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Strategic Policymaking for Implementing Renewable Portfolio Standards: A Tri-level Optimization Approach

Systems and Control 2021-02-15 v2 Systems and Control

Abstract

Appropriately designed renewable support policies can play a leading role in promoting renewable expansions and contribute to low emission goals. Meanwhile, ill-designed policies may distort electricity markets, put power utilities and generation companies on an unlevel playing field and, in turn, cause inefficiencies. This paper proposes a framework to optimize policymaking for renewable energy sources, while incorporating conflicting interests and objectives of different stakeholders. We formulate a tri-level optimization problem where each level represents a different entity: a state regulator, a power utility and a wholesale electricity market. To solve this tri-level problem, we exploit optimality conditions and develop a modification of the Column-and-Cut Generation (C&CG) algorithm that generates cuts for bilinear terms. The case study based on the ISO New England 8-zone test system reveals different policy trade-offs that policymakers face under different decarbonization goals and implementation scenarios.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2009.01336,
  title  = {Strategic Policymaking for Implementing Renewable Portfolio Standards: A Tri-level Optimization Approach},
  author = {Jip Kim and Sylwia Bialek and Burcin Unel and Yury Dvorkin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2009.01336},
  year   = {2021}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T18:16:47.127Z