6533b839fe1ef96bd12a6665

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Estimation of total electricity consumption curves by sampling in a finite population when some trajectories are partially unobserved

Camelia GogaHervé CardotAnne De Moliner

subject

Statistics and Probabilityconstructionkernel smoothingPopulationSurvey samplingimputation01 natural sciences010104 statistics & probability[MATH.MATH-ST]Mathematics [math]/Statistics [math.ST]0502 economics and businessStatisticsImputation (statistics)0101 mathematicseducationsurvey samplingfunctional data050205 econometrics Mathematicsconfidence bandsConsumption (economics)Estimationeducation.field_of_studymissing completely at randombusiness.industry05 social sciencesprincipal analysis by conditional estimationSampling (statistics)[MATH.MATH-PR]Mathematics [math]/Probability [math.PR]nearest neighboursKernel smoothervariance-estimationElectricityStatistics Probability and Uncertaintybusinessvariance approximation

description

International audience; Millions of smart meters that are able to collect individual load curves, that is, electricity consumption time series, of residential and business customers at fine scale time grids are now deployed by electricity companies all around the world. It may be complex and costly to transmit and exploit such a large quantity of information, therefore it can be relevant to use survey sampling techniques to estimate mean load curves of specific groups of customers. Data collection, like every mass process, may undergo technical problems at every point of the metering and collection chain resulting in missing values. We consider imputation approaches (linear interpolation, kernel smoothing, nearest neighbours, principal analysis by conditional estimation) that take advantage of the specificities of the data, that is to say the strong relation between the consumption at different instants of time. The performances of these techniques are compared on a real example of Irish electricity load curves under various scenarios of missing data. A general variance approximation of total estimators is also given which encompasses nearest neighbours, kernel smoothers imputation and linear imputation methods.

10.1002/cjs.11473https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01996996