Electricity Pricing in Transition

Electricity Pricing in Transition
Author: Ahmad Faruqui
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2002-09-30
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780792376002

Electricity Pricing In Transition is written to address the new issues facing utilities, retailers, regulators, and customers in the changing electricity market. It is organized into five sections. Section I deals with the new restructured organization that has emerged from yesterday's vertically integrated, regulated monopoly company. Section II deals with issues in competitive pricing. Section III reviews the role of demand response and product design in today's chaotic marketplace. Given the single importance of California's energy crisis and the fact that it will be studied for years to come, Section IV is devoted to studying the lessons learned from this crisis. The final section of the book deals with markets and regulations. This book will provide practitioners with guidance on how to avoid the major pitfalls in pricing electricity while the market is in transition by drawing upon the insights and lessons learned from the experience of others that are documented in this book.

Final Determination

Final Determination
Author: Independent Competition and Regulatory Commission (A.C.T.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 38
Release: 2003
Genre: Electricity
ISBN:

Issues Paper

Issues Paper
Author: Independent Competition and Regulatory Commission (A.C.T.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 141
Release: 2002
Genre: Electric utilities
ISBN:

Price Shock

Price Shock
Author: Tony Wood
Publisher:
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2017-03-13
Genre: Competition
ISBN: 9780987612113

"Competition in electricity retailing hasn't delivered what was promised: lower prices for consumers. The failure is worst in Victoria, the state with the most retailers and the longest and the longest experience of deregulation. Profit margins appear to be higher than in other retail sectors - and more than double the margin that regulators considered fair when they set retail electricity prices. Victorians would save about $250 million a year if the profit margin of electricity retailers fell to match that of other retail businesses. The price problem goes beyond Victoria. Across Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Adelaide, consumers are paying nearly twice as much as they were a decade ago. Electricity bills are the number one cost concern for Australian households. High gas prices, the shutdown of older coal-fired generators and the shift to renewables are increasing bills everywhere. But the price rise should be less in Victoria because there has not been major investments in poles and wires, unlike NSW and Queensland. Lower price deals are available, but most consumers find the market so complicated that they have given up trying to find them. Thus, many Australians, including some of the most vulnerable, are paying more than they need to. The way retailers advertise their discounts is confusing and possibly misleading. And even consumers who take advantage of discounts can end up paying much higher prices when their contract expires. Electricity is an essential service without substitutes, so many consumers feel stuck and simply give up. Nor has competition yet delivered the promised innovation in customer service. Most offers provide a discount for people who switch their retailer, pay their bills on time, or pay via direct debit; but there has been little real innovation around the service itself. Retailers have been slow to build offers based on the the benefits available through smart meters, or the bundling of solar-power and battery-storage. Instead they have super-charged their marketing costs for a commodity product that almost every consumer was going to buy anyway. Competition has delivered lower costs in the wholesale/generation sector where the purchased are specialised. In contrast, the benefits of retail competition in electricity may just be less than the costs. But it is too early to give up on competition altogether. The experience in other countries, particularly the UK, shows that reregulating prices can cause problems of it own. Retailers say that major innovation is just around the corner, and governments should not look after 'lazy' customers. Nonetheless, governments should require retailers to tell customers precisely how much they will pay under 'discount' deals, and to advertise in ways that make prices easier to compare. They should require retailers to tell customers when their contract is about to expire and how much extra they will pay if they take no action. They should encourage retailers to provide detailed data on their profit margins to an independent body, and threaten to mandate disclosure if they don't. The results of these and other actions recommended in this report should be monitored against the realistic expectations of competition. The industry is on notice. We may yet see fairer prices. We may yet see real innovation. But if not, governments will have no choice but to return to price regulation."--Page 3.

Customer Risk from Real-time Retail Electricity Pricing

Customer Risk from Real-time Retail Electricity Pricing
Author: Severin Borenstein
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2006
Genre: Electricity
ISBN:

One of the most critical concerns that customers have voiced in the debate over real-time retail electricity pricing is that they would be exposed to risk from fluctuations in their electricity cost. The concern seems to be that a customer could find itself consuming a large quantity of power on the day that prices skyrocket and thus receive a monthly bill far larger than it had budgeted for. I analyze the magnitude of this risk, using demand data from 1142 large industrial customers, and then ask how much of this risk can be eliminated through various straightforward financial instruments. I find that very simple hedging strategies can eliminate more than 80% of the bill volatility that would otherwise occur. Far from being complex, mystifying financial instruments that only a Wall Street analyst could love, these are simple forward power purchase contracts, and are already offered to retail customers by a number of fully-regulated utilities that operate real-time pricing programs. I then show that a slightly more sophisticated application of these forward power purchases can significantly enhance their effect on reducing bill volatility.

The Future of Electricity Retailing and How We Get There

The Future of Electricity Retailing and How We Get There
Author: Frank A. Wolak
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2021-09-28
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3030850056

This book covers the current trends and challenges faced by regulators, policymakers, and researchers in the field of retail electricity market design and regulation. It addresses the role that “smart” technologies are playing in reshaping how utilities and consumers interact with each other and with their generating technologies. The book covers topics including smart meter adoption, dynamic pricing, demand response, distributed and utility-scale solar, technology costs trends, and the microeconomic theory that governs our understanding of retailer and consumer incentives. Existing inefficiencies of transmission and distribution network pricing as well as the potential regulatory approaches that can be used to remedy them are discussed along with the advantages of retail competition and draw attention to the barriers that currently are preventing all of the benefits of retail competition from materializing. The book uses very recent data to provide the most up-to-date overview of retailing trends and policies in the USA, Europe, Asia, Oceania, and Latin America. The book will be useful for researchers and regulators and policymakers.