Deregulated Power, Pollution, and Game Theory Frank Deviney 11/16/05.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MISO Day 2: A Transmission Users (Marketers) Perspective Leon White August 8, 2007.
Advertisements

EPOC Winter Workshop, September 7, 2007 Andy Philpott The University of Auckland (joint work with Eddie Anderson, UNSW) Uniform-price.
By Ronald R. Braeutigam & John C. Panzar Presented by Fadhila Diversification Incentives under “price-based” and “cost-based” Regulation.
Copyright 2003 PJM 1 PJM’s Annual FTR Auction.
Gloria Godson VP, Federal Regulatory Policy Reliability Pricing Model Part 2.
Pablo Serra Universidad de Chile Forward Contracts, Auctions and Efficiency in Electricity Markets.
The Competitive Effects of Ownership of Financial Transmission Rights in a Deregulated Electricity Industry Manho Joung and Ross Baldick Electrical and.
Nash equilibria in Electricity Markets: A comparison of different approaches Seminar in Electric Power Networks, 12/5/12 Magdalena Klemun Master Student,
SCED Power Balance Penalty Curve
PJM©2014www.pjm.com Winter 2014 Overview & Recent and Upcoming Market Rule Changes Adam Keech Director, Market Operations.
Demand Response in New York State Northwest Power and Conservation Council DR workshop February 24, 2006.
Ramping and CMSC (Congestion Management Settlement Credit) payments.
December 4, 2000© 2000 Fernando L. Alvarado1 Reliability concepts and market power Fernando L. Alvarado Professor, The University of Wisconsin Invited.
© 2011 D. Kirschen and the University of Washington 1 Participating in Electricity Markets.
MISO’s Midwest Market Initiative APEX Ron McNamara October 31, 2005.
Luis A. Camargo S. Wholesale Electricity Market Manager Colombia The Andean Electricity Market -TIE- Cartagena de Indias, October 14&15th
Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
Congestion Pricing: Competitive Locational Prices of Power Stoft (2002)
Environmental Regulation in Oligopoly Markets: A Study of Electricity Restructuring Erin T. Mansur UC Berkeley and UC Energy Institute March 22, 2002 POWER.
Utility Regulation March 10, 2011 Raj Addepalli Deputy Director, Electric, Office of Electric,Gas and Water New York State Department of Public Service.
Market Overview in Electric Power Systems Market Structure and Operation Introduction Market Overview Market Overview in Electric Power Systems Mohammad.
Emissions Trading (Cap and Trade) Kate Macauley. 1. Economics of emissions trading 2. Overview of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS)
Effects of the Transmission Network on Electricity Markets © 2011 D. Kirschen and the University of Washington 1.
Preliminary Analysis of the SEE Future Infrastructure Development Plan and REM Benefits.
EE 369 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS
New Zealand & Australian Wholesale Electricity Markets A Comparative Review Dr Ralph Craven Transpower NZ Ltd.
Overview of LMP Markets Features of ISOs / RTOs David Withrow Senior Market Economist Fall 2007 Meeting of the NARUC Staff Subcommittee on Accounting and.
Demand Response in MISO Markets NASUCA Panel on DR November 12, 2012.
 Power Costs, Inc All rights reserved. Confidential and Proprietary to Power Costs, Inc. May not be distributed or reproduced without permission.
Nodal Pricing in an LMP Energy Market
Pricing and Gaming in a Simple electricity Market Queen’s University Regulatory Economics Class Guest Lecture March 24, 2015.
Costs of Ancillary Services & Congestion Management Fedor Opadchiy Deputy Chairman of the Board.
© 2013 McNees Wallace & Nurick LLC October 17, 2013 Robert A. Weishaar, Jr. ON SITE ENERGY – INTERPLAY WITH PJM DEMAND RESPONSE PROGRAMS Harrisburg, PA.
PJM © PJM Overview ARIPPA Valley Forge, PA November 8, 2007.
Welcome New York Independent System Operator. (Pre-NYISO) Regulated Market Physical contracts Regulated industry Cost Based System Two Party Deals Bundled.
