Litcius/Paper detail

Defining and Quantifying Intermittency in the Power Sector

Daniel Suchet, Adrien Jeantet, Thomas Elghozi, Zacharie Jehl Li‐Kao

2020Energies24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The lack of a systematic definition of intermittency in the power sector blurs the use of this term in the public debate: the same power source can be described as stable or intermittent, depending on the standpoint of the authors. This work tackles a quantitative definition of intermittency adapted to the power sector, linked to the nature of the source, and not to the current state of the energy mix or the production predictive capacity. A quantitative indicator is devised, discussed and graphically depicted. A case study is illustrated by the analysis of the 2018 production data in France and then developed further to evaluate the impact of two methods often considered to reduce intermittency: aggregation and complementarity between wind and solar productions.

Topics & Concepts

IntermittencyComplementarity (molecular biology)Wind powerProduction (economics)Work (physics)Computer scienceEconometricsEconomicsEngineeringGeographyMicroeconomicsMeteorologyElectrical engineeringMechanical engineeringGeneticsTurbulenceBiologyIntegrated Energy Systems OptimizationEnergy Load and Power ForecastingGlobal Energy and Sustainability Research
Defining and Quantifying Intermittency in the Power Sector | Litcius