DocumentCode
1579240
Title
A global perspective on the impact of competition on transmission
Author
Henney, A.
fYear
1995
fDate
10/12/1995 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
42552
Lastpage
42557
Abstract
Competitive electric systems have been introduced in Chile (1985), England and Wales (1990), Scotland (after a fashion, 1990), Argentina (1992), the State of Victoria Australia (1995), and Finland (1995). Competition is in the process of being introduced into Sweden (1996), the USA at wholesale level, for new generation in Spain, and in New Zealand in due course. The creation of a competitive market fundamentally changes the role of transmission. Introducing competition means that there will be a number of generating units in diverse ownership, distribution undertakings, and directly connected customers who are independent agents operating in a market. The fragmentation creates a set of complex interfaces between the planning and operation of generation and the planning and operation of transmission which have to be knitted together with a mixture of contracts and pricing signals. The diverse interests create a governance problem. The author discusses some of the common themes emerging from the change to a competitive market in the countries mentioned. The author discusses the independence of transmission, separation of transmission and system operation, ancillary services, market economics, and the governance problems
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Network Pricing, Investment and Access: A Review of International Experiences, IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location
London
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/ic:19951037
Filename
497046
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