Electric Restructuring In Pennsylvania Sonny Popowsky Pennsylvania Consumer Advocate May 10, 2007 Institute for Regulatory Policy Studies Transforming.
Perfect Competition *MADE BY RACHEL STAND* :). I. Perfect Competition: A Model A. Basic Definitions 1. Perfect Competition: a model of the market based.
RELIABILITY and RENEWABLES: Two Case Studies Using the SuperOPF Tim Mount Department of Applied Economics and Management Cornell University
Overview of the North American and Canadian Markets 2008 APEX Conference in Sydney, Australia October 13, 2008 Hung-po Chao Director, Market Strategy and.
1 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory Externalities.
For discussion purposes only Financial Transmission Rights: Design options Presentation to Electricity Commission 2 September 2009.
1 Demand Response in Midwest ISO Markets 09 February 2007.
Cap and Trade: The Technology Adoption Problem May 4, 2009 Economic Games and Mechanisms to Address Climate Change Suzanne Scotchmer University of California.
Day Ahead Market Working Group April 14, Agenda Discussion of SMD-style DAM review questions posed by the DAM WG and Coral regarding the SMD-
Market Evolution Program Day Ahead Market Project How the DSO Calculates Nodal Prices DAMWG October 20, 2003.
GENERATION SCHEDULING WITH HYBRID ENERGY RESOURCES IN A DEREGULATED POWER SYSTEM Manas Trivedi Clemson University Electric Power Research Association.
1 Andrew L. Ott General Manager, Market Coordination PJM Interconnection, L. L. C. PJM Energy Market Model.
Leader-Follower Framework For Control of Energy Services Ali Keyhani Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Ohio State University
January 21, 2010 Security Constrained Economic Dispatch Resmi Surendran.
PJM©2013www.pjm.com Economic DR participation in energy market ERCOT April 14, 2014 Pete Langbein.
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopolies. Monopolistic Competition Companies offer differentiated products yet face competition Companies face downward.
Increasing integration of variable RES-E: Policy and regulatory measures for T&D networks Luis Olmos Pontificia Comillas University Madrid / Spain
Cross border redispatching Central West Electricity Regional Energy Market Mini Forum Alain Marien 20 th of June 2006.
IWWG Annual Conference Wind Management at MISO July 22, 2011.
Lecture 17 Optimal Power Flow, LMPs Professor Tom Overbye Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering ECE 476 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS.
Illinois Wholesale Market Update December 10, 2003.
Announcements Homework 8 is 11.19, 11.21, 11.26, 11.27, due now
Operating Reserves and Extended Locational Marginal Pricing 1.
ECE 476 Power System Analysis Lecture 18: LMP Markets, Symmetrical Faults and Components Prof. Tom Overbye Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Role Of ERC in the WESM To enforce the rules and regulations governing the operations of the WESM and monitors the activities of the Market Operator and.
1 Economic Dispatch Sub-Committee Meeting Ross Baldick Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The University of Texas at Austin September 24,
Greenhouse Gas Initiatives: progress and perspective Sandra Meier Environmental Energy Alliance of New York.
Joint Energy Auction Implementation Proposal of PG&E, SCE and SDG&E California Public Utilities Commission Workshop – November 1, 2006.
Pär Holmberg, Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN)
Wind Management at MISO
Auctions and Competitive Bidding
Flexible Forward Contracts for Renewable Energy Generators
Pricing: Understanding and Capturing Customer Value
Submodularity in capacity auctions
Deregulated Power, Pollution, and Game Theory
Presentation transcript:

Deregulated Power, Pollution, and Game Theory Frank Deviney 11/16/05

My Questions How does deregulation affect the distribution of pollutant emissions? Can game theory help answer this question?

