A dynamic game theoretic framework for process plant competitive upgrade and production planning |
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Authors: | Philip Tominac Vladimir Mahalec |
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Affiliation: | Dept. of Chemical Engineering, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, ON L8S 4L8, Canada |
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Abstract: | A dynamic potential game theoretic production planning framework is presented in which production plants are treated as individual competing entities and competition occurs dynamically over a discrete finite time horizon. A modified Cournot oligopoly with sticky prices provides the basis for dynamic game theoretic competition in a multimarket nonlinear and nonconvex production planning model wherein market price adapts to a value that clears cumulative market supply. The framework is used to investigate a petrochemical refining scenario in which a single inefficient refiner faces elimination by its competitors; we demonstrate that there exist conditions under which the threatened refiner may upgrade itself to become competitive and escape the threat, or alternatively in which the threat of elimination is illegitimate and the refiner is effectively safe in the given market configuration. Globally optimal dynamic Nash equilibrium production trajectories are presented for each case. © 2017 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 64: 916–925, 2018 |
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Keywords: | production planning strategic planning dynamic game potential game Nash equilibrium |
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