Nodes to You: Transmission - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

Nodes to You: Transmission

Description:

Nodes to You: Transmission s market test in PJM Robert J. Michaels California State University, Fullerton and Econ One Research and Consulting, Inc. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: rmichaels
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nodes to You: Transmission


1
Nodes to You Transmissions market test in PJM
  • Robert J. Michaels
  • California State University, Fullerton
  • and
  • Econ One Research and Consulting, Inc.
  • Achieving Optimal Transmission Pricing
  • Risk Publications
  • Houston, Texas
  • Nov. 8, 1999

2
The lessons so far from PJM
  • Few noticeable improvements in short-run
    efficiency
  • Increased risk inhibits growth of bilateral
    transactions
  • Inadequacy of official transmission congestion
    contracts FTRs
  • Unresolved market power issues
  • Unclear long-run signals
  • Questionable usefulness of economics professors

3
PJM One kind of perfection
  • Economists and the perfectly competitive ideal
  • Time-varying energy prices, market based PX bids
    after 4/1/99
  • PX and ISO operate as a unit, bilaterals possible
  • Ancillary services bundled, cannot be
    self-provided
  • LMP calculated from PX price at 1744 nodes,
    applies to all transactions
  • Fixed Transmission Rights FTR allocated by load
    to servers, remainder auctioned

4
How perfect is it?
  • Why arent other goods priced this way?
  • Ideal pricing at wholesale, few usable signals at
    retail
  • Differential risk exposures of utilities and
    non-utilities
  • Knowing the nodal price only after it happens
  • The invalid market order analogy
  • Negative prices
  • LMP overcollections, FTR allocations, and
    barriers to entry

5
Costs, benefits, and transfers
  • Foregone opportunities setup and operating
    charges v. bilaterals and competing exchanges
  • Imposition of institutions rather than letting
    market decide
  • Move from the complex to the simple?
  • Costs of redispatch and costs of capital
  • 1,744 thin markets or a handful of liquid ones?
  • Costs of increased uncertainty
  • Overcollections their size and redistribution

6
What about congestion?
  • 1998 some congestion 17 percent of hours
  • Not all peak
  • Average east-west differentials 46 to 75
  • East-West???? Hogan said there werent zones
  • Changes in price averages cannot be linked to
    LMP, result from expected causes
  • Old Dominions complaint
  • 1998 monthly spot sales 440 M, congestion
    charges 18.4 M, excess congestion rents 4.1 M

7
Gettting the Prices Right
  • Why reject a simpler zone system?
  • The 1997 zonal experiment
  • One zone and obvious arbitrage
  • No way to create other zones or tariffs then
  • One zone, two zones, or more like a hundred?
  • The uneasy case for a hundred zones
  • The Constellation merger application

8
Fixed Transmission Rights I
  • Blunting the impact of LMP on utilities
  • Point-to-point and network service
  • Load servers get allocations by noncoincident
    peak, monthly auction of remainder
  • FTRs are specific to receipt and delivery points
  • Hard to aggregate for transactions using multiple
    generators
  • PJM requirement for source identification
  • Pricing reversals require two-way FTRs for
    complete hedge

9
Fixed Transmission Rights II
  • If monopoly power matters, the most competent
    would-be monopolist will win the bidding
  • Generation ownership increases potential market
    power
  • With retail competition, rights follow service to
    retail loads
  • Differential effects on utilities and
    non-utilities?
  • What rights for marketers?
  • The future shape of the auction

10
Hubs and risk
  • Because it rebundles, nodal pricing makes
    separation of commodity and transport risk
    impossible
  • Deaths of the Eastern Hub and Sellers Choice
  • Can we be sure nodal prices are at fault?
  • Western Hub volumes and liquidity
  • The forlorn NYMEX contract
  • A comparison with Cinergy
  • The hubs according to Professor Hogan

11
LMP and market power I
  • The non-story of seller concentration
  • Relevance of the HHI statistic
  • Question of geographic boundaries
  • The transmission owners interest -- not
    expanding constrained capacity
  • Particularly if it has not divested generation
  • Market power harder to exercise where there are
    futures, forwards, and easy bilaterals

12
LMP and Market Power II
  • Easier to exercise if transmission pricing
    facilitates de facto load pockets
  • If risk of capacity withdrawal gives physical
    rights holders market power, deal with it
    directly
  • Will near-term adjustment markets for unused
    transmission allow an adequate window for trade?
  • The power of the central market
  • Or is it denial of the right to trade through
    the ISO? Hogan
  • Is it sufficient that everyone else trades mostly
    paper?
  • The pattern of cross-subsidies

13
The long run
  • Nodal prices increase uncertainty, cut
    transaction horizons
  • Why rely on them for long-run signals and capital
    recovery?
  • If they are 50 percent randomness, what do they
    mean?
  • And are they better than prices for physical
    rights?
  • Signals to build transmission or generation?
  • Are 7,000 MW really coming by 2002?

14
I have seen the future...
  • Hoecker and the future is PJM
  • Hogan not really and its efficient like I
    said
  • By a short-term static standard?
  • Bailey close and 7 of the 8 PJM utilities
    support it
  • Supporting Companies not really and we were
    the ones who designed it
  • Michaels What kind of competition did you expect
    incumbent monopolists to design?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com