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2005-06 Seminars
Investment incentive
issues and the interactions between engineering
reliability standards and competitive electricity
markets
Paul Joskow
MIT
Abstract
This paper seeks to
bridge the gap between economists focused on
designing competitive market mechanisms and
engineers focused on the physical attributes and
engineering requirements they perceive as being
needed for operating a reliable electric power
system. The paper starts by deriving the
(second-best) optimal prices and investment program
when there are price-insensitive retail consumers,
but when their load serving entities can choose any
level of rationing they prefer contingent on real
time prices. It then examines the assumptions
required for a competitive wholesale and retail
market to achieve this optimal price and investment
program. The paper analyses the implications of
relaxing several of these assumptions. First, it
analyzes the interrelationships between
regulator-imposed price caps and capacity
obligations. It goes on to explore the implications
of potential network collapses, the concomitant need
for operating reserve requirements and whether
market prices will provide incentives for
investments consistent with these reserve
requirements.
Paper (PPT
File)
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