Retail Competition and Electricity Contracts Richard Green University of Hull and CEPR.

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Presentation transcript:

Retail Competition and Electricity Contracts Richard Green University of Hull and CEPR

The issue Retail competition is spreading –UK since 1999 –Nordic countries since mid-1990s –some US states –EU draft directive Does this reduce suppliers’ incentive to contract? Would that affect electricity prices?

The model Two generators Regional incumbent retailers Non-strategic customers & entrant retailers Stage 1: long-term contracts Stage 2: annual wholesale market Stage 3: retail market

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Rival’s Sales Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Rival’s Sales Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Profit Rival’s Sales Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Rival’s Sales Profit Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Rival’s Sales Profit Forward Sales

The annual wholesale market £/MWh MWh Marginal Cost Industry Demand Rival’s Sales Profit Forward Sales

Forward sales depend upon Rival’s forward sales (  ve) Forward  annual price premium (+ve) Impact of extra sales on this premium (  ve)

The retail market(s) £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers

The retail market(s) £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers Annual wholesale price

Regulated incumbents £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers Annual wholesale price Regulated price

Regulated incumbents Profits Annual price Forward price Average cover

Regulated incumbents Profits Annual price Forward price Average cover More cover

Regulated incumbents Profits Annual price Forward price Average cover More cover Less cover

The regulated firm Likes profits Dislikes risk - Utility = mean (profits)  ½ variance (profits) Tends to buy the average level of cover Would buy more if the forward price is less than the expected annual price (it won’t be)

Competing incumbents £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers Annual wholesale price Entrants’ sales

Competing incumbents £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers Annual wholesale price Entrants’ sales Profits Retail price

Competing incumbents £/MWh MWh Industry Demand Small customers Large customers Annual wholesale price Entrants’ sales Profits Retail price

Competing incumbents Profits Annual price Forward price No cover

Competing incumbents Profits Annual price Forward price No cover Forward cover

The competing firm Will only buy contracts if their price is less than the expected annual price Buys fewer contracts than the regulated firm Faces a higher annual price Might face a lower forward price - if risk aversion is great enough

Calibrating the model Use values reflecting early-90s England Marginal Cost £20/MWh Equilibrium (no contracts) £30/MWh Equilibrium (no risk-aversion)£26/MWh Variance of the annual price5.76 (annual average Pool price, 90-01)

The impact of risk and competition Avg Price, £/MWh Regulation Competition (% change in profits needed to offset 10% point rise in c.v.)

Conclusions Firms are buying & selling in annual markets Retail competition does reduce long-term contracting Risk aversion probably not great enough for this to have a very large impact Results may be sensitive to model design Impact of contracts on entry not studied