Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Cote, Luc, Sun, Andy
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.19530
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1866914410099900416
author Cote, Luc
Sun, Andy
author_facet Cote, Luc
Sun, Andy
contents We propose a market design for real-time electricity markets that utilizes a two-layered dispatch mechanism to systematically incorporate carbon accounting into grid operations. In this mechanism, ``dispatch'', the centralized allocation of generation resources to meet system load, is executed via a hierarchical structure where the first layer minimizes financial costs to maintain economic efficiency, while the second layer minimizes system emissions strictly within the set of cost-optimal solutions. We define locational marginal emissions (LMEs) as the marginal rate of system emissions derived from the dual variables of the two-layered formulation. Unlike standard marginal prices which correspond to right-hand-side constraint relaxations, LMEs must account for the requirement of economic optimality which introduces demand parameters into the problem's constraint structure. Under the framework, we establish that LMEs satisfy properties analogous to the first and second fundamental theorems of welfare economics. We prove that (1) decentralized ``carbon profit'' maximization by individual grid entities guarantees a system-wide emission profile consistent with the economic dispatch, and (2) any optimal low-carbon economic dispatch is supported by a corresponding set of LME signals acting as a decentralized equilibrium. Furthermore, we establish a general carbon accounting theorem, called the Carbon Footprint Theorem, showing that these market-consistent LMEs ensure the sum of carbon accounts across all grid components (loads, generators, transmission, and storage) equals the total physical carbon emissions. This completes the theoretical foundation of the LME. Finally, we investigate and validate the empirical properties of LMEs and LME-based carbon accounting through case studies on a realistic Texas grid model.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_19530
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On Locational Marginal Emissions in Electricity Markets: A Two-Layered Dispatch Mechanism and Its Fundamental Theorems
Cote, Luc
Sun, Andy
Optimization and Control
We propose a market design for real-time electricity markets that utilizes a two-layered dispatch mechanism to systematically incorporate carbon accounting into grid operations. In this mechanism, ``dispatch'', the centralized allocation of generation resources to meet system load, is executed via a hierarchical structure where the first layer minimizes financial costs to maintain economic efficiency, while the second layer minimizes system emissions strictly within the set of cost-optimal solutions. We define locational marginal emissions (LMEs) as the marginal rate of system emissions derived from the dual variables of the two-layered formulation. Unlike standard marginal prices which correspond to right-hand-side constraint relaxations, LMEs must account for the requirement of economic optimality which introduces demand parameters into the problem's constraint structure. Under the framework, we establish that LMEs satisfy properties analogous to the first and second fundamental theorems of welfare economics. We prove that (1) decentralized ``carbon profit'' maximization by individual grid entities guarantees a system-wide emission profile consistent with the economic dispatch, and (2) any optimal low-carbon economic dispatch is supported by a corresponding set of LME signals acting as a decentralized equilibrium. Furthermore, we establish a general carbon accounting theorem, called the Carbon Footprint Theorem, showing that these market-consistent LMEs ensure the sum of carbon accounts across all grid components (loads, generators, transmission, and storage) equals the total physical carbon emissions. This completes the theoretical foundation of the LME. Finally, we investigate and validate the empirical properties of LMEs and LME-based carbon accounting through case studies on a realistic Texas grid model.
title On Locational Marginal Emissions in Electricity Markets: A Two-Layered Dispatch Mechanism and Its Fundamental Theorems
topic Optimization and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.19530