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Strategies for the security of electricity supply. 2005. 5. Contents. Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies. 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures. 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the
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Contents • Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long • term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the open market 4. Nuclear energy and governmental support
Contents • Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long • term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the open market 4. Nuclear energy and governmental support
1-1. The basic plan of long term electricity supply & demand • Electricity companies enjoy decent profitability considering the rules and policies set by the government • The government is responsible for the Basic Plan • The government predicts electricity demands, and devises relevant policies • The basic plan covers 14 years, and is updated every two years • The basic plan reflects basic directions, demands prospects, and construction plan of grid lines • Power companies refer to the basic plan, when they make decisions of new investments.
1-2. The constructions in the Basic plan • The basic plan includes A, B, C1, classified by the degree of uncertainty. • A : under construction, imminent completion • B : in pre-construction stage after being approved • C1: in planning stage to construct, expected to be approved within 2years (executions and processes are less certain) • C2: in planning stage, not included in the basic plan, not expected to be approved within 2years (some issues such as linkage to power network need further study) C2 C1 B A Underconstruction Planning (no approval within 2years) Preparing to start construction Planning (approval within 2years)
1-3. The Plan of constructions by GenCos • State owned GenCos plan to commission 31,100 MW facilities (81% of total construction) from 2004 to 2017 • they will construct nuclear power plants and coal power plants, which are very capital intnsive • Private GenCo plan to construct 7,100 MW facilities, 19% of capacity entries • they prefer to construct LNG power plants, which require less investment 38,200 Plan period : 2004~2017, unit : MW 7,100 (19%) 25,200 31,100 (81%) Private GenCo 4,000 (11%) 13,000 3,100 (8%) 21,200 (55%) State ownedGenco 9,900 (26%) Total Under construction In preparation
1-4. Prospects of capacity reserve margin • Capacity reserve margin is expected to be more than 15~17%, the proper margin level to guarantee supply, when the planned constructions are successfully completed • capacity reserve margin is expected to reach 15∼18% by 2006, afterwards 25%
1-5. Risk factors in the execution of the plan • C1 constructions may not be executed if market condition changes unfavorably • The government cannot force the private companies’ construction. • State owned GenCos 9,900MW, private GenCos, 3,100MW • The constructions of nuclear power plants have many barriers to overcome • Low public acceptance (NIMBY) and opposition of NGOs while 6 nuclear power plants (6,000MW) are scheduled for commissioning over the plan period • Prospects of capacity reserve margin by uncertainties • The delay of C1 may trigger a demand-supply emergency starting from 2015 • The delay of 6 nuclear power plants may trigger an emergency starting from 2013
1-6. Strategies to execute the construction plan • The Government (KEPCO) promotes C1 by state owned GenCos to meet the capacity entries timeframe • The processes of constructions are cautiously evaluated by KEPCO • State owned GenCos will replace private GenCos in constructing C1 if the private GenCos withdraw • No corporate investment risk exists in constructing nuclear power plants because KEPCO holds 100% shares of the nuclear power company. • However, opposition of NGOs and citizens require continuous promotion to increase public acceptance to nuclear power plants. • safety first operation • co-prosperity with regional community • advertising the necessity of nuclear energy in Korea due to high dependence on imported energy resources
Contents 1. Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the open market 4. Nuclear energy and governmental support
2-1. Risk factors to secure electricity supply in the open market • Investment decisions are made upon the price signals and predictability in the open market, however, the price signals may not function well • when irrational market system distorts the signals • when price hike and abnormal volatilities are caused by manipulations of any participants’ market power • The GenCos may fail to secure proper profitability for re-investment • when the market is interrupted by regulatory body for the purpose of price stabilisation
2-2. Strategies to secure stable supply of electricity Cost Based Pool (CBP) is the realistic best solution • CBP has proven to be the best way to keep the market stability in Korea until effective solution is found: • effective promotion of competition for cost reduction • reasonable market price • stable supply of electricity • less distortion of market signal by irrational market system • less market manipulation by participants • less interruption by regulatory bodies
