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Open Generation and Transmission Operation and Expansion Planning Model with RES and ESS (openTEPES)

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Open Generation and Transmission Operation and Expansion Planning Model with RES and ESS (openTEPES)

Simplicity and Transparency in Power Systems Planning

The openTEPES model has been developed at the Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT) of the Universidad Pontificia Comillas.

openTEPES determines the investment plans of new facilities (generators, ESS and lines) for supplying the forecasted demand at minimum cost. Tactical planning is concerned with time horizons of 10-20 years. Its objective is to evaluate the future generation, storage and network needs. The main results are the guidelines for the future structure of the generation and transmission systems.

The openTEPES model presents a decision support system for defining the generation and transmission expansion plan of a large-scale electric system at a tactical level, defined as a set of generation and network investment decisions for future years. The expansion candidate, generators, ESS and lines, are pre-defined by the user, so the model determines the optimal decisions among those specified by the user.

It determines automatically optimal expansion plans that satisfy simultaneously several attributes. Its main characteristics are:

  • Static: the scope of the model corresponds to a single year at a long-term horizon, 2030 or 2040 for example.

    It represents hierarchically the different time scopes to take decisions in an electric system:

    • Period: one year

    • Load level: 2030-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 to 2030-12-30T23:00:00+01:00

    The time division allows a flexible representation of the periods for evaluating the system operation. Additionally, it can be run with chronological periods of several consecutive hours (bi-hourly, tri-hourly resolution) to allow decreasing the computational burden without accuracy loss.

  • Stochastic: several stochastic parameters that can influence the optimal generation and transmission expansion decisions are considered. The model considers stochastic medium-term yearly uncertainties (scenarios) related to the system operation. These operation scenarios are associated with renewable energy sources and electricity demand.

The objective function incorporates the two main quantifiable costs: generation and transmission investment cost (CAPEX) and expected variable operation costs (including generation emission and reliability costs) (system OPEX).

The model formulates a stochastic optimization problem including generation and network binary investment decisions, generation operation decisions (commitment, startup and shutdown decisions are also binary) and line switching decisions.

The operation model is a network constrained unit commitment (NCUC) based on a tight and compact formulation including operating reserves with a DC power flow (DCPF) including line switching decisions. Network ohmic losses are considered proportional to the line flow. It considers different energy storage systems (ESS), e.g., pumped-storage hydro, battery, etc. It allows analyzing the trade-off between the investment in generation/transmission and the investment or use of storage capacity.

The main results of the model can be structured in these topics:

  • Investment: investment decisions and cost

  • Operation: output of different units and aggregation by technologies (thermal, storage hydro, pumped-storage hydro, RES), RES curtailment, line flows, line ohmic losses, node voltage angles

  • Emissions: CO2 emissions by unit

  • Marginal: Locational Short-Run Marginal Costs (LSRMC), water value

A careful implementation has been done to avoid numerical problems by scaling parameters, variables and equations of the optimization problem allowing the model to be used for large-scale cases, e.g., the European system with hourly detail.

Installation

There are 2 ways to get all required packages under Windows. We recommend using the Python distribution Anaconda. If you don’t want to use it or already have an existing Python (version 3.8 | 3.9 recommended, 2.7 is supported as well) installation, you can also download the required packages by yourself.

GitHub Repository (the hard way)

  1. Clone the openTEPES repository.

  2. Launch the command prompt (Windows: Win+R, type “cmd”, Enter), or the Anaconda prompt

  3. Set up the path by cd "C:\Users\<username>\...\openTEPES". (Note that the path is where the repository was cloned.)

  4. Install openTEPES via pip by pip install .

Solvers

GLPK

As an easy option for installation, we have the free and open-source GLPK solver. However, it takes too much time for large-scale problems. It can be installed using: conda install -c conda-forge glpk.

CBC

The CBC solver is our recommendation if you want a free and open-source solver. For Windows users, the effective way to install the CBC solver is downloading the binaries from this link, copy and paste the cbc.exe file to the PATH that is the “bin” directory of the Anaconda or Miniconda environment. It can be installed using: conda install -c conda-forge coincbc.

Gurobi

Our another recommendation is the use Gurobi solver. However, it is commercial solver but most powerful than GPLK and CBC for large-scale problems. As a commercial solver it needs a license that is free of charge for academic usage by signing up in Gurobi webpage. After downloading the latest version of the Gurobi optimizer. Install Gurobi using the downloaded executable and ask for an academic or commercial license. Active the license in your computer using the grbgetkey command (you need to be in the university domain if you are installing an academic license).

Mosek

Another alternative is the Mosek solver. Note that it is a commercial solver and you need a license for it. Mosek is a good alternative to deal with QPs, SOCPs, and SDPs problems. You only need to use conda install -c mosek mosek for installation and request a license (academic or commercial). To request the academic one, you can request here. Moreover, Mosek brings a license guide. But if you are request an academic license, you will receive the license by email, and you only need to locate it in the following path C:\Users\(your user)\mosek in your computer.

Get started

Developers

By cloning the openTEPES repository, you can create branches and propose pull-request. Any help will be very appreciated.

Continue like the users for a simple way of executions.

Users

If you are not planning on developing, please follows the instructions of the Installation.

Once installation is complete, openTEPES can be executed in a test mode by using a command prompt. In the directory of your choice, open and execute the openTEPES_run.py script by using the following on the command prompt (Windows) or Terminal (Linux). (Depending on what your standard python version is, you might need to call python3 instead of python.):

openTEPES_Main

Then, three parameters (case, dir, and solver) will be asked for.

Remark: at this step only press enter for each input and openTEPES will be executed with the default parameters.

After this in a directory of your choice, make a copy of the 9n or sSEP case to create a new case of your choice but using the current format of the CSV files. A proper execution by openTEPES_Main can be made by introducing the new case and the directory of your choice. Note that the solver is glpk by default, but it can be changed by other solvers that pyomo supports (e.g., gurobi, mosek).

Then, the results should be written in the folder who is called with the case name. The results contain plots and summary spreadsheets for multiple optimised energy scenarios, periods and load levels as well as the investment decisions.

Note that there is an alternative way to run the model by creating a new script script.py, and write the following:

from openTEPES.openTEPES import openTEPES_run

openTEPES_run(<case>, <dir>, <solver>)

Tips

  1. A complete documentation of the openTEPES model can be found at https://pascua.iit.comillas.edu/aramos/openTEPES/index.html#, which presents the mathematical formulation, input data and output results.

  2. Try modifying the TimeStep in oT_Data_Parameter_<case>.csv and see their effect on results.

  3. Using 0 or 1, the optimization options can be activated or deactivated in oT_Data_Option_<case>.csv.

  4. If you need a nice python editor, think about using PyCharm. It has many features including project management, etc.

  5. We also suggest the use of Gurobi (for Academics and Researchers) as a solver to deal with MIP and LP problems instead of GLPK.

Run the Tutorial

It can be run in Binder:

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Expected Results

Network map with investment decisions

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