IEEE Access (Jan 2024)

Multi-Step-Ahead Wind Speed Forecast System: Hybrid Multivariate Decomposition and Feature Selection-Based Gated Additive Tree Ensemble Model

  • Lionel P. Joseph,
  • Ravinesh C. Deo,
  • David Casillas-Perez,
  • Ramendra Prasad,
  • Nawin Raj,
  • Sancho Salcedo-Sanz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3392899
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 58750 – 58777

Abstract

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Wind, being a clean and sustainable resource, boasts environmental advantages. However, its electricity generation faces challenges due to unpredictable variations in wind speed (WS). Accurate predictions of these variations would allow mixed grids to adjust their energy mix in real-time, ensuring overall stability. For this purpose, the paper develops a new hybrid gated additive tree ensemble (H-GATE) model for accurate multi-step-ahead WS predictions. First, the multivariate empirical mode decomposition (MEMD) simultaneously demarcates the multivariate data into intrinsic mode functions (IMFs) and residuals. These components represent underlying trends, periodicity, and stochastic patterns in WS variations. The IMF and residual components are pooled in respective sets, and an opposition-based whale optimization algorithm (OBWOA) is applied for dimensionality reduction. The selected features are used by GATE tuned with Bayesian optimization (BO) to forecast the individual IMF and residual components. The outputs are summed to obtain the final multi-step-ahead WS forecasts. The proposed H-GATE is benchmarked against standalone (S-GATE, S-CLSTM, and S-ABR) and hybrid (H-CLSTM and H-ABR) models. Based on all statistical metrics and diagnostic plots, H-GATE outperforms all comparative models at all forecast horizons, accumulating the lowest mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 6.13 - 9.93% (at $t_{L+1}$ ), 8.67 - 14.07% (at $t_{L+2}$ ), and 11.60 - 18.37% (at $t_{L+3}$ ) across all three sites. This novel multi-step-ahead WS forecasting strategy can significantly benefit grid operators by helping anticipate fluctuations in wind power generation. This can assist in optimizing energy dispatch schedules, reducing reliance on backup power sources, and enhancing overall grid stability. Practical implementation of this method can help meet the rising energy demands through renewable wind energy.

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