Managing Water-Energy-Carbon Nexus for Urban Areas With Ambiguous Moment Information

被引:7
作者
Zhao, Pengfei [1 ,2 ]
Li, Shuangqi [3 ,4 ]
Hu, Paul Jen-Hwa [5 ]
Gu, Chenghong [3 ]
Cao, Zhidong [1 ]
Xiang, Yue [6 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Automat, State Key Lab Management & Control Complex Syst, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Artificial Intelligence, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Bath, Dept Elect & Elect Engn, Bath BA2 7AY, England
[4] Beijing Inst Technol, Natl Engn Lab Elect Vehicles, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[5] Univ Utah, David Eccles Sch Business, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
[6] Sichuan Univ, Coll Elect Engn, Chengdu 610044, Sichuan, Peoples R China
基金
北京市自然科学基金; 中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Carbon reduction; energy management; renewable energy sources; water-energy-carbon nexus system; OPERATION; SYSTEMS; POWER; DEMAND; OPTIMIZATION; MANAGEMENT; DISPATCH; MODEL;
D O I
10.1109/TPWRS.2022.3214189
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
The rapid growth of electric load fuels urbanization but creates unsettling environmental challenges. In that regard, the energy system is a crucial part of consuming water and emitting greenhouse gases. To support reliable and economical energy system operations, with reduced water waste and carbon emissions, we design a viable co-optimization of water-energy-carbon nexus for an integrated energy system by adequately modelling essential interdependencies of power, gas, and water systems. A two-stage distributionally robust optimization method is proposed: the first-stage model minimizes the day-ahead reserve capacity scheduling for the next day, and the second-stage model enables real-time dispatch by considering the variability in renewable power generation. The carbon emissions by power generation and distribution are incorporated in both stages to ensure low-carbon operations. We use a two-stage moment-based distributionally robust approach to capture and represent the uncertainties in renewable generation. Instead of assuming a deterministic distribution, we characterize an ambiguity set with mean vectors and covariance matrices, which produces a family set of distributions. We conduct case studies using a modified IEEE 33-bus power system that includes and links a 20-node gas system and a 10-node water system. The comparative results indicate that the proposed co-optimization of water-energy-carbon nexus is superior than several benchmarks. By considering the close interdependencies of water, energy, and carbon, we create an optimal resource allocation scheme, which is capable of minimizing operation costs, lessening carbon emissions, and reducing water waste. The current research enables effective operation schemes for urban energy systems, illustrates a viable way to curb local environmental emissions, and increases water usage efficiency in the water-energy-carbon nexus.
引用
收藏
页码:4432 / 4446
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Research on the Coupling Evaluation and Driving Factors of Water-Energy-Carbon in the Yellow River Basin [J].
Liu, Jianhua ;
Pu, Lingyu ;
Huang, Liangchao ;
Shi, Tianle .
WATER, 2023, 15 (13)
[42]   The food water energy nexus in an urban context: Connecting theory and practice for nexus governance [J].
Tye, Mari R. ;
Wilhelmi, Olga, V ;
Pierce, Andrea L. ;
Sharma, Saloni ;
Nichersu, Iuliana ;
Wroblewski, Michal ;
Goszczynski, Wojciech ;
Wendel, Jochen ;
Laborgne, Pia ;
Heyder, Monika ;
Nichersu, Iulian .
EARTH SYSTEM GOVERNANCE, 2022, 12
[43]   Climate change and the water-energy nexus: an urban challenge [J].
Silva, Gabriela da Costa .
JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE, 2014, 5 (03) :259-275
[44]   Water-Energy Nexus-Based Optimization of the Water Supply Infrastructure in a Dryland Urban Setting [J].
Maxwell, Charles Odira ;
Oonge, Zablon Isaboke ;
Odira, Patts M. A. ;
Ouma, Gilbert Ong'isa ;
Lompi, Marco ;
Pacetti, Tommaso ;
Di Bacco, Mario ;
Caporali, Enrica .
WATER, 2024, 16 (21)
[45]   Managing food at urban level through water-energy-food nexus in India: A way towards holistic sustainable development [J].
Singh, Swati ;
Tayal, Shresth .
ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 24 (03) :3640-3658
[46]   Urban food-energy-water nexus: a case study in Beijing [J].
Li, Xinqing ;
Zhang, Lixiao ;
Zhang, Pengpeng ;
Hao, Yan ;
Xiong, Xin .
CHINESE JOURNAL OF POPULATION RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 19 (03) :62-70
[47]   Urban water-energy-food-climate nexus in integrated wastewater and reuse systems: Cyber-physical framework and innovations [J].
Radini, Serena ;
Marinelli, Enrico ;
Akyol, Cagri ;
Eusebi, Anna Laura ;
Vasilaki, Vasileia ;
Mancini, Adriano ;
Frontoni, Emanuele ;
Bischetti, Gian Battista ;
Gandolfi, Claudio ;
Katsou, Evina ;
Fatone, Francesco .
APPLIED ENERGY, 2021, 298
[48]   A load-complementarity combined flexible clustering approach for large-scale urban energy-water nexus optimization [J].
Wang, Wei ;
Jing, Rui ;
Zhao, Yingru ;
Zhang, Chuan ;
Wang, Xiaonan .
APPLIED ENERGY, 2020, 270
[49]   Water-energy-carbon nexus and sustainability-oriented prioritization of negative emissions technologies for the oil & gas industry: A decision support system under Fermatean fuzzy environment [J].
Fetanat, Abdolvahhab ;
Tayebi, Mohsen ;
Mofid, Hossein .
PROCESS SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 2023, 179 :462-483
[50]   Quantifying and managing the water-energy-food nexus in dry regions food insecurity: New methods and evidence [J].
Radmehr, Riza ;
Ghorbani, Mohammad ;
Ziaei, Ali Naghi .
AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2021, 245