RTO 101: Session 5How RTOs Use Markets to Achieve
Short-run Reliability and
Long-run Resource Adequacy
Prepared by John Chandley
for
PJM and Midwest ISO States
May 2008
Part I
How Much Capacity Do We Need?
Setting the Target and
It’s Impact on Retail Rates
3
Who Decides the Res. Adequacy Target?
Setting the RA Target drives fixed/capital costs and has a large impact on rates, as well as affecting quality of service. These issues are normally thought of as state responsibilities. However . . .
Under the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Electric Reliability Organizations, like Reliability First Corporation (RFC) and Midwest Reliability Organization (MRO), are also authorized to set the RA target.
EROs thus affect a significant part of the level of retail rates and indirectly, the reliability of service.
4
Let the Engineers Decide
Traditional “reliability standards” are not economically based. They are strictly engineering standards based on historic practices. No one claims they are cost justified.
A traditional engineering standard for “adequacy” is to carry enough capacity so that on average, the system does not run short of capacity – loss of load expectation -- more than once in 10 years:
1-day in 10-yr LOLE = reserve margins of about 15%-18%.
5
Let the Economics Decide
An alternative is to allow economics to define the RA Target.
The principle is to allow the reliability or reserve target to be
based on what consumers (or states speaking for them) would be willing to pay for reliability – i.e, to avoid being short of capacity.
We’d need a way to figure out what consumers want.
This could lead to reserve margins more, but probably less than 15%. (that is, consumers might not be willing to pay for 1 day in 10 year LOLE)
6
RA Target Defines the Revenue Requirement
Suppose PJM/MISO accept 1-day in 10-year LOLE . . . e.g., a 15% - 18% reserve margin (RM) requirement.
Then every state must set retail rates to recover the full revenue requirements for that level of capacity. Once the RM is set, rates have to recover about the same total revenues whether we have markets or regulation (assuming both structures are efficient).
In regulated states, retail rates must recover the utilities’ full revenue requirements for building/operating that much capacity to cover their loads plus the RA target reserve margin. If not, utilities won’t build.
For market-based investments, wholesale market prices must also recover full revenue requirements, and retail rates must recover these same wholesale costs. Otherwise, the investments won’t occur.
Part II
The “Missing Money” Problem:
Alternative Ways to Solve It and
Why the Choices Matter
8
Generators Depend on the Highest-Price HoursTo Recover Most of Their Fixed Costs
$/MWh
Demand
Supply offers
Off-peak hours
Shortage hours
Peak hours
Shoulder hours
POff-peak
Low-price hours barely cover operating costs
PShortage
PShoulder
PPeak
Contributions to Fixed Costs
9
A “Missing Money Problem” Arises If the RTO Does Not Use Shortage-cost Pricing
$/MWh
Demand
Supply offers
Off-peak hours
Shortage hours
Peak hours
Shoulder hours
POff-peak
Implicit “caps” on energy prices prevent generators from receiving a significant contribution to their fixed/capital costs
PShortage
PShoulder
PCap
Lost Contributions to Fixed Costs
PPeak
10
A “Missing Money” Problem Arises In Shortages If There Is No Shortage Pricing
Quantity
Clearing Price
“Capped” Price
The “missing money” = lost contributions to fixed costs for
every plant
DPeak
The “missing money” problem undermines both long-run investment and short-run reliable dispatch
Intermediate
Price set by supply offer caps
Price set by
demand
Peaker
Base-load
PATH B
PATH A
11
Path A or Path B?
A key design choice depends on how energy and operating reserve prices are set. What happens when the ISO dispatch runs short of plants to supply the total demand for energy plus operating reserves?
Path A: Allow scarcity prices to clear the markets for energy and operating reserves based on demand.
Path B: Cap the energy prices, but recover the “missing revenues” from capacity payments and other mechanisms.
PJM, NY, NE chose Path B. MISO is trying Path A.
12
Original ISOs Evolved Into Path B
In the Eastern ISOs, the original “power pools” had an installed capacity (ICAP) requirement.
PJM, NYPP, and NEPOOL were shared reserve pools.
The “pool” imposed an ICAP requirement on each utility-member to cover its own loads + reserve margin
It supported reserve sharing between the pool members
It prevented free-riding, which could otherwise occur because regional dispatch allows “leaning” on others’ resources in real time. That is, the pool dispatch meets everyone’s load, and draws from whatever plants are available for dispatch.
