The merit order is a way of ranking available sources of energy, especially electrical generation, based on ascending order of price (which may reflect the order of their short-run
marginal cost
In economics, the marginal cost is the change in the total cost that arises when the quantity produced is increased, i.e. the cost of producing additional quantity. In some contexts, it refers to an increment of one unit of output, and in others it ...
s of production) and sometimes pollution, together with amount of energy that will be generated. In a centralized management scheme, the ranking is such that those with the lowest marginal costs are the first sources to be brought online to meet demand, and the plants with the highest marginal costs are the last to be brought on line. Dispatching power generation in this way, known as economic dispatch, minimizes the cost of production of electricity. Sometimes generating units must be started out of merit order, due to
transmission congestion, system reliability or other reasons.
In environmental dispatch, additional considerations concerning reduction of pollution further complicate the power dispatch problem. The basic constraints of the economic dispatch problem remain in place but the model is optimized to minimize pollutant emission in addition to minimizing fuel costs and total power loss.
The effect of renewable energy on merit order
The high demand for electricity during
peak demand pushes up the bidding price for electricity, and the often relatively inexpensive
baseload power supply mix is supplemented by '
peaking power plants', which produce electrical power at higher cost, and therefore are priced higher for their electrical output.
Increasing the supply of
renewable energy
Renewable energy (also called green energy) is energy made from renewable resource, renewable natural resources that are replenished on a human lifetime, human timescale. The most widely used renewable energy types are solar energy, wind pow ...
tends to lower the average price per unit of electricity because
wind energy
Wind power is the use of wind energy to generate useful work. Historically, wind power was used by sails, windmills and windpumps, but today it is mostly used to generate electricity. This article deals only with wind power for electricity ...
and
solar energy
Solar energy is the radiant energy from the Sun's sunlight, light and heat, which can be harnessed using a range of technologies such as solar electricity, solar thermal energy (including solar water heating) and solar architecture. It is a ...
have very low marginal costs: they do not have to pay for fuel, and the sole contributors to their marginal cost is operations and maintenance. With cost often reduced by feed-in-tariff revenue, their electricity is as a result, less costly on the spot market than that from coal or natural gas, and transmission companies typically` buy from them first.
Solar and wind electricity therefore substantially reduce the amount of highly priced peak electricity that transmission companies need to buy, during the times when solar/wind power is available, reducing the overall cost. A study by the
Fraunhofer Institute ISI found that this "merit order effect" had allowed solar power to reduce the price of electricity on the German energy exchange by 10% on average, and by as much as 40% in the early afternoon. In 2007; as more solar electricity was fed into the grid, peak prices may come down even further.
By 2006, the "merit order effect" indicated that the savings in electricity costs to German consumers, on average, more than offset the support payments paid by customers for renewable electricity generation.
A 2013 study estimated the merit order effect of both wind and photovoltaic electricity generation in Germany between the years 2008 and 2012. For each additional GWh of renewables fed into the grid, the price of electricity in the day-ahead market was reduced by 0.11–0.13¢/kWh. The total merit order effect of wind and photovoltaics ranged from 0.5¢/kWh in 2010 to more than 1.1¢/kWh in 2012.
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The near-zero marginal cost of wind and solar energy does not, however, translate into zero marginal cost of peak load electricity in a competitive open electricity market system as wind and solar supply alone often cannot be dispatched to meet peak demand without incurring marginal transmission costs and potentially the costs of ``
batteries. The purpose of the merit order dispatching paradigm was to enable the lowest net cost electricity to be dispatched first thus minimising overall electricity system costs to consumers. Intermittent wind and solar is sometimes able to supply this economic function. If peak wind (or solar) supply and peak demand both coincide in time and quantity, the price reduction is larger. On the other hand, solar energy tends to be most abundant at noon, whereas peak demand is late afternoon in warm climates, leading to the so-called
duck curve.
A 2008 study by the
Fraunhofer Institute ISI in
Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe ( ; ; ; South Franconian German, South Franconian: ''Kallsruh'') is the List of cities in Baden-Württemberg by population, third-largest city of the States of Germany, German state of Baden-Württemberg, after its capital Stuttgart a ...
, Germany found that windpower saves German consumers €5billion a year. It is estimated to have lowered prices in European countries with high wind generation by between 3 and 23€/MWh. On the other hand, renewable energy in Germany increased the price for electricity, consumers there now pay 52.8 €/MWh more only for renewable energy (see
German Renewable Energy Sources Act), average price for electricity in Germany now is increased to 26¢/kWh. Increasing electrical grid costs for new transmission, market trading and storage associated with wind and solar are not included in the marginal cost of power sources, instead grid costs are combined with source costs at the consumer end.
Economic dispatch
Economic dispatch is the short-term determination of the optimal output of a number of
electricity generation
Electricity generation is the process of generating electric power from sources of primary energy. For electric utility, utilities in the electric power industry, it is the stage prior to its Electricity delivery, delivery (Electric power transm ...
facilities, to meet the system load, at the lowest possible cost, subject to transmission and operational constraints. The Economic Dispatch Problem can be solved by specialized computer software which should satisfy the operational and system constraints of the available resources and corresponding transmission capabilities. In the US
Energy Policy Act of 2005
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 () is a federal law signed by President George W. Bush on August 8, 2005, at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The act, described by proponents as an attempt to combat growing energy problems ...
, the term is defined as "the operation of generation facilities to produce energy at the lowest cost to reliably serve consumers, recognising any operational limits of generation and transmission facilities".
The main idea is that, in order to satisfy the load at a minimum total cost, the set of generators with the lowest marginal costs must be used first, with the marginal cost of the final generator needed to meet load setting the system marginal cost. This is the cost of delivering one additional MWh of energy onto the system. Due to transmission constraints, this cost can vary at different locations within the power grid - these different cost levels are identified as "
locational marginal prices" (LMPs). The historic methodology for economic dispatch was developed to manage fossil fuel burning power plants, relying on calculations involving the input/output characteristics of power stations.
Basic mathematical formulation
The following is based on an analytical methodology following Biggar and Hesamzadeh (2014) and Kirschen (2010). The economic dispatch problem can be thought of as maximising the economic welfare of a power network whilst meeting system constraints.
For a network with buses (nodes), suppose that is the rate of generation, and is the rate of consumption at bus . Suppose, further, that is the cost function of producing power (i.e., the rate at which the generator incurs costs when producing at rate ), and is the rate at which the load receives value or benefits (expressed in currency units) when consuming at rate . The total welfare is then
:
The economic dispatch task is to find the combination of rates of production and consumption () which maximise this expression subject to a number of constraints:
:
The first constraint, which is necessary to interpret the constraints that follow, is that the net injection at each bus is equal to the total production at that bus less the total consumption:
:
The power balance constraint requires that the sum of the net injections at all buses must be equal to the power losses in the branches of the network:
:
The power losses depend on the flows in the branches and thus on the net injections as shown in the above equation. However it cannot depend on the injections on all the buses as this would give an over-determined system. Thus one bus is chosen as the
Slack bus and is omitted from the variables of the function . The choice of Slack bus is entirely arbitrary, here bus is chosen.
The second constraint involves capacity constraints on the flow on network lines. For a system with lines this constraint is modeled as:
:
where is the flow on branch , and is the maximum value that this flow is allowed to take. Note that the net injection at the slack bus is not included in this equation for the same reasons as above.
These equations can now be combined to build the
Lagrangian of the optimization problem:
: