Aggregators are playing an increasingly crucial role in the integration of
renewable generation in power systems. However, the intermittent nature of
renewable generation makes market interactions of aggregators difficult to
monitor and regulate, raising concerns about potential market manipulation by
aggregators. In this paper, we study this issue by quantifying the profit an
aggregator can obtain through strategic curtailment of generation in an
electricity market. We show that, while the problem of maximizing the benefit
from curtailment is hard in general, efficient algorithms exist when the
topology of the network is radial (acyclic). Further, we highlight that
significant increases in profit are possible via strategic curtailment in
practical settings