Optimal Coordination of Local Flexibility from Electric Vehicles with Social Impact Consideration
Si Chen, Benoit Couraud, Sonam Norbu, Merlinda Andoni, Zafar Iqbal, Sasa Djokic, Desen Kirli, Satria Putra Kanugrahan, Paolo Cherubini, Susan Krumdieck, Valentin Robu, David Flynn

TL;DR
This paper presents a social impact-aware optimization method for smart EV charging that significantly reduces renewable energy curtailment while considering user habits and social factors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel AC OPF formulation incorporating social impact indicators and scalable clustering techniques for EV flexibility coordination.
Findings
Curtailed wind energy reduced by 99.5% during peak periods.
Method improves EV flexibility acceptability by aligning with user habits.
Scalable approach demonstrated on the Orkney grid with multi-year EV data.
Abstract
The integration of renewable energy sources (RES) and the convergence of transport electrification, creates a significant challenge for distribution network management e.g. voltage and frequency violations, particularly in rural and remote areas. This paper investigates how smart charging of electric vehicles (EVs) can help reduce renewable energy curtailment and alleviate stress on local distribution networks. We implement a customised AC Optimal Power Flow (AC OPF) formulation which integrates into the optimisation an indicator reflecting the social impact of flexibility from EV users, based on the analysis of historical EV charging behaviours. The contribution of EV owners to reducing wind curtailment is optimised to enhance the acceptability of flexibility procurement, as the method targets EV users whose charging habits are most likely to align with flexibility requirements. Our…
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