Pollution – Cap and Trade SO 2 allowances are allocated or auctioned After-market exists for trading allowances ~9 million allowances per year An allowance permits emission of a fixed amount of SO 2 Local power plants Possum Point0.001 lbs SO 2 /mmBtu550+ MW Mt Storm0.10 lbs SO 2 /mmBtu1600 MW Bremo Bluff1.45 lbs SO 2 /mmBtu250 MW Fear – hot spots

Power Grid Situation Problems under environment of deregulation Energy (Generation) pricing Congestion management and pricing Others Capacity expansion Reserve capacity Environmental/other constraints

Generation Old Paradigm – minimize costs subject to “Keep the Lights On” constraint. A regulated monopolies environment. New Paradigm – Competition leads to efficiency. Maximize benefits for all. Game theory has been used to: Justify the switch Establish bidding procedures for participants

Generation I Ferrero, Rivera, and Shahidehpour, 1998 Objective: maximize each participant’s benefit Assumptions (PoolCo model) Coordinator schedules (dispatches) generation beginning with lowest bid price until demand is met Generators receive the “spot price”, the max bid of all dispatched generators Assumption: spot price equal throughout the grid “sealed bids” – submit bids at same time Knows own cost but not others’ costs Knows others’ bid history, but not their benefit Gen costs are 2 nd order fn of power output

Generation I, cont. Aspects of the Game Formulated as non-cooperative, two-player Correlated costs allowed (used in the example) Strategy is to bid with respect to initial marginal cost (as if not in the market) Probability distribution of the game derived from available information, they use fuel prices in the example. Demonstrate analytical solution for Nash equilibria  so presumably participant could use game theory to establish bidding positions

Generation II Park, Kim, Kim, Jung, and Park 2001 Assumptions (PoolCo model) Total generation bids  demand Individual generation bid < demand Demand is constant Transmission losses and congestion ignored Complete information available to all (apparently holds in some countries) Again the 2 nd order cost function Generation allocation < last-dispatched unit, all generation offered = last-dispatched unit, split with others with equal bids

Generation II, cont. Aspects of the Game Formulated as non-cooperative, two-player Strategy = (bid price, bid generation) in continuous space Suggest a hybrid approach combining analytical and graphical methods Inelastic demand  Bidding price cap

A question I have tended to think of the allowances as being a constraint on production. Generator’s goal is to maximize production or profit subject to the emission allowance constraint. Companies tend to re-distribute their allowances in-house rather than through the market. How does the existence of such global constraints affect the assumptions inherent in a non-cooperative game?

How does PJM do it? As complicated as the game theory models may be, the actual market is more complicated

Market Timelines Day-ahead Until noon – PJM receives bids and offers for energy for next day Noon until 4 p.m. Market is closed. PJM computes next- day LMPs. 4 p.m. PJM posts initial day-ahead LMPs. 4-6 p.m. Market re-opens for re-bidding. 6 p.m. – Day-ahead LMPs locked in. Remainder of day – PJM continually updates the dispatch list Real-time ? 5-minute intervals?

What is congestion? When the economic dispatch solution cannot be implemented due to transmission line constraints.

Congestion Silva, Wollenberg, and Zheng, 2001 Assumptions Constant marginal cost for generation Constant demand An “economic dispatch” solution exists Competitors will not provide cost information, but can estimate others’ costs Marginal cost domains are bounded The pdf is otherwise continuous

Congestion, cont. Mechanism Design A mechanism is a game. Proposed game is that: Generators submit bids to agent Agent allocates production and reward Goal is to get generators to provide true cost bids Claim is that the proposed payment scheme achieves this

What does PJM do? LMPs Implicit congestion – payments/receipts based on bus LMP explicit congestion – transactions pay differential between source and sink LMPs FTRs – Financial Transmission Rights Monthly, annual auctions Serve as a hedge against day-ahead uncertainty as to when and where congestion will occur.