13
Features of First Generation ICAP Markets
ISO (or Reliability Authority) sets the required level of capacity. Pool region must maintain (e.g.) a 15 % reserve margin
ISO allocates to each LSE its share of capacity requirement. Based on LSE’s share at peak, adjusted for retail switching.
ISO conducts an auction market for LSEs/Generators. Typically a monthly auction, but could be daily, seasonal, etc. Used to buy/sell capacity and set price for “overs” and “unders.”
ISO penalizes LSEs/Generators who fail to meet the rules. “Short” LSE must pay deficiency charge each MW it is short. Generators that fail to be available pay high penalty.
14
All the First ICAP Markets Failed! Why?
They ignored the underlying incentive problems . . . Capped energy prices plus ICAP payments => . . .
• Poor incentives to gencos to be available when needed in RT.• Poor incentives to provide the right operational features.• Poor incentives for demand-side response.
Uniform ICAP payments ignored locational differences So all ICAP mechanisms are moving to multi-zonal “LICAP.”
And fixed ICAP demand created other problems . . . Volatility -- inevitable with fixed capacity requirements.
Market power -- it’s easy to exercise in earlier capacity markets.
15
ICAP Investment Needed At Right Locations
If there are transmission constraints on delivering power to load pockets, non-locational ICAP payments cannot allocate the missing money to the right locations. Instead, uniform ICAP prices result in:
Not enough investment at the right locations (Boston, SWConn, New Jersey, Wisconsin, etc.)
Too much investment at the wrong locations (Maine, Western NY/PA)
The resulting generation cannot sustain reliable operations because its power can’t all be delivered to loads.
Lesson: If we use ICAP to restore missing money, ICAP payments need to be locationally different (LICAP) to reflect transmission limits.
16
Every ICAP Reform Added LICAP Zones
New York ISO: Created three zones with different prices in each zone. New York City, Long Island and “Rest of New York”
New England ISO – earlier LICAP proposal proposed five fixed LICAP zones. In 2006 settlement, ISO will define zones before each auction.
PJM RPM Settlement – starts with 4 LICAP zones and expands number in 3 years up to 23 zones. Eastern MACC, SW MACC, AP & MACC, Rest of PJM
17
RPM May Have Multiple Deliverability Areas
Transition
PJM South
Western MAAC
SouthwesternMAAC
Eastern MAAC
ComEd
MAAC
AEP
DQE
AP
PENELEC
ME
BGE
Dayton
Dominion
DPL
AE
DPL South
PSEG North
RE
JCPL
PECO
PPL
PSEG
AP
PJM West
Initial Proposal
18
Can LICAP Designs Improve Efficiency?
Locational ICAP (LICAP) can lessen the problems with non-locational ICAP, but there is a tradeoff.
With many interconnected zones, it is not obvious how one allocates deliverability rights to constrained transmission. Transfer capacity is not a fixed number.
PJM’s RPM with many LICAP zones may confront this problem, and there may not be an efficient solution.
Any large RTO may need many LICAP zones if it follows Path B.
19
Price Volatility in Earlier ICAP Markets
Original ICAP markets could skip between very low (near zero) prices and very high prices at deficiency.
When there is a surplus, the capacity price tends to be very low, or near zero.
When there is a slight shortage of capacity, the price rises to the deficiency charge (Pcap) – a price cap.
The more vertical the supply/ demand curves, the more price volatility occurs.
Investment risks are high.D
S
Quantity
ICAP Price
QuantityD
SPCap
P
20
Market Power Incentives in ICAP Markets
The combination of a vertical demand curve and a near-vertical supply curve presents strong incentives to exercise market power.
Any withheld supply shifts the Supply curve to the left.
A slight shift of the supply curve to the left causes a large increase in price.
This can easily offset the revenues foregone as a result of withholding.
Price
Quantity
Price
Quantity
Price
QuantityD
SPcap
P
21
Two Approaches To Lessen Market Power
Use a downward-sloping curve for ICAP demand. A sloping demand curve reduces the incentives for market power.
Recognizes that capacity beyond the “target” has value.
Recognizes that capacity is more valuable when short.
Use a forward auction (extend the supply curve). Define “product” to be delivered 3-4 years from now.
New entrants can compete with existing resources.
May facilitate competition with transmission?
22
NY ISO ICAP Demand Curve
ICAP Price
ICAP Quantity
Price Ceiling
Net Cost of Entry
Minimum NYCA
Requirement
Zero- Crossing
Point
23
Proposed ISO-NE Demand Curve (Not included in Settlement)
24
PJM Initial Demand Curve for Variable Resource Requirement
Note: The settlement did not adopt this curve.
