How does market power affect the impact of large scale wind investment in `energy only' wholesale electricity markets?
Authored by David Young, Stephen Poletti, Oliver Browne
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2015.08.030
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Abstract
In the short run, it is well known that increasing wind penetration is
likely to reduce spot market electricity prices due to the merit order
effect. The long run effect is less clear because there will be a change
in new capacity investment in response to the wind penetration. In this
paper we examine the interaction between capacity investment, wind
penetration and market power by first using a least-cost generation
expansion model to simulate capacity investment with increasing amounts
of wind generation, and then using a computer agent-based model to
predict electricity prices in the presence of market power. We find the
degree to which firms are able to exercise market power depends
critically on the ratio of capacity to peak demand. For our preferred
long run generation scenario we show market power increases for some
periods as wind penetration increases however the merit order
counteracts this with the results that prices overall remain flat.
Returns to peakers increase significantly as wind penetration increases.
The market power in turn leads to inefficient dispatch which is
exacerbated with large amounts of wind generation. (C) 2015 Elsevier
Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
models
incentives
Generation
Prices
Germany
Renewables