Real-time pricing of electricity supply functions as a load management tool because it interacts and influences the consumer behavior. This represents a radically different approach to marketing electricity. One area of application of real-time pricing, is in determining wheeling rates. Wheeling, is the transmission of electrical power and reactive power from a seller to a buyer through transmission network owned by a third party. In this paper, a strategy for pricing wheeling power is formulated and evaluated. Unlike other methods which use only the variation of fuel cost for generation, the proposed wheeling pricing algorithm incorporates the optimal allocation of transmission system operating costs based on time-of-use pricing. The transmission costs are obtained by assigning a price k to each unit of reactive and active power flows in the network. The assignment does not discriminate between participants located at differing parts of the network. It is assumed that there is separate ownership of the generating plants and transmission lines. The modeling scheme is applied to the IEEE standard 14 and 30 power systems which involves solving a modified optimal power flow problem (OPF) iteratively using the MINOS package. It is concluded that the method has a potential wide application in wheeling rates of electricity supply.
[1]
M. L. Baughman,et al.
Real-time pricing of reactive power: theory and case study results
,
1991,
IEEE Power Engineering Review.
[2]
F. Schweppe.
Spot Pricing of Electricity
,
1988
.
[3]
H. Happ.
Transmission access raises unresolved economic issues
,
1994,
IEEE Power Engineering Review.
[4]
M.E. El-Hawary,et al.
A method for optimal pricing of electric supply including transmission system considerations
,
1997,
CCECE '97. Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering. Engineering Innovation: Voyage of Discovery. Conference Proceedings.
[5]
Y. Z. Li,et al.
Optimal multi-area wheeling
,
1994
.
[6]
F. Schweppe,et al.
The Costs of Wheeling and Optimal Wheeling Rates
,
1986,
IEEE Transactions on Power Systems.
[7]
M.E. El-Hawary,et al.
A summary of algorithms in reactive power pricing
,
1995,
Proceedings 1995 Canadian Conference on Electrical and Computer Engineering.
[8]
A. Catelli,et al.
Evaluation of wheeling and nonutility generation (NUG) options using optimal power flows
,
1992
.
[9]
A. David,et al.
Wheeling rates of reactive power flow under marginal cost pricing
,
1994
.