Putting renewable energy auctions into action - An agent-based model of onshore wind power auctions in Germany
Authored by Vasilios Anatolitis, Marijke Welisch
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2017.08.024
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The following analysis looks into auctions for renewable energy,
specifically onshore wind power in Germany. Following an agent-based
modeling approach, the two most commonly applied auction pricing rules
are compared (uniform and pay-as-bid) and first conclusions on outcomes
are drawn for future policy design. The auctions are modeled to closely
represent the auction design foreseen in the German Renewable Energy
Sources Act (EEG, 2017) and replicate their parameters.
The analysis draws on auction theory. For both pricing schemes,
individually rational agents with independent valuation are assumed. As
support for renewable electricity through auctions is to be established
permanently and auction rounds will be held multi-annually, a further
focus lies on agents learning over time by adapting their behavior to
new information.
The model results show that pay-as-bid exhibits lower prices and thus
support costs than uniform pricing, whereas allocative efficiency
suffers under pay-as-bid. Over time, one can observe a decline in the
strike price, which is due to learning effects, whereas agents' profits
increase in the course of the auctions. Furthermore, smaller actors will
experience difficulties and agent diversity is likely to suffer in the
long term, if this is not accounted for in other ways.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
bidding strategy
Support
Auction simulation
Onshore wind power
Uniform
pricing
Pay-as-bid
Electricity pay
Bid auction