JOURNAL ARTICLE

Short-term forecasting of solar irradiance using decision tree-based models and non-parametric quantile regression

Amon MasachePrecious MdlongwaDaniel MaposaCaston Sigauke

Year: 2024 Journal:   PLoS ONE Vol: 19 (12)Pages: e0312814-e0312814   Publisher: Public Library of Science

Abstract

The renewable energy industry requires accurate forecasts of intermittent solar irradiance (SI) to effectively manage solar power generation and supply. Introducing the random forests (RFs) model and its hybridisation with quantile regression modelling, the quantile regression random forest (QRRF), can help improve the forecasts’ accuracy. This paper assesses the RFs and QRRF models against the quantile generalised additive model (QGAM) by evaluating their forecast performances. A simulation study of multivariate data-generating processes was carried out to compare the forecasting accuracy of the models when predicting global horizontal solar irradiance. The QRRF and QGAM are completely new forecasting frameworks for SI studies, to the best of our knowledge. Simulation results suggested that the introduced QRRF compared well with the QGAM when predicting the forecast distribution. However, the evaluations of the pinball loss scores and mean absolute scaled errors demonstrated a clear superiority of the QGAM. Similar results were obtained in an application to real-life data. Therefore, we recommend that the QGAM be preferred ahead of decision tree-based models when predicting solar irradiance. However, the QRRF model can be used alternatively to predict the forecast distribution. Both the QGAM and QRRF modelling frameworks went beyond representing forecast uncertainty of SI as probability distributions around a prediction interval to give complete information through the estimation of quantiles. Most SI studies conducted are residual and/or non-parametric modelling that are limited to represent information about the conditional mean distribution. Extensions of the QRRF and QGAM frameworks can be made to model other renewable sources of energy that have meteorological characteristics similar to solar irradiance.

Keywords:
Term (time) Decision tree Quantile Quantile regression Parametric statistics Statistics Econometrics Solar irradiance Irradiance Cross-sectional regression Regression analysis Computer science Environmental science Mathematics Machine learning Meteorology Geography Bayesian multivariate linear regression Physics

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2
Cited By
1.28
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
62
Refs
0.80
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Solar Radiation and Photovoltaics
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Energy Load and Power Forecasting
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Grey System Theory Applications
Social Sciences →  Decision Sciences →  Management Science and Operations Research

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