25
PJM Final Demand Curve for Variable Resource Requirement
Final Shape (not to scale)
26
Why the Demand Curves Matter
Changing the demand curve changes investment and risks.
No matter what, the implicit or explicit demand curve for energy and reserves (or capacity) will drive the level of investment. Moving the curve down and/or left => less investment Moving the curve up and/or right => more investment
If the demand curves don’t reflect the investment requirements, they can’t achieve the RA goal.
27
Market Power Solution II: Change the Supply Curve
A joint PJM-NY-NE study developed the concept of holding the ICAP auctions 3-4 years in advance.
If the ICAP “product” does not have to be delivered for 3-4 years, then new entrants could compete against existing plants.
New entry/competition would limit the ability of existing plants to exercise market power, such as by withholding capacity from monthly auctions.
PJM’s RPM and ISO-NE’s Settlement use this forward auction approach.
28
Proposed Timing of RPM Auctions
Base Residual Auction
Planning Year
3 Years
Incremental Auction
Incremental Auction
June
4 months
13 months
Incremental Auction
23 months
EFORd Fixed
Self- Supply & Bilateral Designation
Ongoing Bilateral Market – (shorter-term reconfiguration)
ILR
Source: PJM
29
Recent Results in PJM Capacity Auctions
PJM first held auctions for the 2007-08, 2008-09, and 2009-10 years.
PJM is still in “surplus” for most regions, which means the clearing prices are often below the “break-even” points to support new investments. Since little new capacity can be offered from this year to next, the
surplus will diminish, and prices gradually rise above the break-even point where new investments would make sense.
And PJM recently filed to raise the Net CONE – higher prices
A downward sloping curve yields higher LICAP prices than would have occurred with a vertical curve when there is a surplus . . .but about the same prices on average over time.
30
Availability Incentives: How Should We Measure and Reward Availability?
In the past, ICAP availability has been measured by EFORd
What was your unit’s average availability during the last 12 months, given its various outages as measured by EFORd?
In the LICAP case, ISO-NE proposed to use availability during operating reserve “shortage hours” to replace EFORd
Was your unit available during an hour in which the operating reserves fell below the normal requirement for OR?
“Available” means producing energy or providing operating reserves.
If you weren’t running or available for reserves during the shortage hour, you won’t be paid for that hour. (But the non-payment “penalty” may be spread out over time by reducing future monthly payments.)
31
Issues with UCAP and EFORd Adjustments
There are concerns about continued use of EFORd as an effective measure of availability.
EFORd is based on self reporting – can we trust this? The capacity that a supplier can sell is defined by UCAP. UCAP is ICAP adjusted by EFORd -- by outage hours. Do
Sellers have an incentive to under-report outage hours?
EFORd is an average measure. It ignores the fact that the value of availability is higher at some
times than at others. Is a 10% outage rate good or bad?• Outages during non-peak periods mean little• Outages during peak demand hours mean a lot
32
Using “Shortage-Hours” to Replace EFORd
Is Defining “Capacity” To Be Like “Energy”To be “available” during a “shortage hour,” a unit must: Be operating – producing energy in real time, or Be scheduled or eligible to provide operating reserve
• Capacity that is capable of starting within 30 minutes could be eligible, because it could be used as 30 minute reserves.
This metric encourages plants to be available when most needed, and to be the kinds of plants that are quick-start and flexible. If you’re not “available” you don’t get paid An energy+OR+scarcity pricing market would work the same way
The “capacity” payment becomes a payment for “energy or operating reserves,” paid for the hours in which the energy or reserves are most valuable but prices would likely be capped. Pays the revenues missing in shortage hours because of price/bid caps Provides the availability incentives missing during those same hours
Part III
Solving the Missing Money ProblemWith
Shortage-cost Pricing(So-called “Energy-only” Market
But it’s really energy plus operating reserves)
34
Revisit the Strategic Decision:Avoid Missing Money With Shortage Pricing
Quantity
Uncapped Clearing
Price
Price Cap
The “missing money” = lost contributions to fixed costs
DPeak
Path A = Energy and Op. Reserve Market with Shortage Prices Path B = Capped Energy Market with (L)ICAP, curves, RPM.
Base-load plants
Path B plus ICAP
Path A
35
What the Midwest ISO Is Proposing
Regionalize procurement of operating reserves (OR)
Create bid-based markets to procure OR
Co-optimize procurement of OR and energy pick the least cost mix
Apply shortage-cost pricing to energy and OR (PATH A).
