Optimizing electric fleet management with vehicle-to-grid services for profitability and grid stability: a case study of ridehailing in Lisbon

dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Elèctrica
dc.contributor
Instituto Superior Técnico Lisboa
dc.contributor
Díaz González, Francisco
dc.contributor
Moura, Filipe
dc.contributor.author
Curado Fernandes, Nuno Afonso
dc.date.accessioned
2025-11-08T08:18:26Z
dc.date.available
2025-11-08T08:18:26Z
dc.date.issued
2025-09
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/445113
dc.identifier
PRISMA-199655
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/445113
dc.description.abstract
This dissertation assesses the economic viability of Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) participation for an electric ride-hail fleet operating out of Lisbon while also examining the service and regulatory landscape in which V2G is economically justified. Realistic traffic generation using a ride-hailing fleet of twelve vehicles is integrated with mixed-integer linear. It is programmed to pre-screen charging and discharging over 15-minute intervals based on Portuguese day-ahead pricing and a Monte Carlo approach for battery round-trip efficiency and degradation penalty sampling. Three scenarios are analysed: (i) a base case with voluntary, price-driven participation under current market conditions; (ii) a minimum energy dispatch requirement; and (iii) minimum dispatch combined with availability-based capacity remuneration. Without incentives, profitable V2G events are rare: in the base case, only 1.6% of simulations exported any energy, indicating that price arbitrage alone seldom justifies discharge. Imposing a minimum-dispatch requirement generally erodes value. By contrast, introducing capacity payments shifts outcomes decisively positive: approximately 70% of simulations become profitable, with a viability threshold — the capacity tariff at which at least half of cases yield a positive Net V2G Benefit — close to €0.062 /kWh. Precision matters: short, well-timed discharges proved more effective than bulk delivery. Ultimately, V2G can provide an additional revenue stream and electric grid revenuegenerating service when fleets can afford idle periods; however, to ensure consistent economic viability, selective engagement with market compensation elements is crucial. This study contributes to operational decision-making for V2G fleets and to the design of regulatory policies, while paving the way for future studies involving aggregators, capital investment, and the expansion to other variable load processes, such as frequency regulation.
dc.description.abstract
Incoming
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
dc.rights
Open Access
dc.subject
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Enginyeria elèctrica
dc.subject
Electric vehicles
dc.subject
Electric networks
dc.subject
Urban transportation -- Lisbon
dc.subject
Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G); Ride-hailing fleets; Optimisation; Monte Carlo simulation; Capacity remuneration; Portugal
dc.subject
Vehicles elèctrics
dc.subject
Xarxes elèctriques
dc.subject
Transport urbà -- Lisboa
dc.title
Optimizing electric fleet management with vehicle-to-grid services for profitability and grid stability: a case study of ridehailing in Lisbon
dc.type
Master thesis
dc.coverage
east=-9.1393366; north=38.7222524; name=Lisboa, Portugal


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