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Research Article

Techno-economic comparison of P2P energy sharing and residential battery storage in the photovoltaic community

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Pages 1107-1123 | Received 24 Sep 2022, Accepted 03 Jul 2023, Published online: 10 Jul 2023
 

ABSTRACT

To quantify the techno-economic benefits of peer-to-peer (P2P) sharing and residential battery storage and clarify their inter-relationship, this study proposes four working modes for the PV community with P2P energy sharing and batteries as variables. Besides, the energy flow and electricity cost components are comprehensively quantified at the community and individual customer levels. The yearly simulation results indicate that the batteries and P2P sharing both can increase the community’s self-sufficiency rate (SSR) and self-consumption rate (SCR) by 70–80%. Regarding economics, installing batteries has little effect on average electricity cost (AEC) because of its high cost, while P2P sharing can reduce the AEC by 8.25%. P2P energy sharing combined with battery has the best techno-economicperformance, increasing the SSR and SCR by around 140% and reducing the AEC by 10%, thus is suggested as the optimal mode. In the combined mode, 15% less PV power is stored in batteries than in the only battery storage system, demonstrating that the energy storage role of batteries is not fully exploited. This is because P2P energy sharing is designed to use limited surplus PV power before battery charging. Therefore, the battery size can be reduced to save initial investment in the combined mode.

Acknowledgements

The authors appreciate the financial support provided by the National Key Research and Development Program of China through Grant 2022YFB4200902 & 2022YFE0196500, the Non-carbon Energy Conversion and Utilization Institute under the Shanghai Class IV Peak Disciplinary Development Program, the Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation through the Grant LR20E060001 and the State Key Laboratory of Clean Energy Utilization through the Grant ZJUCEU2020006.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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