When supplies are short, prices can be set by demand – the willingness of consumers to pay -- not merely by the offers/bids of generators.
And energy prices are affected by the level of operating reserves. If the ISO falls short of operating reserves, jeopardizing reliable dispatch, energy prices would rise to reflect that shortage.
36
X% Target 0-1%
% of Operating Reserves Above Demand
Demand Curve for Operating Reserves VOLL
Shortage Cost in $/MWh
$1000
$0
Available Supply in MW
Shortage Cost Pricing Approach (Illustrative)
5%3%
Rotating blackout warning
Reserve shortage warning
$500
Note: Actual ISO methods may use separate curves for each type of reserves, and simple steps for the “curve”
37
Reminders: Limited Spot Price Exposure
Retail customers have little or no exposure to volatile spot prices. Only those who choose to rely on spot prices are exposed.
In regulated states (no retail choice) . . . If a utility covers full load requirement, retail customers are not exposed.
If utility purchases any energy from ISO spot market, it pays spot prices only for that amount; but retail customers are hedged by fixed rates.
In states with retail choice . . . Largest customers might face hourly spot prices, but they can be
hedged through contracts, own generation (self supply), demand response, to the degree they choose. Several states already doing this.
For smaller customers: Regulators would ensure utility or competitive LSEs hedge default customers with longer-term contracts. (e.g., New Jersey/Illinois default supply model)
38
Market Power Mitigation Still Applies
In an energy plus operating reserve market with scarcity pricing, market power mitigation would still apply.
Offer caps would still apply to prevent price gouging bids, just as they do today.• Unit-specific conduct and impact tests still apply
• $1000/MWh overall cap still applies.
Must offer rules would prevent physical withholding, just as they do today.
Shortage cost pricing does NOT mean removal of market power mitigation. It’s all still used.
39
How the PJM and MISO Models Could Merge
40
Market Revenues for GeneratorsCome From Four ISO sources
Energy market Primary source of revenues for most generators But price caps limit revenues from this source
Operating reserve markets Supplemental source of revenues Extent depends on scarcity pricing
Capacity market Needed if energy and OR markets not enough to support RA target (the
“missing money” problem)
Local reliability-must-run (RMR) contracts in load pockets Needed to cover local/other costs not covered by Energy, OR and (if
any) Capacity markets. These RMR contracts tend to be based on cost-of-service principles.
41
Different Models DetermineWhere Generators Get Their $$$ . . . But Total Revenue Requirements Are The Same
“RMR”
Energy
OperatingReserve
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
RMR
Energy
ICAP
LICAP PJM/NE/NY
MISO Proposed
LICAP
OperatingReserve
ICAP Earlier ISOs
Cost of Service
Payments depend on
availability for real-time dispatch
Monthly payments unless tied to shortages
LICAP helps lower local RMR
42
Difference BetweenICAP and LICAP Approaches
Compare the ICAP and LICAP columns in that slide.
A locational ICAP approach tends to reallocate the source of revenues from non-market payments (RMR-type, cost-of-service contracts) to “market” payments for capacity.
• Mostly, this is money paid to generators in transmission-constrained load pockets. That’s where most RMR units are.
• Higher locational ICAP (LICAP) payments in load pockets help substitute for RMR contracts in those load pockets.
The total revenue requirement for all generators combined stays about the same for the same level of capacity.
43
Different Models Cost About the Same
First, the total revenue requirements are about the same for all three approaches, for a given RA target. It means aggregate retail rates should be about the same.
Conversely, for the same level of revenues, all three approaches achieve about the same level of RA. That’s because, if total revenues are about the same, the total dollars
available for investment is also about the same.
(The mix of investments may be a little different, because investment incentives depend partly on where the revenues come from – i.e., what are we rewarding? Reliable energy producers? Or just countable capacity?)
Bottom line: different models change the source of where generators get their revenues, but not the total.
44
Should We Care About Revenue Source?
Better short run price signals improve reliability.
If generators get most of their revenues from providing energy and operating reserves in real time, they have strong incentives to make their plants available for real-time dispatch and OR. They’ll make investment in features that improve availability.
If generators get a large portion of their revenues from monthly capacity payments, whether or not they show up in RT, they have weaker incentives to make their plants available when and where most needed. They’ll invest less in reliable operations.
