EPSRC-SFI: Blockchain transactions in the electricity industry: beyond tokenised energy

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Engineering

Abstract

Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin are underpinned by a computer technology called blockchain, which has existed for around ten years. There are now proposals to use blockchain technologies to allow consumers to buy electricity directly from generators, in the form of tokenised energy.

This project will investigate the new opportunities that could arise if the trading of tokenised electricity gains broader adoption. In particular, the project will examine the role another new blockchain technology, known as smart contracts, can play in such a business landscape. Smart contracts allow financial and business arrangements to be codified directly into the blockchain itself, where they execute in a way that cannot be interfered with. This project will explore the potential for deploying smart contracts in various new roles connected with tokenised energy trading, for instance:

- to allow trading of other useful electricity services, such as targeting and rewarding reductions of consumption at times of high system stress;

- to coordinate the generation and consumption of electricity within local energy communities so they do not burden the physical utility network;

- to provide financial functions such as price guarantees for consumers or revenue-sharing schemes for community-owned energy resources.

A particular focus of the project will be on renewable energy: can these blockchain technologies speed up the decarbonisation of electricity grids?; and can empowering communities, consumers and renewable generators with new financial tools create a cleaner and more collaborative electricity system?

Overall, this project is a forward-looking piece of research which will guide how system operators adapt to blockchain technologies. The goal is give a well-rounded perspective on the full potential value that can be captured, rather than narrowly focusing on just the trading of tokenised energy itself. The project will show how positive interaction effects can arise, so that a vibrant blockchain sector can emerge across the electricity value chain, with each new piece of smart contract functionality complementing and adding value to the entire ecosystem.

Planned Impact

This project aims to demonstrate how blockchain smart contracts can create a participatory financial ecosystem that offers value across the electricity sector.

Prosumers (consumers who own and proactively manage distributed energy resources) will benefit from new smart contracts that increase the utilisation of their energy resources, and de-risk their ownership. Smart contracts will be designed that facilitate the formation of cooperative federations between groups of prosumers, allowing them to enter into larger and longer-term energy and flexibility contracts. Hedging and risk-sharing arrangements built into the smart contracts will help address electricity price uncertainty, variable renewable generation and penalties for flexibility service non-delivery.

Blockchain-enabled peer-to-peer trading offers value for prosumers, and if properly managed, for the system as a whole. Matching local renewable generation with flexible demand can reduce upstream power flows and losses, alleviate the need for renewable curtailment and help defer costly distribution, transmission and generation infrastructure upgrades. However, a major unresolved challenge is how network constraints can be managed, without re-introducing a distribution system operator as a central authority. The project will address this by developing a novel methodology for calculating peer-to-peer network incentives, in the form of fees and subsidies, which help steer blockchain markets away from outcomes which would violate network constraints.

System operators will be able to make use of smart contracts to procure flexibility services from prosumers. Since, smart contracts are decentralised and directly negotiated, they are particularly suited for establishing transparent and competitive markets. Integrating owners of smaller scale flexible resources (e.g. electric vehicles, heat pumps) into flexibility markets would help increase liquidity and allow constraints to be managed on a more granular level. This is expected to become increasingly important, given government policies supporting the rapid electrification of heat and transport.

Overall, the aim of the project is to go beyond how blockchain smart contracts can benefit particular electricity market participants, by articulating how they can create value across the sector. Ultimately, the successful translation of the technologies developed during the project would be reflected in lower energy bills for consumers, even as the UK and the Republic of Ireland pursue ambitious decarbonisation objectives.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title Great Britain High-Fidelity Transmission Network and Balancing Mechanism Data 
Description High-Fidelity data for the Great Britain transmission network and balancing mechanism. This combines unit-level market data from Elexon and detailed network data from the National Grid 10 Year Statement. It contains data for 1882 nodes, 2769 lines and 5002 balancing mechanism units. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This model was used for analysis conducted for BEIS to investigate the value of locational enhancements to the UK's Contracts for Difference Auction scheme. A paper on this has been published: Savelli, I., Hardy, J., Hepburn, C., & Morstyn, T. (2022). Putting wind and solar in their place: Internalising congestion and other system-wide costs with enhanced contracts for difference in Great Britain. Energy Economics. 
URL https://github.com/EsaLaboratory/EnhancedCfD
 
Description Energy Blockchain Collaboration with University College Dublin 
Organisation University College Dublin
Country Ireland 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The project started in August 2021. We are holiding fortnightly meetings with Dr Cuffe and his research team. We have developed an initial design for a blockchain smart contract which would enable the flexible formation of federated power plants made up of small- and medium-scale distributed energy resource owners, enabling them to offer balancing services to National Grid ESO.
Collaborator Contribution The project started in August 2021. Dr Cuffe and his research team are participating in fortnightly meetings. Dr Cuffe and his team have an initial proposal for blockchain-based decentralised finanacing mechanisms to help facilitate community financing of renewable generation.
Impact Since our project started in August 2021, we expect to have collaborative outputs later this year.
Start Year 2021
 
Description INFORMS Annual Meeting 2021 - Chaired Panel Session on "Market Design for Smart Local Energy Systems" 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited to chair a panel session on "Market Design for Smart Local Energy Systems" at the INFORMS 2021 Annual Meeting (held virtually). The INFORMS Annual Meeting is the main gathering of the The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences. The aim of the session was to bring together researchers working at the forefront of energy market design to discuss the state-of-the-art and identify impactful research directions.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL http://meetings.informs.org/wordpress/anaheim2021/schedule
 
Description INFORMS Annual Meeting 2022 - Panel Session on Market Design in Future Energy Systems 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited to present at a Panel Session on "Market design in future energy systems" at the INFORMS 2022 Annual Meeting. The INFORMS Annual Meeting is the main conference of The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences. The talk had approximately 30 attendees, including academics from engineering, economics and computer science as well as policymakers and industry professionals.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://meetings.informs.org/wordpress/indianapolis2022/
 
Description Seminar for the Iran Local Energy Market Committee 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Presentation of research to the Iran Local Energy Market Committee in collaboration with the Iran Future Energy Market Forum and Iran Energy Agency. 30+ attendees showed interest with lots of questions at end of presentation.

Outcomes:
- New acdemic collaboration established with Dr Mohsen Khorasany and Dr Amin Shokri Gzafroudi on the design of integrated markets for peer-to-peer energy trading and distribution system flexibility.
- Asked to present a webinar for the second season of the Iran Local Energy Market Forum on tools, libraries, and softwares related to modelling local energy markets
- Asked to contribute two book chapters for a new book being published by Springer, "Trading in Local Energy Markets and Energy Communities: Concepts, Structures and Technologies"
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVUJyd-CzaE