Walter Boltz
Chairman, CEER Gas Working Group
Enabling MarketsInitial assessment of merging market areas
& trading regionsGas Target Model
2GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
Internal EU gas market
• What do we want to achieve?• Internal EU gas market
• How we want to achieve this?• First we need to enable functioning wholesale
markets (“markets”), where they do not exist yet.• As second step we need to connect these markets
better to move forward to an integrated market.
Basic conditions need to be established in all countries
No one size fits all solution possible
3GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
Overview of the MECO-S model for EU gas market integration
Improve effectiveness by realising economic pipeline investments
MECO-S Model
Pillar 1:Enable functioning wholesale markets
Pillar 2:Tightly
connect markets
Pillar 3:Enable secure
supply patterns
Pillar 1: Structuring network access to the European gas grid in a way that enables functioning wholesale markets so that every European final customer is easily accessible from such a market.
Pillar 2: Fostering short and mid-term price alignment between the functioning wholesale markets by tightly connecting the markets through facilitating cross-market supply and trading and potentially implementing market coupling as far as the (at any time) given infrastructure allows.
Pillar 3: Enabling the establishment of secure supply patterns to the functioning wholesale markets.
Foundation: Improving the effectiveness of pillars 1 to 3 by making sure that economic investments in pipelines are realised.
4GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
Where do we have functioning wholesale markets yet?
• Depending on the definition applied between 1 and 5 functioning gas markets exist in Europe today!
• Shall we strive to create 25 functioning gas markets?
• Will this foster competition in the retail markets?
• Would the German gas market have developed the same if we had not reduced the number of zones (~20) by merging them?
• Would the French gas market have developed the same if we had not reduced the number of zones (5) by merging them?
Can markets be enabled without liquidity only via better connection?
5GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
How to enable functioning wholesale markets?
• Different pictures all over Europe call for different approaches which are not mutually exclusive• If a country is capable of establishing a functioning
market itself the establishment of one (or two, based on C/B analysis) zone within this country is important (e.g. GB, Germany, France, Spain);
• If a country is not capable of establishing a functioning market itself (e.g. due to lack of liquidity or size)
• Cross-border market areas (full merger) is one solution; or • Accession to a larger, already functioning market; or• Trading Regions – a single cross-border zone for wholesale
markets with congestion-free interconnection to national end-user zones.
6GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
The Market Area Model
Features:
•One virtual point for wholesale trading
•Fully integrated wholesale market
•One balancing zone from import points to final customers
•Full integration of DSO networks
•Single set of balancing rules
•Single balancing entity
Symbols
Virtual point of the market area serving as the sole marketplace of the market area
Entry or exit contract
Exit contract
Market Area A
Country A
Country A Country B
Market Area AB
Cross-border market
area
National market
area
VP
Final customers (A) Final customers (B)
VP
Final customers (A)
VP
7GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
The Trading Region Model
Country A Country B
Trading Region AB
End userzone A
End userzone B
Final customers (A) Final customers (B)
VP
Legend and Symbols
End user zone = National balancing zone for national final customers, no matter the system (distribution or transmission) they are connected to
Trading Region AB = Cross-border entry/exit system including all nominated points on the transmission systems of countries A and B
Entry or exit contract
Exit contract
Virtual point of the trading region serving as the sole marketplace of the trading region and all attached end user zones. Shifting of gas between trading region and end user zone is done by nominating a virtual exit on the VP.
VP
Features:• One virtual point for wholesale
trading• Fully integrated wholesale market• Trading region is basically kept free
of imbalances• Final customers are balanced in
national end user zones that may reflect national specifics
• End-user balancing may be done by national balancing entity
• Congestion-free interconnection between trading region and end user zones through the common virtual point ( virtual exit to end user zone)
8GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
What needs to be done in all approaches?
• Prerequisite for merging market areas and creating trading regions:• Absence or at least limited physical congestion
• As soon as we are talking about cross-border integration the following issues have to be analysed• Entry / Exit Tariffication• Redistribution of revenues and costs• Alignment of regulatory framework• Investments• TSO as well as NRA cooperation
9GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
MECO-S Model: Architecture at Large
Legend and Symbols
Hub to Hub capacity product and potentially market coupling
Virtual point.VP
Country E Country F
Trading Region EF
End user zone E End user zone F
Country C Country D
Market Area CD
Market Area A
Country A
Market Area B
Country B
VP
VP
VP
VP
10GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
Common position of European gas industry associations on multi-system
operation of TSOs
11GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
The second step: connecting markets
• Connecting markets means price alignment between functioning markets and thereby driving market efficiency and public welfare on a European scale
• Connecting markets can happen at different timescales, e.g. short-term implicit auctions.
12GTM Workshop in London, 11 April 2011
Thank you for your attention!
www.energy-regulators.eu
Top Related