ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY

Similar documents
Interconnector participation in Capacity Remuneration Mechanisms

ARE MARKETS DEAD? ARE WE HEADING FOR A REGULATED FUTURE? DOES COMPETITION STILL STAND A CHANCE?

STATEMENT ON SSE S APPROACH TO HEDGING 14 November 2018

Integrated Single Electricity Market (I-SEM)

RESEARCH ON THE EFFECTS OF A CARBON PRICE FLOOR

Wholesale power market challenges:

Volatility, risk, and risk-premium in German and Continental power markets. Stefan Judisch Supply & Trading GmbH 3 rd April 2014

Volatility, risk, and risk-premium in German and Continental power markets

The basics of energy trading. Edgar Wilton

Ireland in the wider European energy market

ICIS Energy Forum. Power and Carbon Markets. 1

Access to Market. REA EMR event 27 th March 2013

The role of the spot market in successful demand side management. James Matthys-Donnadieu Brussels,

Designing Energy Markets for the Future

20 years operation of the Nordic electricity market

Electricity trading and risk management in liberalised market

Brexit and electricity interconnectors. Jason Mann

Ex-ante trade of balancing power reserves in German electricity markets The cure to the missing money or a new disease?*

Capacity mechanisms in Europe

Evolution of intraday and balancing markets: towards a vision of harmonized cross-border opportunities

Impacts of Marginal Loss Implementation in ERCOT

The Road to the I-SEM

Nordic Market Design Forum Feasibility study. Final report. September 2017

Marcel Cailliau, GDF Suez (Electrabel)

The RES-induced Switching Effect Across Fossil Fuels: An Analysis of the Italian Day-ahead and Balancing Prices

Operationalising regional adequacy

***I DRAFT REPORT. EN United in diversity EN. European Parliament 2016/0379(COD)

The policy and regulatory aspects of a bankable solar power project. Uzbekistan Energy Forum, London 18 April 2018 Louis Skyner Partner

ISO Transmission Planning Process. Supplemental Sensitivity Analysis: Risks of early economic retirement of gas fleet

Present: Philippe de LADOUCETTE, Chairman, Olivier CHALLAN BELVAL, Hélène GASSIN, Jean-Pierre SOTURA and Michel THIOLLIERE, Commissioners.

How can power market design unlock flexibility? The role of auctions for Intraday Trading

SSE Consolidated Segmental Statement (CSS) - year ending 31 March 2013

CROSS BORDER CAPACITY ALLOCATION FOR THE EXCHANGE OF ANCILLARY SERVICES

Quick Guide to the Integrated Single Electricity Market. Version 1

Half Year Results 6 Months Ended 30 June July 2018

Power Trading in the Coupled European Markets

The impact of regulatory changes on trading activities. Platts European Gas Summit September 29 30, 2014 Kempinski Hotel Bristol Berlin, Germany

ISG202-SPAR REPORTING ON JANUARY 2018 SYSTEM PRICE ANALYSIS REPORT 1 SYSTEM PRICES AND LENGTH

SSE Consolidated Segmental Statement (CSS) - year ending 31 March 2014

Full Year Results 12 Months Ended 31 December February 2018

State of play of capacity markets in Europe Eurelectric Conference 'Capacity markets - delivering security of supply in the IEM' 04 March 2015

Electricity Market Reform

TNUoS Tariffs in 10 minutes March 2018

Cross border participation in the capacity mechanism. Sharing the spoils...

ELECTRICITY BALANCING IN EUROPE

Workshop on Regional Electricity Trade and Market Development

Electricity Markets. Prof. Dr. G. Erdmann Fachgebiet Energiesysteme / TU Berlin Einsteinufer 25 / TA 8 (Room TA 033) D Berlin

The Nordic Market Model 10 Years of Experience

ISG206-SPAR REPORTING ON MAY 2018 SYSTEM PRICE ANALYSIS REPORT 1 SYSTEM PRICES AND LENGTH

Capacity Calculation Region Nordics regional design of long-term transmission rights in accordance with Article 31 of the Commission Regulation (EU)

Support mechanisms for RES-e

Possible market model for crossborder intraday trading

Current State of Intraday Markets in Europe May 2007

ESB. Debt Investor Presentation Business Update. Pat Fenlon Group Finance Director. Gerry Tallon Group Treasurer

A Closer Examination of Wind Generation in Ireland

Constellation Energy Comments on Proposed OTC Reforms

SEM, BETTA and Beyond Approach to Interconnector Modelling

Response to ENTSOE public consultation. Network Code on Capacity Allocation and Congestion Management for. Electricity

Supporting investments into renewable electricity in context of deep market integration of RES-e after 2020:

ENERGY COMMODITIES C O N F E R E N C E

Generation investment in a liberalised electricity market. 28 March 2008

How a power exchange can help integrate RES into the wholesale power market. Belpex Elia s ad hoc platform RES Rob Loos Brussels 6 March 2012

Price report Index. Daily Market. MIBEL: Energy, economic volume and technologies. Intraday Market. Settlement of the Daily and Intraday Market


