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Main Authors: Tejada-Arango, Diego A., Morales-Espana, German, Kiviluoma, Juha
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.05451
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author Tejada-Arango, Diego A.
Morales-Espana, German
Kiviluoma, Juha
author_facet Tejada-Arango, Diego A.
Morales-Espana, German
Kiviluoma, Juha
contents Energy system models are essential for planning and supporting the energy transition. However, increasing temporal, spatial, and sectoral resolutions have led to large-scale linear programming (LP) models that are often (over)simplified to remain computationally tractable-frequently at the expense of model fidelity. This paper challenges the common belief that LP formulations cannot be improved without sacrificing their accuracy. Inspired by graph theory, we propose to model energy systems using energy assets (vertices), as a single building-block, and flows to connect between them. This reduces the need for additional components such as nodes and connections. The resulting formulation is more compact, without sacrificing accuracy, and leverages the inherent graph structure of energy systems. To evaluate performance, we implemented and compared four common modelling approaches varying in their use of building blocks and flow representations. We conducted experiments using TulipaEnergyModel.jl and applied them to a multi-sector case study with varying problem sizes. Results show that our single-building-block (1BB-1F) approach reduces variables and constraints by 26 and 35 percentage, respectively, and achieves a 1.27 times average speedup in solving time without any loss in model fidelity. The speedup increases with problem size, making this approach particularly advantageous for large-scale models. Our findings demonstrate that not all LPs are equal in quality and that better reformulations can lead to substantial computational benefits. This paper also aims to raise awareness of model quality considerations in energy system optimisation and promote more efficient formulations without compromising fidelity.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_05451
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Debunking the Speed-Fidelity Trade-Off: Speeding-up Large-Scale Energy Models while Keeping Fidelity
Tejada-Arango, Diego A.
Morales-Espana, German
Kiviluoma, Juha
Optimization and Control
Energy system models are essential for planning and supporting the energy transition. However, increasing temporal, spatial, and sectoral resolutions have led to large-scale linear programming (LP) models that are often (over)simplified to remain computationally tractable-frequently at the expense of model fidelity. This paper challenges the common belief that LP formulations cannot be improved without sacrificing their accuracy. Inspired by graph theory, we propose to model energy systems using energy assets (vertices), as a single building-block, and flows to connect between them. This reduces the need for additional components such as nodes and connections. The resulting formulation is more compact, without sacrificing accuracy, and leverages the inherent graph structure of energy systems. To evaluate performance, we implemented and compared four common modelling approaches varying in their use of building blocks and flow representations. We conducted experiments using TulipaEnergyModel.jl and applied them to a multi-sector case study with varying problem sizes. Results show that our single-building-block (1BB-1F) approach reduces variables and constraints by 26 and 35 percentage, respectively, and achieves a 1.27 times average speedup in solving time without any loss in model fidelity. The speedup increases with problem size, making this approach particularly advantageous for large-scale models. Our findings demonstrate that not all LPs are equal in quality and that better reformulations can lead to substantial computational benefits. This paper also aims to raise awareness of model quality considerations in energy system optimisation and promote more efficient formulations without compromising fidelity.
title Debunking the Speed-Fidelity Trade-Off: Speeding-up Large-Scale Energy Models while Keeping Fidelity
topic Optimization and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.05451