Statistical and economic evaluation of forecasts in electricity markets: beyond RMSE and MAE
Katarzyna Maciejowska,
Arkadiusz Lipiecki and
Bartosz Uniejewski
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
Electricity price forecasts are typically evaluated using accuracy measures such as RMSE and MAE, although these metrics often fail to reflect their economic value in operational decisions. This paper investigates which statistical properties of electricity price forecasts are most relevant for economic performance, using battery energy storage system (BESS) arbitrage as an application. We assess prediction quality along four dimensions: forecast accuracy, intraday error dispersion, association between predicted and realized prices, and the ability to identify daily price extrema. We construct a comprehensive pool of 192 hourly day-ahead electricity price forecasts and use it to evaluate the relationship between proposed quality measures and profits generated for two representative BESS configurations. The results show that traditional accuracy metrics are only weakly correlated with BESS income. At the same time, dispersion- and association-based measures better capture a forecast's economic value by reflecting its ability to reproduce daily price patterns. These findings demonstrate that incorporating complementary evaluation criteria may improve forecast selection and enhance the economic performance of BESS.
Date: 2025-11, Revised 2026-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene and nep-for
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Published in Energy Conversion and Management, 356, 121408, 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:arx:papers:2511.13616
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