DynaGrow – Multi-Objective Optimization for Energy Cost-Efficient Control of Supplemental Light in Greenhouses

Jan Corfixen Sørensen, Katrine Heinsvig Kjær, Carl-Otto Ottosen, Bo Nørregaard Jørgensen

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

The Danish greenhouse horticulture industry utilized 0.8 % of the total national electricity consumption in 2009 and it is estimated that 75 % of this is used for supplemental lighting. The increase in energy prices is a challenge for growers, and need to be addressed by utilizing supplemental light at low prices without compromising the growth and quality of the crop. Optimization of such multiple conflicting objectives requires advanced strategies that are currently not supported in existing greenhouse climate control systems. It is costly to incorporate advanced optimization functionality into existing systems as the software is not designed for such changes. The growers can not afford to buy new systems or new hardware to address the changing objectives. DynaGrow is build on top of existing climate computers to utilize existing infrastructure. The greenhouse climate control problem is characterized by non-linearity, stochasticity, non-convexity, high dimension of decision variables and an uncertain dynamic environment. Together, these mathematical properties are handled by applying a Multi-Objective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA) for discovering and exploiting critical trade-offs when optimizing the greenhouse climate. To formulate advanced objectives, DynaGrow integrates local climate data, electricity energy price forecasts and outdoor weather forecasts. In spring 2015, one greenhouse experiment was executed to evaluate the effects of DynaGrow. The experiment was run as three treatments in three identical greenhouse compartments. One treatment was controlled by a standard control system and the other three treatments were controlled by different DynaGrow configurations. A number of different plant species and batches were grown in the three treatments over a season. The results from DynaGrow treatment demonstrated that it was clearly possible to produce a number of different sales-ready plant species and at the same time optimize the utility of supplemental light at low electricity prices without compromising product quality.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationECTA 2016 - 8th International Conference on Evolutionary Computation Theory and Applications
Number of pages9
Publication dateJun 2016
Pages1-9
Article numberECTA 2016 #16
ISBN (Electronic)9789897582011
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2016
EventECTA 2016: ECTA 35h Annual Conference - Dubrovnik, Croatia
Duration: 22 Jun 201625 Jun 2016
http://conference.ecta.org/

Conference

ConferenceECTA 2016
Country/TerritoryCroatia
CityDubrovnik
Period22/06/201625/06/2016
Internet address

Keywords

  • DynaGrow
  • Energy
  • Optimization
  • Supplemental Light
  • greenhouses

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