• Media type: Electronic Conference Proceeding
  • Title: How to explore a large scenario space of future power systems? - A multi-perspective analysis for Germany
  • Contributor: FREY, Ulrich [Author]; CAO, Karl-Kiên [Author]; Breuer, Thomas [Author]; BÖHME, Aileen [Author]; SASANPOUR, Shima [Author]; BUSCHMANN, Jan [Author]; KRBEK, Kai VON [Author]; WETZEL, Manuel [Author]
  • imprint: Forschungszentrum Jülich: JuSER (Juelich Shared Electronic Resources), 2023
  • Published in: doi:10.34734/FZJ-2024-00495 ; 13. Internationale Energiewirtschaftstagung IEWT 2023, IEWT 2023, Wien, Austria, 2023-02-15 - 2023-02-17
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.34734/FZJ-2024-00495
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Diese Datenquelle enthält auch Bestandsnachweise, die nicht zu einem Volltext führen.
  • Description: Motivation and research question: There are four challenges in energy systems analysis. The first is that future pathways are highly contingent on assumptions [1]. The second is computational limitations. The third is that, given a certain methodology, only few aspects of scenarios are usually analyzed [2]. The fourth is the identification of desirable futures within the target triangle of energy supply (affordability, security, sustainability). Addressing these problems means to create many scenarios using powerful hardware and software (problem 1), to sample from a huge parameter space (problem 2), coupling different tools, (problem 3), and to evaluate scenarios from multi-dimensional perspectives (problem 4). Methods We implemented a high-performance computing (HPC) workflow on the supercomputer JUWELS [3]. To utilize this HPC system efficiently, the parallel solver for linear programs, PIPS-IPM++ [4], has been applied. This solver is part of a tool chain including scenario generation, energy system optimization (REMix [5]), agent-based market simulation (AMIRIS [6]) and results evaluation based on a set of multi-dimensional indicators. In particular, we coupled a large diversity of software packages in a fully automated workflow (JUBE [7]) enabling the calculation of a multitude of large-scale scenario analyses in a matter of days. The real-world problem investigated is future power supply in Germany. It is either modeled as market where the interactions of decentral actors are simulated, or operation and investment planning are optimized from a central planner’s perspective. For the latter, the model comprises 479 network nodes that represent unique locations of transformer substations in the transmission grid. Neighboring countries, different weather profiles and techno-economic parameters are also part of the parametrization. To sample the huge parameter space [8], a literature research considering about 50 sources derives statistical descriptors of the most important parameter values to be varied. ...
  • Access State: Open Access