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SUMMARY OF THE IG DISCUSSION PAPER ON THE BALANCING IN THE BALTICS. Aistija Zubaviciute, NCC Baltic Electricity Market Mini-Forum 23rd November 2006, Vilnius. SOME DATA IN THE BALTIC ELECTRICITY MARKETS. Consumption in 2005: EE – 7,5 TWh LV – 6,5 TWh LT – 8,4 TWh
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SUMMARY OF THE IG DISCUSSION PAPER ON THE BALANCING IN THE BALTICS Aistija Zubaviciute, NCC Baltic Electricity Market Mini-Forum 23rd November 2006, Vilnius
SOME DATA IN THE BALTIC ELECTRICITY MARKETS Consumption in 2005: • EE – 7,5 TWh • LV – 6,5 TWh • LT – 8,4 TWh Generation companies >5% in 2005: • EE – 1 • LV – 1 • LT – 3 Market opening in 2005: • EE – 12% (2009 – 35%, 2013 – 100%) • LV – 76% • LT – 74% Independent suppliers in 2005: • EE – 0 • LV – 7 • LT – 20
DEFINITIONS • ESTONIA: Balance settlement means the settlement of electricity trades which have taken place during a specific hour • LITHUANIA: Balancing electricity means electricity which is consumed/not consumed by customers or generated/not generated by producers in derogation from the quantities of electricity planned in the schedules drawn up adhering to the Electricity Trading Rules approved by the Government or a body authorised by it
BALTIC TSOs ROLE ESTONIA: TSO is responsible for national balance settlement • settles balance power between TSO and balance providers • settles balance power between TSO and other neighbouring countries • the final settlement is ready during 3 months LATVIA:TSO is responsible for system balancing and ensuring operational stability in the transmission system • performs balance settlement between TSO and those market parties having balancing agreement with TSO • has an open delivery agreement with a neighbouring system LITHUANIA: TSO carries out the national balancing function by providing uniform, non-discriminatory and competitive conditions for all market participants • settles balancing and regulation energy between TSO and other neighbouring countries • organizes regulation energy and reserve capacity auctions
PRICING ESTONIA: • Reference price of balance energy – the selling or purchase price with system open supplier • Price of balance energy in system has to cover the following expenses of TSO: • any justified expenses incurred in the purchase of regulating capacity • any justified expenses incurred in connection with balance determination • any justified expenses incurred in connection with the purchase and sale of balancing energy • ensure justified profitability LATVIA:The methodology has not been officially elaborated yet LITHUANIA: • Reference price of balance energy – the selling or purchase price with open balancing energy supplier or/and regulation energy auction price • Balancing energy price is market based price
EXAMPLES OF IMBALANCE PRICES Notes: • Period 01.10.2006 – 31.12.2006 for Latvia; • Period 01.09.2006 – 31.12.2006 for Lithuania (It could change till the end of year).
ADVANTAGES&DISADVANTAGES ESTONIA: • it should be discussed in the meeting LATVIA: • no comments LITHUANIA: • the method applied in the national market is based on the classical scheme used in the most countries of the Western Europe. • there are possible some corrections on the imbalance coefficients in relation with the bilateral agreement between Russia and Lithuania
PRESENT STATUS OF CONTRACTS • Bilateral agreement between EE and LV >> LV and RU • Bilateral agreement between LT and RU >> LT and RU (there is a contract between LT and LV, but not activated) • Such system works quite well – are there any other options? - Yes
MODELS DESCRIBED IN ETSO REPORT • No trading, except emergency – traditional model • Cross-border Reserve Pooling – has been used in Nordel • Cross-border Reserve Trading – open to reciprocity • Reserve capacity payment and the exclusive right to use the reserve (Germany) • Only based on energy payment (France) • Sharing of Reserve Capacity (no exclusive right to use their own share of the common reserve) – present model in Nordel
CHARACTERISTICS OF TECHNICAL MODELS • Models 2 and 4 imply some form of balancing mechanism integration and require product harmonization • Models 2 and 3 may reduce long term reserve margins • Model 4 enables full integration of balancing mechanisms (centralization) and may reduce reserve margin reguirements, however when applied over a vaster area may be restricted due to transmission bottlenecks
EVALUATION BY ETSO REPORT Challenges: • Product compatibility • Differences in price structure/incompatible product values • Differences in procurement position of TSOs Consequences of cross-border trade of Tertiary Reserves: • Change in procurement costs for TSOs • Potential decrease or reserve margins in the long term Prefered conditions: • Sufficient competition • Transparency A key element for an efficient market is right pricing of products, also needed a Balance Management Reference Model
OPTIONS? • Improved bilateral contract market • All Baltic countries have a possibility to buy the balance energy from each other • A possibility to buy from other countries than the Baltic region • Coordinated balance towards other countries • Common Baltic reserve and regulation power market
WHAT IS NEEDED? If Common Baltic reserve and regulation power market 1 stage • Setting main principles and procedures for RRPM • Princing concepts • The creation of Baltic Operational System (BOIS) • Disturbance (emergency) reserve market only 2 stage • Pricing concepts adaptation for regulation power market • The adjusting of BOIS for regulation power trade • Disturbance (emergency) reserve and regulation energy market • Balancing pricing
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