CID Methodology Explanatory note

Business Process. BP_SO_13.1 Interim Long-Term Coordinated Capacity Calculation

Chapter 5: Trading. Industry Guide to the I-SEM

MAIN REGULATORY ISSUES FOR INVESTORS

Proposed Reserve Market Enhancements

METIS Technical Note T3. Market module configuration for study S12. Focus on day-ahead, intraday and balancing markets

Supporting document for the Danish TSO, Energinet, of the Nordic Capacity Calculation Region proposal for splitting long-term cross-zonal capacity

Wholesale Energy Markets Overview. Jeff Klarer Market Strategist

INTRODUCTION TO HUPX GROUP. Minta szöveg minta Minta

NEAS ENERGY - Route to Market

TSOs perspective of the CACM requirements. Athanasios Troupakis Market Advisor ENTSO-E

Response by Power NI Energy (PPB)

POWER MARKETS: CRITICAL ELEMENTS FOR PROPER FUNCTIONING

Introduction to EMR for New Suppliers. Thursday 3 December 2015

SSE plc TRADING STATEMENT

Can The EU Be An Example To Turkish Electricity Market Liberalisation?

UK ELECTRIC MARKET REFORM APPLICATION TO TEXAS POWER MARKET. Ingmar Sterzing CEIC Seminar April 10, 2013

APPENDIX B: WHOLESALE AND RETAIL PRICE FORECAST

Ex post payoffs of a tolling agreement for natural-gas-fired generation in Texas

California ISO October 1, 2002 Market Design Elements

Generation Retirement Scenario Special Assessment Update

2019 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) Public Input Meeting January 24, 2019

Review of the second GB capacity auction

Review of the first GB capacity auction

Introduction to EMR Arrangements. Thursday 18 May 2017

The North Seas Countries Offshore Grid Initiative

RE-POWERING MARKETS Designing capacity mechanisms

Community Solar Rate Rider: Schedule No February 13, 2018

Municipality Owned Utilities and Stadtwerke

Info Session NWE Day-Ahead

5. Vorlesung Energiewirtschaft II: Risk Management and Electricity Trade

Proposal of the Transmission System Operators of the Baltic. Capacity Calculation Region for the regional design of longterm

Electricity Market. August 18

International Management Electricity Trading in Germany

16 July 2018 DRAFT VERSION for public consultation

FORTUMS RESPONSE TO ACER CONSULTATION ON FORWARD RISK-HEDGING PRODUCTS AND HARMONISATION OF LONG-TERM CAPACITY ALLOCATION RULES

Transcription:

ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY Stephen Woodhouse 3 November 2015

AGENDA ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY To be covered in this session: What is flexibility? Reality and misconceptions What is the solution? Distortions which mean that flexibility is undervalued Why has it not been implemented? Perceptions of rules which block trading of flexibility Target Model 2.0? Energy Only Market 2.0? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 2

DECARBONISATION IS TRANSFORMING ELECTRICITY MARKETS Decarbonisation of the electricity sector is central to Europe s plans to reduce carbon emissions, and this is set to be achieved through wind and solar Decarbonisation of the power sector will come from weather variable generation with intermittent and less predictable generating patterns What is the impact on conventional thermal generation? Is there a need for smarter types of back-up capacity and new modes of operation? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 3

Generation Output (GW) (GW) Generation Output (GW) (GW) Generation (GW) Output (GW) Generation Output (GW) (GW) INTERMITTENCY WILL BE A MAJOR CHALLENGE Weather-variable generation translates into both lower load factors and more uncertain operating patterns for conventional thermal capacity Traditional, low-renewables generation patterns (2010) Future generation patterns (2030) 50 40 Intermittent generation 50 40 Intermittent generation 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Nuclear Biomass Coal CHP CCGT Other renewables 70 Nuclear Demand Peaking Biomass plants Imports CCSCoal 60 CCGT Other renewables Demand 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 01-Jan 04-Jan 07-Jan 10-Jan 13-Jan 16-Jan 19-Jan 01-Jan22-Jan 04-Jan25-Jan 07-Jan28-Jan 10-Jan 31-Jan 13-Jan 16-Jan 19 ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 4

NEED FOR FLEXIBILITY More within-day flexibility will be needed to manage the system and this can come from different sources (IC, storage, DSM and thermal generation) Hourly dispatch change, 2020 (GW) ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 5

CONVENTIONAL CAPACITY FACES NEW RISKS These increasing levels of weather variable generation across Europe give rise to both price and volume risk for conventional thermal capacity Thermal plants can no longer assume near-baseload operation, face volume risks and greater reliance on scarcity pricing in future Brown-out & price spikes risks often unacceptable from political and regulatory perspectives (even if economically sound) Market interventions to protect consumers can result in missing money Can I invest based on the spark spread? Is infrequent scarcity pricing a credible basis for investment? Do traded contracts allow both price and volume risk to be hedged? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 6

