Topic Editors

Department of Electrical Engineering, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Cartagena, Spain
Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Cartagena, Spain
Department of Electrical Engineering, Universidad de La Rioja, La Rioja, Spain

Short-Term Load Forecasting

Abstract submission deadline
closed (31 July 2024)
Manuscript submission deadline
30 September 2024
Viewed by
24009

Topic Information

Dear Colleagues,

It is well known that short-term load forecasting (STLF) plays a key role in the formulation of economic, reliable, and secure operating strategies for power systems (planning, scheduling, maintenance, and control processes, among others), and this topic has been an important issue for several decades. However, there is still much progress to be made in this field. The deployment of enabling technologies (e.g., smart meters and sub-metering) has made high granular data available for many customer segments and many tasks—for instance, it has made load forecasting tasks feasible at several demand aggregation levels. The first challenge in this area is the improvement of STLF models and their performance at new demand aggregation levels. Specifically, individual level demand forecasting, which is more challenging than aggregated demand, should be addressed in a comprehensive manner, helping customers in decision making. Moreover, the increasing inclusion of renewable energies (wind and solar power) in the power system, and the necessity of including more flexibility through demand response initiatives, have introduced greater uncertainties, creating new challenges for STLF in future power systems. Other relevant issues are net demand forecasting in “prosumers” (i.e., the integrated or disaggregated forecast of demand and renewable generation), and demand forecasting by end-uses in large or aggregated customers.

Many techniques have been proposed for STLF, including traditional statistical models (such as SARIMA, ARMAX, exponential smoothing, linear and non-linear models, etc.) and artificial intelligence techniques (such as fuzzy regression, artificial neural networks, support vector regression, tree-based regression, ensemble methods, stacked methods, etc.). In the case of individual loads, the techniques for peak detection and extreme values are of great importance. Furthermore, distribution planning needs, as well as grid modernization, have initiated the development of hierarchical load forecasting. Analogously, the need to face new uncertainty sources in the power system has given more importance to probabilistic load forecasting in recent years.

This Topic is concerned with both fundamental research on STLF methodologies and its practical application to power systems, aiming at exploring the challenges that will be faced by a more distributed power system in the future.

All submitted contributions must be based on the rigorous examination of the mentioned approaches and demonstrate a theoretically sound framework; submissions lacking such a scientific approach are discouraged. It is recommended that existing/presented approaches are validated using real practical applications.

Prof. Dr. Antonio Gabaldón
Prof. Dr. María Carmen Ruiz-Abellón
Prof. Dr. Luis Alfredo Fernández-Jiménez
Topic Editors

Keywords

  • short-term load forecasting and distributed energy resources
  • short-term load forecasting and demand aggregation levels
  • statistical forecasting models (SARIMA, ARMAX, exponential smoothing, linear and non-linear regression, etc.)
  • artificial neural networks (ANNs)
  • fuzzy regression models
  • tree-based regression methods
  • stacked and ensemble methods
  • evolutionary algorithms
  • deep learning architectures
  • support vector regression (SVR)
  • robust load forecasting
  • hierarchical and probabilistic forecasting
  • hybrid and combined models
  • renewable generation forecasting
  • short-term net demand forecasting
  • inference on extreme and rare events
  • end-use demand forecasting

Participating Journals

Journal Name Impact Factor CiteScore Launched Year First Decision (median) APC
Algorithms
algorithms
1.8 4.1 2008 15 Days CHF 1600 Submit
Applied Sciences
applsci
2.5 5.3 2011 17.8 Days CHF 2400 Submit
Energies
energies
3.0 6.2 2008 17.5 Days CHF 2600 Submit
Forecasting
forecasting
2.3 5.8 2019 24.2 Days CHF 1800 Submit
Sustainability
sustainability
3.3 6.8 2009 20 Days CHF 2400 Submit

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Published Papers (13 papers)

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