2-2. Strategies to secure stable supply of electricity • CBP has evolved through improvements such as adoption of BLMP and A/S • Adoption of Base Load Marginal Price (BLMP) • In a signal market pool, the estimated market price set by System Marginal Price (SMP) used to be too high to be accepted resulting from the portfolio of fuel mix • Nuclear power plants and coal power plants determine BLMP • LNG and oil power plants determine SMP • Payments forancillary services for grid security and cycle maintenance to meet the market system • Promoting investments by continuously improving CBP system • The CBP market system will be improved, i.e. differentiated capacity payment (CP) will be linked to reserve margin As Is To Be • CP paid on the Pari passu basis to all available capacity • low reserve margin, high CP • high reserve margin, low CP
Contents 1. Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the open market 4. Nuclear energy and governmental support
3-1. Whole sale market and securing the stability of price • Oil and LNG generators determine 75~80% of market pricing at around 5.7¢/kWh under System Marginal Price (SMP) system • Oil and LNG generators produce 20% of annual generation volume. • KEPCO may suffer financial risks from high SMP and low tariff regulated at 6.5¢/kWh • Financial health of GenCos and KEPCO through price stabilization measures is essential. Load Duration Curve Reserve Margin ( MW) LNG / Oil Coal 75~80% Nuclear 100% 8,760 hours
3-1. Whole sale market and securing the stability of price • Introduction of BLMP has secured price stability • The highest marginal price of base load generators is determined as BLMP • The highest marginal price of peak load generators is determined as SMP • The settlement prices have been maintained at around 4.2~4.4¢/kWh Introduction of Separate Settlement (Variable Cost) SMP 5.43 ¢ CP : 0.63 ¢ 4.80 ¢ LNG 4.19 ¢ Oil 3.44 ¢ CP : 1.79 ¢/kWh 1.64 ¢ Coal BLMP 0.35 ¢ Nuclear Base Load Volume 78% Peak Load 22%
3-2. Evaluation on the operation of the wholesale market • State owned GenCos have enjoyed significant increase of operating income ratio(16.5% before separation → 20.9% after separation). • They own base load generators (nuclear, coal), and enjoy reasonable profits from market price. • Private GenCos in the market also have enjoyed reasonable profits. • They own peak load generators (LNG), and are sufficiently compensated by the CP to recover fixed costs. • Private GenCos having PPA with KEPCO are guaranteed reasonable ROR(8%). ※ Operating income ratio of GenCos after separation
Contents 1. Risk factors in the present Basic Plan of long term Electricity Supply & Demand, and Strategies 2. Risk factors in the open market and countermeasures 3. The strategy for the stability of price in the open market 4. Nuclear energy and governmental support
4-1. The status and the prospects of nuclear generation Prospects of nuclear generation • The further construction of nuclear power plants is necessary for securing stable supply of electricity as the demand is expected to highly increase in South Korea. • Korea imports most of its generation fuel (99%), and the prices of fossil fuel rocketed recently (56%). • ‘The basic plan of long term electricity supply & demand’ stipulates that nuclear power plant generation will stay at 30% of the total generation capacity. • Expanding public acceptance to safe of nuclear power plants and promoting timely constructions are required.
4-2. The status of nuclear generation Current status of nuclear energy in the electricity industry • 20 nuclear generators (17,716MW) in operation compose 29% of total capacity in Korea. • The generation by nuclear power plants reached 39 % of total generation volume and 32% of the total traded amount in 2004, the highest shares among generation types. • The low generation costs of nuclear power plants helped Korea not to increase retail prices in spite of recent price hikes of oil and coal.
4-2. The status of nuclear generation The profitability of nuclear power plants in the market • The operating income ratio of nuclear power plants (22.4%) was higher than those of any thermal power plants. • ROR of nuclear power (5.8%) was higher than the average ROR of GenCos (5.3%) in 2004. • While thermal power companies suffer fuel cost increase by the coal price increase, the nuclear power company enjoyed market price increase without the increase of fuel costs. • No difficulty is expected in raising new investments in nuclear power plants with stable profitability under the current CBP market.
4-3. The governmental support to nuclear generation • Nuclear power plants need governmental support for securing construction site and disposal site, and for continuing operation • More constructions of nuclear power plants are inevitable in order to secure electricity supply and stable market price of electricity in Korea • Institutional Support for constructions of nuclear power plants • Economic benefits to local areas near power plants • $9~14mn/year by “special laws for the support of local area accepting location of low-medium radio active waste • $68mn/year by ‘special laws for the support of local area neighboring power plants • Reduction of risk of nuclear energy business by ‘laws for nuclear damages’. • Public relationship in support of nuclear power plants.