Market Power and Distributed Solar Integration in Microgrids under Limited Regulation
Elsa Bou Gebrael,
Majd Olleik and
Sebastian Zwickl-Bernhard
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Elsa Bou Gebrael: American University of Beirut, Maroun Semaan Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Industrial Engineering and Management Department Beirut, Lebanon
Majd Olleik: American University of Beirut, Maroun Semaan Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Industrial Engineering and Management Department Beirut, Lebanon
Sebastian Zwickl-Bernhard: Vienna University of Technology, Institute of Energy Systems and Electrical Drives, Energy Economics Group
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Abstract:
Decentralized electricity systems increasingly emerge where centralized grids fail to provide reliable supply. In such settings, privately operated neighborhood microgrids, often based on diesel generators, exhibit significant market power, limited regulatory oversight, and high environmental externalities. In parallel, households increasingly deploy off-grid solar photovoltaic (PV) systems to gain control over electricity supply. However, these systems suffer from curtailed excess generation during peak solar hours and unreliable access at other times. While prior studies have optimized microgrids in low-reliability grid contexts from a techno-economic perspective, they largely neglect the market power exerted by monopolistic private generators. This paper addresses this gap by developing a bi-level game-theoretic model that enables household-generated electricity to be fed into the microgrid while explicitly accounting for the market power of a neighborhood diesel generator company (DGC). The regulator sets price and feed-in-tariff caps to maximize household economic surplus (HES), while the DGC acts as a profit-maximizing agent controlling access and supply. The model is illustrated using high-resolution empirical data from Lebanon. Results show that: (i) price and feed-in-tariff caps substantially increase HES and consistently induce significant household PV feed-in to the microgrid; (ii) higher DGC budgets or greater PV-owner penetration lead to pronounced gains in HES; and (iii) the renewable energy share reaches 60% under base conditions and approaches 100% at sufficiently high budgets or PV-owner penetration levels, compared to 0% under the status quo.
Date: 2026-03, Revised 2026-05
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-com, nep-ene, nep-env and nep-reg
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