Approximately Socially-Optimal Decentralized Coalition Formation with Application to P2P Energy Sharing
Sid Chi-Kin Chau, Khaled Elbassioni, Yue Zhou

TL;DR
This paper analyzes decentralized coalition formation in P2P energy sharing, establishing theoretical bounds on efficiency loss and proposing algorithms, with empirical validation showing near-optimal outcomes in real-world scenarios.
Contribution
It provides the first theoretical bounds on the strong price-of-anarchy for fair cost-sharing mechanisms and develops decentralized algorithms for stable coalition formation in P2P energy sharing.
Findings
Fair cost-sharing mechanisms achieve near-optimal social cost with 95% efficiency.
Theoretical lower bound on the strong price-of-anarchy is logarithmic.
Empirical results confirm practical coalition stability and efficiency.
Abstract
The paradigm of P2P (peer-to-peer) economy has emerged in diverse areas. "P2P energy sharing" is a new form of P2P economy in the energy sector, which allows users to establish longer-term sharing arrangements of their local energy resources (e.g., rooftop PVs, home batteries) with joint optimized energy management. In such a P2P setting, a coalition of users is formed for sharing resources in a decentralized manner by self-interested users based on their individual preferences. A likely outcome of decentralized coalition formation will be a stable coalition structure, where no group of users could cooperatively opt out to form another coalition that induces higher preferences to all its members. Remarkably, there exist a number of fair cost-sharing mechanisms (e.g., equal-split, proportional-split, egalitarian and Nash bargaining solutions of bargaining games) that model practical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Applications · Game Theory and Voting Systems · Auction Theory and Applications
