Capacity credit (CC, also capacity value) is the fraction of the
installed capacity of a
power plant which can be relied upon at a given time (typically during system stress), frequently expressed as a percentage of the
nameplate capacity. A conventional (
dispatchable) power plant can typically provide the electricity at full power as long as it has a sufficient amount of fuel and is operational, therefore the capacity credit of such a plant is close to 100%; it is exactly 100% for some definitions of the capacity credit (see below). The output of a
variable renewable energy (VRE) plant depends on the state of an uncontrolled natural resource (usually the sun or wind), therefore a mechanically and electrically sound VRE plant might not be able to generate at the rated capacity (neither at the nameplate, nor at the
capacity factor level) when needed, so its CC is much lower than 100%. The capacity credit is useful for a rough estimate of the
firm power a system with weather-dependent generation can reliably provide. For example, with a low, but realistic (cf. Ensslin et al.) wind power capacity credit of 5%, 20
gigawatts (GW) worth of wind power needs to be added to the system in order to permanently retire a 1 GW fossil fuel plant while keeping the
electrical grid
An electrical grid is an interconnected network for electricity delivery from producers to consumers. Electrical grids vary in size and can cover whole countries or continents. It consists of:Kaplan, S. M. (2009). Smart Grid. Electrical Power ...
reliability at the same level.
Definitions
Dent et al. review a few similar definitions of the capacity credit:
* effective load carrying capability (ELCC) defines the capacity value as the extra power the plant can add to the system without degrading a chosen
reliability index Reliability index is an attempt to quantitatively assess the reliability of a system using a single numerical value. The set of reliability indices varies depending on the field of engineering, multiple different indices may be used to characterize ...
(like the
loss of load probability). Unlike the dimensionless CC, ELCC is expressed in power units (
megawatts). California regulators, in their
resource adequacy calculations, use different term, qualifying capacity (QC). For a dispatchable plant, QC is self-assessed and might go as high as the maximum power of the unit. For wind and solar, QC is based on an ELCC modeling; for
cogeneration,
biomass power,
hydropower, and
geothermal power
Geothermal power is electrical power generated from geothermal energy. Technologies in use include dry steam power stations, flash steam power stations and binary cycle power stations. Geothermal electricity generation is currently used in 2 ...
, the history of production is used. Net qualifying capacity (NQC) is similar to QC, except it takes into account the connection of the generator to the grid, for large generating plants,
;
* comparison to the capacity of a conventional power plant represents the amount of the conventional generating capacity which can be replaced by a VRE plant while keeping the value of the risk index. A similar metrics, comparing the plant contribution to that of a perfect always-available-at-full-capacity plant is called an equivalent firm capacity or EFC;
* percentile of peak-period availability defines the capacity value by calculating the capacity at chosen worst-case
percentile (say, 5th lowest) of the power distribution during the times of the peak demand.
Values
The capacity credit can be much lower than the
capacity factor (CF): in a not very probable scenario, if the riskiest time for the power system is after sunset, the capacity credit for
solar power without coupled
energy storage
Energy storage is the capture of energy produced at one time for use at a later time to reduce imbalances between energy demand and energy production.
A device that stores energy is generally called an accumulator or battery.
Energy comes in ...
is zero regardless of its CF (under this scenario all existing conventional power plants would have to be retained after the solar installation is added). More generally, the CC is low when the times of the day (or seasons) for the peak load do not correlate well with times of high energy production. Ensslin et al. report wind CC values ranging from 40% down to 5%, with values dropping off with increased
wind power penetration.
For very low penetrations (few percent), when the chance of the system actually being forced to rely on the VRE at peak times is negligible, the CC of a VRE plant is close to its capacity factor. For high penetrations, due to the fact that the weather tends to affect all plants of similar type at the same time and in the same way - and the chance of a system stress during low wind condition increases, the capacity credit of a VRE plant decreases. Greater geographical diversity of the VRE installations improves the capacity credit value, assuming a grid that can carry all necessary load. Increasing the penetration of one VRE resource also can result in increasing the CC for another one, e.g., in California, increase in solar capacity, with a low incremental CC, expected to be 8% in 2023 and dropping to 6% by 2026, helps shifting the peak demand from other sources later into the evening, when the wind is stronger, therefore the CC of the wind power is expected to increase from 14% to 22% within the same period. A 2020 study of ELCC by California utilities recommends even more pessimistic values for photovoltaics: by 2030 the ELCC of solar will become "nearly zero".
In some areas peak demand is driven by air conditioning and occurs on summer afternoons and evenings., while the wind is strongest at night, with
offshore wind
Offshore wind power or offshore wind energy is the generation of electricity through wind farms in bodies of water, usually at sea. There are higher wind speeds offshore than on land, so offshore farms generate more electricity per amount of c ...
strongest in the winter. This results in a relatively low CC for such potential wind power locations: for example in Texas a predicted average for
onshore wind is 13% and for offshore wind is 7%.
In
Great Britain, the solar contribution to the system adequacy is small and is primarily due to scenarios when the use of solar allows to keep the battery storage fully charged until later in the evening. The
National Grid ESO in 2019 suggested planning for the following EFC-based de-rating:
References
Sources
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* {{citation , last1 = Wolak , first1 = Frank A. , title = Long-Term Resource Adequacy in Wholesale Electricity Markets with Significant Intermittent Renewables , date = July 2021 , publisher = National Bureau of Economic Research , doi = 10.3386/w29033 , url = https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w29033/w29033.pdf
Power engineering