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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2012

Incentives and security in electric distribution networks

Résumé

We study incentive problems in electricity distribution when customer energy usage is imperfectly observable by the utility. Thus, we assume that each customer has private information about the amount of his consumed energy. Imperfect observability of individual user demand results is non-technical energy losses. In developing countries, these losses amount to 20 − 30% per year, and are largely attributed to theft by residential customers. Reducing these losses will allow a marked increase in efficiency of the electricity distribution. Usage of smart energy management devices enables new functionalities and brings the potential for such increased efficiency. However, employing smart energy management devices also entails a new set of problems. Typically, such devices are commercially produced, and employ off-the-shelf information technology (IT) solutions with inherent security vulnerabilities. Thus, due to technology limitations and cost constraints, smart devices are vulnerable to tampering and may enable systemic energy theft, threatening to reduce, or even erase the gains in efficiency. In this paper, we address incentives of utility company to combat theft (i.e., non-technical losses), when utility is subject to rate (tariff) regulation. From our analysis, such regulated utilities invest less than socially optimal in theft reduction. We suggest that regulators should include explicit targets for the allowable losses to remedy the problem of incentive misalignment.
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Dates et versions

hal-00752604 , version 1 (16-11-2012)

Identifiants

Citer

Saurabh Amin, Galina A. Schwartz, Hamidou Tembine. Incentives and security in electric distribution networks. Third Conference on Decision and Game Theory for Security (GameSec), Nov 2012, Budapest, Hungary. pp.264-280, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-34266-0_16⟩. ⟨hal-00752604⟩
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