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Internet data centers and industrial parks as flexibility providers in modern power systems: An ADMM-based coordination mechanism

Seyed Amir Mansouri, Emad Nematbakhsh, Andrés Ramos, Jose Pablo Chaves-Avila, Javier García-González, José A. Aguado

2026Applied Energy11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Smart prosumers with Distributed Generation (DGs) and controllable loads can provide cost-effective grid services. However, realizing this potential requires distributed optimization mechanisms that ensure market efficiency, participant privacy, and compliance with electricity market regulations. This paper presents a bi-level distributed optimization mechanism to maximize flexibility services from industrial parks and Internet Data Centers (IDCs) in distribution-level Congestion Management (CM) markets. The upper-level models the Distribution System Operator (DSO), which identifies congested lines using linear AC power flow analysis on pre-settled energy market results and sends corrective signals to prosumers. The lower level allows prosumers to adjust their operations accordingly and communicate updated transactions back to the DSO. A novel proxy-driven algorithm is proposed to facilitate service-sharing among geo-distributed IDCs, considering congestion issues. Additionally, an adaptive Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers (ADMM) algorithm enables decentralized coordination among market agents, achieving 74.52 % faster convergence than the standard ADMM. A real-world case study from Spain demonstrates that the proposed mechanism enables the grid operator to maximize grid services from prosumers, reducing congestion alleviation costs by 35.27 %. Moreover, IDCs reduced daily costs by 11.07 % through service-sharing and task-shifting aligned with CM market signals, while industrial parks achieved a 13.68 % cost reduction by aligning material production processes with CM market signals, both enabled by the proposed bi-level mechanism.

Topics & Concepts

Flexibility (engineering)The InternetMechanism (biology)BusinessPower (physics)TelecommunicationsProcess managementComputer scienceEngineering managementManufacturing engineeringInternet of ThingsIndustrial InternetKey (lock)Systems engineeringIndustrial organizationEngineeringElectric power systemInternet accessEnvironmental economicsRisk analysis (engineering)Power Systems and TechnologiesSmart Grid Security and ResilienceCloud Computing and Resource Management