable spatial distributions of RE capacity with current policy designs to support capacity expansion management.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Drive Systems and Power Electronics
Institute of Computer Science for Business Administration
Type
Article
Journal
J. Manag. Inf. Syst.
Volume
34
Pages
994-1022
No. of pages
29
Publication date
02.10.2017
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Management Information Systems, Computer Science Applications, Management Science and Operations Research, Information Systems and Management
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1080/07421222.2017.1394044 (Access: Closed)