Applied Energy | 2021

A new interval prediction methodology for short-term electric load forecasting based on pattern recognition

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Demand prediction has been playing an increasingly important role for electricity management, and is fundamental to the corresponding decision-making. Due to the high variability of the increasing electrical load, and of the new renewable energy technologies, power systems are facing technical challenges. Thus, short-term forecasting has crucial utility for generating dispatching commands, managing the spot market, and detecting anomalies. The techniques associated with machine learning are those currently preferred by researchers for making predictions. However, there are concerns regarding limiting the uncertainty of the obtained results. In this work, a statistical methodology with a simple implementation is presented for obtaining a prediction interval with a time horizon of seven days (15-min time steps), thereby limiting the uncertainty. The methodology is based on pattern recognition and inferential statistics. The predictions made differ from those from a classical approach which predicts point values \u200b\u200bby trying to minimize the error. In this study, 96 intervals of absorbed active power are predicted for each day, one for every 15\xa0min, along with a previously defined probability associated with the real values \u200b\u200bbeing within each obtained interval. To validate the effectiveness of the predictions, the results are compared with those from techniques with the best recent results, such as artificial neural network (ANN) long short-term memory (LSTM) models. A case study in Ecuador is analyzed, resulting in a prediction interval coverage probability (PICP) of 81.1% and prediction interval normalized average width (PINAW) of 10.13%, with a confidence interval of 80%.

Volume 297
Pages 117173
DOI 10.1016/J.APENERGY.2021.117173
Language English
Journal Applied Energy

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