Residential Battery Pooling Under Backup Commitments
Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 22:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Pooling batteries across homes still improves margins even when each keeps its own backup reserve, though gains shrink as backup obligations grow stricter.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
When dispatch is coordinated across homes yet each battery retains its own state of charge and must satisfy its own backup commitment, the pooled model predictive controller still achieves higher firm margins than standalone independent control. The pooling benefit declines from 1.49 to 1.27 dollars per home per week as the backup cap rises from two to twenty-four hours, amounting to 13.5 percent down to 11.8 percent of the standalone margin which itself stays near 11 dollars per home per week.
What carries the argument
Model predictive control optimization that maximizes expected market revenue while enforcing individual battery dynamics and household-specific backup energy reserves.
If this is right
- Providers can still capture coordination gains while offering household-level backup products.
- The relative benefit of pooling is larger when backup caps are shorter.
- Standalone margins remain stable near eleven dollars per home per week across the cap range.
- Coordination value declines smoothly rather than disappearing at longer backup durations.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same per-home constraint approach could be tested on other shared resources such as vehicle-to-grid fleets with minimum range guarantees.
- Relaxing the perfect-forecast assumption inside the MPC might reveal how robust the pooling advantage remains under price or load uncertainty.
- If scaled, the modest but persistent benefit could influence contract design for combined market-service and backup offerings.
Load-bearing premise
The 543 homes already able to meet backup needs on their own, together with the two-to-twenty-four-hour caps, represent the relevant range for assessing pooling value under service constraints.
What would settle it
Applying the same controller to homes that cannot meet backup needs independently, or measuring real outage events where pooled homes lose backup power more often than the model predicts.
Figures
read the original abstract
Residential batteries increasingly serve two roles: they can earn money by arbitraging wholesale prices and providing grid services, and they provide backup power during outages. This dual use creates a basic tradeoff between earning market value and preserving outage readiness. Coordination across many batteries can help, but a provider cannot treat the fleet as a single virtual battery when each household is promised its own backup protection. We compare standalone control, in which each home is dispatched independently, with pooling, in which homes are coordinated while each battery retains its own state of charge and household-specific backup requirement. Both regimes are implemented as model predictive control problems with 15-minute decision intervals and evaluated using household telemetry together with ERCOT market inputs. The empirical design focuses on the 543 homes in our sample that can support at least one backup product in standalone operation and studies backup caps ranging from 2 to 24 hours. Lower caps relax backup obligations, while the 24-hour cap coincides with assigning each home its own longest feasible backup tier. Pooling remains beneficial in this service-constrained setting, but its value declines smoothly as backup obligations tighten. Standalone firm margin ranges from \$11.06 per home per week at the 2-hour cap to \$10.79 at the 24-hour cap, while pooling benefit falls from \$1.49 to \$1.27 per home per week. Relative to standalone firm margin, pooling is worth about 13.5% at the 2-hour cap and about 11.8% at the 24-hour cap. Coordination therefore still helps after preserving household-level backup guarantees, but its value declines as backup obligations tighten.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that pooling residential batteries under household-specific backup commitments remains beneficial compared to standalone control, even as backup obligations tighten. Using model predictive control with 15-minute intervals on telemetry from 543 homes (selected as those able to support at least one backup product standalone) and ERCOT market data, standalone firm margins range from $11.06 to $10.79 per home per week across 2- to 24-hour caps, while pooling adds $1.49 to $1.27 (13.5% down to 11.8% relative benefit).
Significance. If the results hold, they demonstrate that coordination value persists under realistic per-home backup constraints, which is relevant for virtual power plant and residential storage service design. The forward simulation on independent price and load data provides a non-circular empirical basis, and the smooth decline in pooling benefit with increasing caps is a clear, policy-relevant pattern.
major comments (1)
- [Empirical Design (sample selection described in abstract and methods)] The headline quantitative claims (pooling benefit of $1.49–$1.27 per home per week and 13.5–11.8% relative to standalone) rest exclusively on the 543-home subset that can already support standalone backup. The manuscript reports no results on the unfiltered population and no sensitivity check that re-includes homes unable to meet standalone requirements. This filtering choice is load-bearing for the reported percentages and the smooth-decline pattern, because pooling could enable backup services or produce different marginal value once the constraint is relaxed to fleet level.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract could briefly state the size of the original dataset before the 543-home filter to clarify the selection fraction and its potential impact on representativeness.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive feedback on our manuscript. We address the major comment on empirical design below and will revise the text to strengthen the justification for our sample selection.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The headline quantitative claims (pooling benefit of $1.49–$1.27 per home per week and 13.5–11.8% relative to standalone) rest exclusively on the 543-home subset that can already support standalone backup. The manuscript reports no results on the unfiltered population and no sensitivity check that re-includes homes unable to meet standalone requirements. This filtering choice is load-bearing for the reported percentages and the smooth-decline pattern, because pooling could enable backup services or produce different marginal value once the constraint is relaxed to fleet level.
Authors: We appreciate the referee's observation on the sample selection. The 543-home subset consists of those homes in our telemetry data that can support at least one backup product under standalone operation, as stated in the abstract and methods. This choice is intentional: it permits a direct comparison of standalone versus pooled control while holding the household-specific backup commitments constant across both regimes. Homes unable to meet standalone requirements would receive no backup service under independent control, so including them would compare different service levels rather than isolating the incremental value of coordination under per-household constraints—the central question of the paper. We will revise the methods and discussion sections to state this rationale more explicitly and to note the implications for generalizability to the broader population. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: results from direct forward simulation on external data
full rationale
The paper evaluates standalone versus pooled battery control via model predictive control applied to real household telemetry and ERCOT price series. All reported margins and pooling benefits (e.g., $1.49 to $1.27 per home per week) are computed outputs of these simulations rather than quantities obtained by fitting parameters to the target statistics or by reducing equations to self-referential definitions. No self-citations, uniqueness theorems, or ansatzes are invoked to justify the central quantitative claims; the derivation chain consists of standard optimization and data-driven evaluation that remains independent of the reported percentages.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Model predictive control with 15-minute decision intervals accurately represents optimal battery dispatch under price and load uncertainty for both standalone and pooled regimes.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We compare standalone control... with pooling... both regimes are implemented as model predictive control problems... reserve targets rt,h+1 = q(0.90)t,h+1 / ηdis
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Pooling benefit falls steadily... from $1.49 per home at the 2-hour cap to $1.27 at the 24-hour cap
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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