Recent capacity market rules try to solve this problem by making capacity payments conditional on plants being bid in the DAM and being available for energy/OR during OR shortages.
45
Reserve Margin Target Is Set by EROIt Determines Total $$$ We Pay
MISO
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
LICAP
LICAP
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
LICAP
LICAP
15-17% Reserves12-14% Reserves
A 3 Percent Difference costs about $1+ billions
for a 100,000 MW
system
Same load = Almost same
Operating cost
About the
Sametotal costs
46
Factors Leading To Common Approach
Regional reliability organizations covering PJM and MISO support a common RA criterion:
• 1-day in 10 year LOLE => 15-18 % Reserve Margin
It may not be practical for MISO to reach 15-18 % RM using only energy and OR markets with scarcity pricing. To get the extra few %, MISO may need to make capacity
payments to cover the revenue requirements of the extra MW.
Meanwhile, PJM is improving its OR markets and believes in shortage-cost pricing. If it implements better OR and shortage-cost pricing, more
revenues will come from energy and OR markets, and less from capacity payments.
Because any approach must solve the same problems, there is a likely convergence (next slide).
47
If All ISOs Must Meet Higher ReservesThen MISO and PJM May Converge
MISO
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve
PJM w/LICAP
LICAP
RMR
Energy
OperatingReserve LICAP
Convergence?
15-18% RM Mandated by ERO
12-14% RMPJM
LICAP $$ get
smaller as . . .
Improved energy and OR pricing
supports dispatch
MISO can add
LICAP to pay for
higher RM
. . . PJM improves energy and OR shortage pricing
48
Path C: “Belts and Suspenders” Model
Combine both scarcity pricing (Path A) and some ICAP approach (Path B), at least for a transition period:
Get the spot market prices right – solves most of the problem.• Apply shortage-cost pricing in the real-time and DA markets.• Co-optimze energy and operating reserve markets.• Energy prices rise when ISO is short of operating reserves.• Use regulatory means to ensure default loads are hedged.
Use ICAP model to reach any non-economic reserve target.• Spot price supports “economic” but not “engineering” RA.• Use either short-run (NY) or forward (PJM) ICAP markets.• Sloped Demand curves are okay. (NY and PJM)• Contract hedges/options are fine. (NE)• ICAP payments are net of energy/OR profits. (All ISOs)
49
Extra Slides
50
Why Explicit Demand Curves Are Needed
If spot prices during shortages can be set by the demand curves, then the ISO must have an explicit demand curve for setting prices.
But consumers cannot yet define these demand curves. The ISO must define the curves.
Some customers can tell us their preferences.
But most (non-responsive) demand can’t.
51
Energy Demand Curve Components
Average VOLL
Quantity
Price responsive demand
(dispatchable)
Non-responsive demand
Price responsive demand
Price responsive loads (or their states, utilities, LSEs) decide what price they are willing to pay.
Price-responsive demand includes:
• Dispatchable loads
• Loads with interruptible rates
• Utility sponsored DSM
• LSE-based demand-response
• Customers responding (where they face spot prices)
Demand curve with no responsive demand
52
Some Portion of Demand Cannot Easily Respond to Price
Average VOLL
Quantity
Non-responsive demand
Price responsive demand
Some entity (states? ISO?) can estimate what price these customers would be willing to pay
Non-responsive demand cannot respond to prices
because:
• No interval metering
• Don’t face spot prices
• Bundled rates
Someone must speak for them
Price responsive demand
(dispatchable)
53
Meaning of Average VOLL (Value of Lost Load)
Average VOLL
Quantity
Price responsive demand
(dispatchable)
Non-responsive demand
Price responsive demand
VOLL applies only when ISO can’t meet minimum operating reserve without rotating blackouts.
Average VOLL =
The average price for energy at which non-responsive loads would be indifferent to being
served or curtailed, if they had the means to express their
wishes.
54
The ISO Must Specify a Demand Curve for Operating Reserves
Operating reserve requirements are essentially engineering standards – not economic demands. We need enough to cover loss of largest contingency. We need X MW of 10-minute reserves and 30-minute reserves. A percent must be “spinning” (synchonized to grid).
To implement shortage-cost pricing, ISO must translate these engineering standards into a set of demand curves for operating reserves that relates quantity to price.
55
Composite Demand Curve for OR
Quantity
Every ISO/SO has a curve. It’s not explicit or transparent. Proposal: make it transparent and allow it to affect prices.
