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Stackelberg Game-theoretic Model for Low Carbon Energy Market Scheduling

Hua, Weiqi; Li, Dan; Sun, Hongjian; Matthews, Peter

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Authors

Weiqi Hua

Dan Li

Peter Matthews



Abstract

Excessive carbon emissions have posed a threat to sustainable development. An appropriate market-based low carbon policy becomes the essence of regulating strategy for reducing carbon emissions in the energy sector. This study proposes a Stackelberg game-theoretic model to determine an optimal low carbon policy design in energy market. To encourage fuel switching to low-carbon generating sources, the effects of varying carbon price on generator's profit are evaluated. Meanwhile, to reduce carbon emissions caused by energy consumption, carbon tracing and billing incentive methods for consumers are proposed. The efficiency of low carbon policy is ensured through maximising social welfare and the overall carbon reductions from economic and environmental perspectives. A bi-level multiobjective optimisation immune algorithm is designed to dynamically find optimal policy decisions in the leader level, and optimal generation and consumption decisions in the followers level. Case studies demonstrate that the designed model leads to better carbon mitigation and social welfare in the energy market. The proposed methodology can save up to 26.41% of carbon emissions from the consumption side for the UK power sector and promote 31.45% of more electricity generation from renewable energy sources.

Citation

Hua, W., Li, D., Sun, H., & Matthews, P. (2020). Stackelberg Game-theoretic Model for Low Carbon Energy Market Scheduling. IET Smart Grid, 3(1), 31-41. https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-stg.2018.0109

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 28, 2019
Online Publication Date Aug 29, 2019
Publication Date Feb 28, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 3, 2019
Publicly Available Date Feb 18, 2020
Journal IET Smart Grid
Print ISSN 2515-2947
Electronic ISSN 2515-2947
Publisher Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Issue 1
Pages 31-41
DOI https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-stg.2018.0109
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1293836

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