Abstract
This paper explores a future perspective to foster the provision of balancing services to the electricity grid by distributed assets. One recent test case, initiated by the Dutch Transmission System Operator (TSO), was to operate an Electric Vehicle (EV) fleet on the automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve (aFRR) market, which entails fast and automated reserves. To achieve that in a decentralised, automated and transparent manner, the role of blockchain technology for this specific application is explored. We propose a novel configuration that can serve as a basis for deploying distributed assets for aFRR markets using blockchain or any alternative Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT). Automation can be achieved via the deployment of smart contracts, which also results in transparency in the system. The blockchain configurations are designed for three phases in the aFRR market, namely: (i) Operational planning and scheduling by a balancing service provider (i.e., formulation and submission of aFRR bid), (ii) Real-time operations (i.e., activation and measurements), and (iii) Verification and settlement (i.e., imbalance correction and financial settlement). The paper concludes that the scalability of distributed assets that can participate in the system, combined with the large transaction times and energy consumption of some consensus mechanisms, could put limitations on the proposed architecture. Future research should address benchmarking studies of other alternatives (e.g., DLTs, such as the ones based on directed acyclic graphs, and non-DLT solutions) with the proposed blockchain solution.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 62 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-17 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | World Electric Vehicle Journal |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |
Funding
Funding: This work was partially funded by the “Blockchain-based platform for peer-to-peer energy transactions between Distributed Energy Resources (B-DER)” project which is financially supported by the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO) within the framework of the Dutch Topsector Energy and the PV-Prosumers4Grid Project, which received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 764786.
Keywords
- Automatic frequency restoration reserve
- Balancing market
- Blockchain
- Demand side management
- Distributed assets
- Electric vehicles
- Flexibility