TY - GEN
T1 - Shared Self-Consumption Economic Analysis for a Residential Energy Community
AU - Alvaro-Hermana, Roberto
AU - Merino, Julia
AU - Fraile-Ardanuy, Jesus
AU - Castano-Solis, Sandra
AU - Jimenez, David
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 IEEE.
PY - 2019/9
Y1 - 2019/9
N2 - Self-consumption is a growing public demand in an energy environment with growing electricity costs and decreasing photovoltaic installation costs. Shared self-consumption is an imperative aspect for bringing self-consumption into Multi-Family Residential Buildings (MRB), where most families live. Nevertheless, current legislation in most countries does not consider shared self-consumption or does not exploit its full potential; such is the case of Spain or Portugal. This paper will present a novel optimization problem for studying the economics of a shared self-consumption installation in a MRB (composed of five family demands, a PV installation and a battery) with the aim of reducing the total bill of the MRB during an entire year. The impact on energy communities of two different types of energy policies is analysed: the remuneration scheme for the surplus energy (net metering, net billing, and exclusive self-consumption policies) and the regulation for shared self-generated energy (demand-dependent, proportional output and no sharing). It is found that the regulation for the sharing energy can be more important that the remuneration scheme, which has been the traditional target of the self-consumption policy.
AB - Self-consumption is a growing public demand in an energy environment with growing electricity costs and decreasing photovoltaic installation costs. Shared self-consumption is an imperative aspect for bringing self-consumption into Multi-Family Residential Buildings (MRB), where most families live. Nevertheless, current legislation in most countries does not consider shared self-consumption or does not exploit its full potential; such is the case of Spain or Portugal. This paper will present a novel optimization problem for studying the economics of a shared self-consumption installation in a MRB (composed of five family demands, a PV installation and a battery) with the aim of reducing the total bill of the MRB during an entire year. The impact on energy communities of two different types of energy policies is analysed: the remuneration scheme for the surplus energy (net metering, net billing, and exclusive self-consumption policies) and the regulation for shared self-generated energy (demand-dependent, proportional output and no sharing). It is found that the regulation for the sharing energy can be more important that the remuneration scheme, which has been the traditional target of the self-consumption policy.
KW - Self-consumption
KW - Photovoltaic
KW - Optimization
KW - Energy community
KW - Energy policy
KW - Self-consumption
KW - Photovoltaic
KW - Optimization
KW - Energy community
KW - Energy policy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073373935&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/sest.2019.8849101
DO - 10.1109/sest.2019.8849101
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 978-1-7281-1157-5
T3 - SEST 2019 - 2nd International Conference on Smart Energy Systems and Technologies
SP - 1
EP - 6
BT - unknown
PB - IEEE
T2 - 2nd International Conference on Smart Energy Systems and Technologies, SEST 2019
Y2 - 9 September 2019 through 11 September 2019
ER -