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China Power System Transformation

Summary and conclusions

Changes to electricity tariffs could help optimise the deployment and use of distributed energy resources (DER).

As DER become more relevant in the power system, individual customers (industrial, commercial and residential) increasingly have a choice between either obtaining electricity from the grid or relying on various self-supply options. While this trend is only emerging today, it will greatly increase the importance of accurate retail electricity tariffs, as the profitability of a distributed energy resource often critically depends on the tariff system. In addition, unlocking flexibility from these sources is only possible if there is an economic signal to make a more dynamic operating pattern profitable.

Standard tariff systems do not usually differentiate prices depending on time of use and do not capture a customer’s contribution to peak electricity demand explicitly at a lower voltage level. Such a tariff environment provides little to no commercial incentive to invest in and operate DER or demand response in a system-optimal manner. As detailed in this report, a shift to more advanced tariffs that differentiate prices by time of day will unlock optimal contributions from DER.

Integrated long-term planning that includes demand shaping and advanced options for energy storage is a crucial foundation for a successful transformation of the power system.

Power system transformation substantially increases the complexity of system planning. Simply put, traditional power sector planning usually focuses on finding a suitable plan for adding large-scale generation capacity to meet expected load growth. Based on this, transmission system planning determines the need for grid expansion and reinforcement.

By contrast, a system featuring a large share of VRE (both large-scale and distributed) and DER (EVs, batteries), and much smarter demand, provides many more options for the future evolution of the system. For example, ultimately a mix of VRE, demand-shaping options and storage may be more cost-effective than building new large-scale generation capacity. Moreover, VRE impacts the power system at all timescales, which means that planning studies also need to examine operational aspects and system stability in a much more sophisticated way than in the past. Finally, the coupling of the electricity system with other parts of the energy system can reduce overall energy system costs while meeting environmental and reliability objectives. Capturing such synergies in planning requires the appropriate inclusion of these sectors in power system planning.

International implications

Accelerated progress on power sector optimisation could bring substantial benefits for China and the world.

China’s power system is the largest national power system in the world; it accounted for 25% of global electricity consumption in 2017 and its share is expected to rise to 28% by 2035 in the NPS. Consequently, optimisation of the Chinese power system has immediate global effects, simply because by itself it accounts for such a substantial share.

The accelerated transformation of the Chinese power system could make a significant contribution to limiting climate change in line with the Paris Agreement. As the modelling conducted for this study demonstrates, improved operations and advanced power system flexibility options can deliver substantial emissions savings while reducing overall system costs.

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