ARE NATIONAL CAPACITY MARKETS THE ANSWER? The response is the development of nationally based CRMs which can distort their markets and are threatening the coherence of the Internal Market for Electricity Centralised ROs Capacity auctions National CRMs are being introduced, each different in design, and with no arrangements yet in place for crossborder participation?? Energy markets are integrating, but capacity markets appear to be diverging Capacity obligations Centralised ROs Uncoordinated CRMs risk distorting spot electricity prices, and may harm demand side response, cross-border trading and investment decisions Will national CRMs undermine the goal of the Internal Market for Electricity? If CRMs damp scarcity energy prices, will this lead to inefficiency? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 7

AGENDA ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY To be covered in this session: What is flexibility? Reality and misconceptions What is the solution? Distortions which mean that flexibility is undervalued Why has it not been implemented? Perceptions of rules which block trading of flexibility Target Model 2.0? Energy Only Market 2.0? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 8

National arrangements VALUING FLEXIBILITY THROUGH TRADING OPTIONS Trading Energy Options would enhance risk management and create the possibility to open the intraday and balancing markets to cross border trade Electricity market participants (in some markets) do not place true value on having access to flexible capability Need tools to allow buyers and sellers of flexibility to better manage price and volume risks in low-carbon future 1 2 Balance responsibility and full marginal balancing pricing* Facilitate trading of energy options No market-based mechanisms to allocate cross-zonal capacity between use of for energy and use for flexibility 3 Cross-border trading of energy options * Long-run marginal pricing, not just short-run marginal pricing, to include scarcity value, and / or marginal allocation of reserve holding fees ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 9

Fractino of prices less than x-value RESERVE PROCUREMENT CAN DAMPEN IMBALANCE (AND ID) PRICES For example, vontracted reserves acts as a cap on the within-day market price in GB and Ofgem now seeks to reflect reservation fees in imbalance prices 1 On average, hours of contracted reserve utilisation in GB are high compared to the low frequency of high energy prices > 300/MWh, Contracted reserves, which guarantee operating reserves, (STOR) are called ~50 to 100 hours per year Whilst day prices exceed 300/MWh for less than 2 hours per year on average 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% Typical range of reserve utilisation prices This indicates that the market may be utilising contracted reserves instead of purchasing energy from the intra-day market. 20% 0% STOR may thus be acting as a cap to the wholesale electricity price ~ 250/MWh APX-UK price ( /MWh) Source: Elexon, 2004 to present ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 10

ENERGY OPTIONS CAN HELP MANAGE PRICE & VOLUME RISK 2 Option contracts can be defined to suit needs Why buy an option? (Even with liquid near-term markets with cross-border access) Why sell an option? (Even with liquid near-term markets with cross-border access) manage exposure to increasingly volatile prices close to real-time Increasing price risk Projected 2030 wholesale electricity prices in NWE manage exposure to increasingly volatile prices close to real-time (possibly subject to intervention) act as an insurance against volume risk (i.e. the energy not being there when needed) Increasing volume risk Projected difference between day-ahead and out-turn (GB) provide an upfront revenue stream that reduces the risk of offering flexibility (i.e. not committing resource earlier) ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 11

OPTIMISATION ACROSS TIMEFRAMES IS A MAJOR ISSUE FOR FLEXIBILITY Commit resource now or hold it for later contingencies? 3 Overall welfare optimisation through market-based mechanisms Cross-zonal capacity Resources in Country A Forward market Day-ahead market Intraday market Balancing Resources in Country B Forward Day-ahead market Intraday market Balancing Resources can be generation, storage, cross-zonal transmission or demand-side ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 12

AGENDA ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY To be covered in this session: What is flexibility? Reality and misconceptions What is the solution? Distortions which mean that flexibility is undervalued Why has it not been implemented? Perceptions of rules which block trading of flexibility Target Model 2.0? Energy Only Market 2.0? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 13

WHY HAVE MARKETS FOR FLEXIBILITY NOT EMERGED? Market circumstances and also regulatory factors affected the rise of flexibility need The market need for flexibility trading has traditionally been low Although RES curtailments occur in Germany, Spain, Denmark, Ireland Volume risk is a new concept which has not yet been fully priced (especially intraday) Flexibility is not yet scarce There are only limited incentives for players to balance RES often exempted from balance responsibility Flattened intraday and imbalance prices (Short Run Marginal Costs, TSO actions, non-marginal pricing Cross border opportunities for flexibility are very limited Capacity often fully used at day ahead stage, not available intraday Meanwhile, effort is spent developing capacity mechanisms Source: EURELECTRIC ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 14

AGENDA ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY To be covered in this session: What is flexibility? Reality and misconceptions What is the solution? Distortions which mean that flexibility is undervalued Why has it not been implemented? Perceptions of rules which block trading of flexibility Target Model 2.0? Energy Only Market 2.0? ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 15

CREATING THE ELECTRICITY TARGET MODEL 2.0 Adapting the European electricity target model to fit a world of flexibility Full cost imbalance pricing to cover LRMC not just SRMC Regional allocation of congestion revenue and re-dispatch costs Coordinated and transparent TSO protocols in emergency situations Co-optimisation of energy and reserve/ system services Target model 1.0 Coordinated security standards Recognition of energy options in the market arrangements Market based allocation of network capacity across timeframes Regional coordination of network planning and resource adequacy ADAPTING THE TARGET MODEL TO VALUE FLEXIBILITY 16

www.poyry.com