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Demand Response: Next Steps. OPSI Annual Meeting October 1, 2012. Howard J. Haas. Defining the Goal: Demand Response. A fully functional demand side of the electricity market means that end use customers will have the: the ability to see real-time energy price signals in real time
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Demand Response: Next Steps • OPSI Annual Meeting • October 1, 2012 Howard J. Haas
Defining the Goal: Demand Response A fully functional demand side of the electricity market means that end use customers will have the: • the ability to see real-time energy price signals in real time • will have the ability to react to real-time energy prices in real time • will have the ability to receive the direct benefits or costs of changes in real-time energy use. www.monitoringanalytics.com
Defining the Goal: Demand Response A fully functional demand side of the capacity market will be able to see current capacity prices will have the ability: • to react to capacity prices • to receive the direct benefits or costs of changes in the demand for capacity. www.monitoringanalytics.com
Defining the Goal: Demand Response Price D S=D* MC S DWL PW P* MB PR S = DR MW* MWR MW www.monitoringanalytics.com
Demand Response: Work in Progress Market failure when behavior is inconsistent with the market value. Occurs because: • Customers do not know the market price • Customer do not pay the market price • Do not benefit from response at market price • Disconnect between wholesale markets and retail pricing Assumes behavior would be different if prices and the costs of consumption were directly linked www.monitoringanalytics.com
Demand Response: Work In Progress Today, most end use customers do not face the market price for energy or capacity: • Locational marginal price of energy (LMP) • Locational capacity market clearing price. Most end use customers pay a fixed retail rate with no direct relationship to the hourly wholesale market LMP, either on an average zonal or on a nodal basis. www.monitoringanalytics.com
PJM’s Demand Response: Interim State PJM’s demand side programs, by design, provide a work around for end use customers that are not otherwise exposed to the incremental, locational costs of energy and capacity. PJM’s programs are a transitional step towards a fully functional demand side for its markets. The complete transition to a fully functional demand side will require explicit agreement and coordination among the Commission, state public utility commissions and RTOs/ISOs. www.monitoringanalytics.com
PJM Demand Response Programs www.monitoringanalytics.com
Energy Demand Response Program: Issues In PJM’s Economic Load Response Program • LMP signal is zonal not nodal • Nodal is the right price signal • Measurement challenges www.monitoringanalytics.com
Energy Demand Response Program: Issues Order 745; March 15, 2011: Distorts energy price signal to load Net Benefits Test: • Pass the test • Get Full LMP vs. LMP-Generation Component of Rate • Fail the test • No payment (retail rate savings) • Double payment to LMP wholesale customers • Already getting the marginal signal: LMP savings • Paying LMP on top of realized savings is double payment www.monitoringanalytics.com
Capacity Demand Response Program: Issues PJM’s Load Management (LM) Program • MW equivalence issue • Limited vs. Summer Only vs. Annual • Should have Annual Only • Current products distort capacity market price • Need Subzonal Designation • Subzonal dispatch, with target of nodal dispatch www.monitoringanalytics.com
Capacity Demand Response Program: Issues PJM’s Load Management (LM) Program • Emergency vs. Economic (not a scarcity trigger) • Not offsetting emergency MW • Minimum Dispatch Price • $1,000 • $2,700? • No reason to pay minimum dispatch price • No call on the economic capacity they are surrendering • Should be paid: LMP – Generation Component of Rate www.monitoringanalytics.com
PJM’s Demand Response: Goal Transition to a structure where customers do not require payments to have an incentive to respond to energy or capacity prices. • Real time nodal price transparency • Direct reduction in Capacity Obligations (save on the margin) • Still a role for third party aggregators/retailers to provide options • Active load response • Fixed price options www.monitoringanalytics.com
Demand Response: Goal No need for programs if retail markets reflected hourly wholesale prices and customers received direct savings associated with reducing consumption in response to prices. • No need for a PJM Economic Load Response Program • No need for extensive measurement and verification protocols. In the transition to that point, however, there is a need for robust measurement and verification techniques to ensure that transitional programs incent the desired behavior. www.monitoringanalytics.com
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