Battery Operations in Electricity Markets: Strategic Behavior and Distortions

40 Pages Posted: 26 Jul 2024

See all articles by Jerry Anunrojwong

Jerry Anunrojwong

Columbia University

Santiago Balseiro

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Decision Risk and Operations; Google Research

Omar Besbes

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Decision Risk and Operations

Bolun Xu

Columbia University

Date Written: June 26, 2024

Abstract

Electric power systems are undergoing a major transformation as they integrate intermittent renewable energy sources, and batteries to smooth out variations in renewable energy production. As privately-owned batteries grow from their role as marginal "price-takers" to significant players in the market, a natural question arises: How do batteries operate in electricity markets, and how does the strategic behavior of decentralized batteries distort decisions compared to centralized batteries? We propose an analytically tractable model that captures salient features of the highly complex electricity market. We derive in closed form the resulting battery behavior and generation cost in three operating regimes: (i) no battery, (ii) centralized battery, and (ii) decentralized profit-maximizing battery. We establish that a decentralized battery distorts its discharge decisions in three ways. First, there is quantity withholding, i.e., discharging less than centrally optimal. Second, there is a shift in participation from day-ahead to real-time, i.e., postponing some of its discharge from day-ahead to real-time. Third, there is reduction in real-time responsiveness, or discharging less in response to smoothing real-time demand than centrally optimal. We quantify each of the three forms of distortions in terms of market fundamentals. To illustrate our results, we calibrate our model to Los Angeles and Houston and show that the loss from incentive misalignment could be consequential.

Keywords: energy storage, batteries, electricity markets, economic withholding, market power, renewable energy, duck curve, two-stage settlement, day-ahead, real-time

Suggested Citation

Anunrojwong, Jerry and Balseiro, Santiago and Besbes, Omar and Xu, Bolun, Battery Operations in Electricity Markets: Strategic Behavior and Distortions (June 26, 2024). Columbia Business School Research Paper No. 4877753, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4877753 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4877753

Santiago Balseiro

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Decision Risk and Operations ( email )

3022 Broadway
New York, NY 10027
United States

Google Research ( email )

Omar Besbes

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Decision Risk and Operations ( email )

New York, NY
United States

Bolun Xu

Columbia University ( email )

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