Min OR
Target level of operating reserves
Average VOLL
Min OR = the lowest level of operating
reserves the ISO will tolerate before starting
rotating outages to prevent uncontrolled
blackouts
Curve’s slope
reflects value of reserve
shortages
56
Pricing of Energy and Operating Reserves in a Market With Shortage-cost Pricing
In a market that recognizes shortage costs, energy prices are set by supply and demand for both energy and operating reserves.
If we have enough supply to meet all energy and operating reserve requirements, the prices remain moderate.
If we start to run short of operating reserves, energy (and reserve) prices start to move up.
*Note: the following slides are overly simplified, to illustrate the concept that operating reserve shortages can affect energy spot prices.
57
Prices With Ample SuppliesThese Apply Most of the Time
Quantity
There is ample supply to meet demand for energy and operating reserves at low prices.
Minimum OR
Average VOLL
Clearing Price
Supply offers
58
Prices With Tighter SuppliesThese Apply On Rare Occasions
Average VOLL
Clearing Price
Quantity
With ISO unable to meet OR target at lower prices, prices rise. Some price-responsive load may reduce demand.
Minimum OR
Supply offers
59
Prices During Severe Shortages With Some Curtailments – Extremely Rare
Quantity
Unable to maintain minimum operating reserve without curtailment, ISO curtails enough non-responsive demand
to maintain min. OR. Price rises to average VOLL.
Curtailment needed to maintain Minimum OR
Clearing price equals
Average VOLL
Supply offers
60
Do Energy+OR Designs Help Efficiency?
An energy-plus-OR market design with scarcity pricing could improve both operational and investment efficiency. We can get better reliability at lower costs.
Operational efficiency: The real-time prices provide strong incentives for generators and demand-side responses to be available when most needed.
Investment efficiency: The energy and operating reserve prices are much more precise with respect to:
Where to build (without the LICAP deliverability problems)
What types of plants to build (flexible operational features)
61
What Does Adjusting VOLL Do for RA?
The price used for average VOLL will allow a level of market revenues that corresponds to an “economic” level of investment. Adjusting VOLL affects investment and resulting reserve levels.
If the level of average VOLL is set lower, the level of investment will be lower. It will support lower planning reserve margins.
If the level of average VOLL is set higher, the level of investment will be higher. It will support higher planning reserve margins.
62
Adjusting VOLL to Achieve Adequacy
The level of planning reserves supported by prices is affected by how high/low ISO sets average VOLL
Average VOLL
Quantity
Price responsive demand
(dispatchable)
Non-responsive demand
Price responsive demand
The ISO could raise the “average VOLL” in order to
support investments in higher reserve margins.
With this higher demand curve, spot prices would be higher during reserve shortages.
Admin-set Average VOLL
63
Adjusting Average VOLL
Adjusting average VOLL is analogous to adjusting the demand curve for capacity, as in NYISO, NE LICAP and PJM RPM proposals. But there’s an important difference:
Adjusting average VOLL affects energy and operating reserve prices, and the prices directly support reliable dispatch. But they also affect investment. So pricing for short-run reliability and long-run resource adequacy are consistent and mutually supportive.
Adjusting a demand curve for capacity affects capacity payments, and these have little/no effect on reliable dispatch. Additional rules/incentives/penalties must be added to ensure:• Capacity available when needed (e.g., during shortages).• Capacity available where needed (reflect transmission limits).• Capacity available is the right type (load following, quick start,
ramping). These problems are the hardest aspect of ICAP.
64
More Market Power Mitigation: NE Proposed to Set Prices by Demand
Curve and Counting All Supply
Total ICAPP
This proposal was left out of Settlement
65
Why Setting RA Target Is Important
If we adopt a “1-day in 10-year LOLE” reliability standard . . . that sets the resource adequacy target. It tells us how much capacity we have to build and pay for.
There are dozens of issues in designing markets for resource adequacy. However . . .
No other decision about RA approaches, such as whether to have an RPM, LICAP, monthly or forward auctions, shape of demand curves, etc., will have as large an impact on the level of retail rates.
66
RA Target Has Major Impact on Rates
In both cost-of-service and market regimes . . .
The fixed/capital cost of generation is driven largely by the resource adequacy target. For a system with 100,000 MW peak demand . . .
A 12% reserve margin requires 112,000 MW of capacity.
A 15% reserve margin requires 115,000 MW of capacity.
The 3,000 MW difference may cost an additional $ billion or so.
Note that in both cases, the operating costs are about the same, because the demand for energy/dispatch is about the same.
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