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Industry and market monitoring at the Electricity Authority. Phil Bishop, Electricity Commission and Ramu Naidoo, PSC. 26 October 2010. Overview. Electricity Authority – objective and functions Key monitoring uses and activities Markets to be monitored Methods Next steps vSPD (vee-SPuD)
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Industry and market monitoring at the Electricity Authority Phil Bishop, Electricity Commission and Ramu Naidoo, PSC 26 October 2010
Overview • Electricity Authority – objective and functions • Key monitoring uses and activities • Markets to be monitored • Methods • Next steps • vSPD (vee-SPuD) • Overview of formulation • Applications to date • Future work
Focused objective • Authority’s objective • promote competition in, reliable supply by, and the efficient operation of, the electricity industry for the long-term benefit of consumers (clause 15, Electricity Industry Act 2010) • Commission objectives and outcomes that are not objectives of the Authority include: • fairness • environmental sustainability • promotion of electricity efficiency • c.f. sections 172N and 172O of the Electricity Act 1992 (as amended)
Functions of the Authority See clause 16: • to maintain a register of industry participants • to make and administer the Electricity Industry Participation Code • to monitor compliance with the Act, the regulations, and the Code • to investigate and enforce compliance with parts 2 and 4, the regulations, and the Code • to investigate and enforce compliance with part 3 • to undertake market-facilitation measures (such as providing education, guidelines, information, and model arrangements), and to monitor the operation and effectiveness of market facilitation measures • to undertake industry and market monitoring, and carry out and make publicly available reviews, studies, and inquiries into any matter relating to the electricity industry • to contract for market operation services and system operator services • to promote to consumers the benefits of comparing and switching retailers • to perform any other specific functions imposed on it under this or any other Act
Key uses and activities • Uses • Inform and assist the Authority’s code development activities • Provide interested parties with sufficient information to determine if the sector’s performance is in the long term interests of consumers • Provide additional discipline on participant’s pricing decisions (when they possess market power) • Activities • Routine measuring, testing, screening, comparing against benchmarks/thresholds and reporting • Provision of data and information (data warehouse project) • One-off reviews and studies The Authority does not seek to become the price police – that is the role of the Commerce Commission
Markets and priorities Priorities determined in recent months by the Establishment Board • Assess competition in NZ’s electricity markets, including: retail, wholesale, ancillary services, and forward markets • Assess reliability of supply – from an efficiency perspective • Assess transaction efficiency Markets to be monitored • Wholesale spot market (incl. resource adequacy) • Instantaneous reserves market • Forwards markets • Ancillary services markets • Fuels and inventories • Retail market • Distribution services market • Transmission services market
Methods • Data warehouse (access via internet) • Models • Transparent and freely available • GAMS-based and open source • E.g. vSPD with daily GDX files of input data for final pricing cases • Matlab-based • Distributed codes and compiled executables • EA website (monitoring page) • Routine screening and summaries • One-off reports and studies
Data warehouse Data Warehouse Server (ECOM039) Service Provider FTP Server (ECOM046) Data arriving via SFTP (pushed) Internet Service Provider Users Analysts
Progress and next steps • Progress • Data warehouse started • Guidelines on data gathering and dissemination • Core tools being developed/enhanced • Next steps • Internal work plan (Nov) • Information paper for industry stakeholders (Dec) • Data management plan (Dec) • Adapt models to generate competition measures (Dec) • Data warehouse accessible via internet (July 2011)
Overview - vSPD • SPD used as the market clearing engine (MCE) in NZ electricity market • Mathematical formulation documented and publicly available • vSPD based on the published mathematical formulation • Developed using GAMS • Estimation of some input parameters (e.g. loss segments)
vSPD inputs ~35MB 1 per final pricing case (48 trade periods) ~5MB
vSPD GUI – configure and solve 5 1 2 4 6 3
Some applications of vSPD • Variable reserves investigation • Investigation of scarcity pricing implementation options within the MCE • Market impact assessments of rule breaches
Ongoing and future work • Improving quality of input data into vSPD • Enhanced override functionality • Additional reporting • Further development of GUI • Sensitivity module