Wind Intermittency and Supply-Demand Imbalance: Evidence from U.S. Regional Power Markets

31 Pages Posted: 26 Feb 2024

See all articles by Victoria Godwin

Victoria Godwin

Georgia Institute of Technology

Matthew E. Oliver

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Abstract

Wind is a prominent source of clean electricity but is highly variable due to random changes in wind speeds. Intermittent generation is problematic because electricity supply must match demand at all times with little margin for error. Imbalances are costly, and system operators must respond to them instantaneously. We investigate the relationship between wind intermittency and supply-demand imbalances in electricity systems, using data from major regional power markets in the United States. Results show greater variation in wind generation leads to robust, statistically significant increases in electricity system imbalance. We discuss implications for system operators and renewable energy policies.

Keywords: wind generation, intermittency, area control error, renewable energy

Suggested Citation

Godwin, Victoria and Oliver, Matthew E., Wind Intermittency and Supply-Demand Imbalance: Evidence from U.S. Regional Power Markets. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4739240 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4739240

Victoria Godwin

Georgia Institute of Technology ( email )

Matthew E. Oliver (Contact Author)

Georgia Institute of Technology ( email )

Atlanta, GA 30332
United States

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