Title :
Empirical Analysis of the Merit-Order Effect and the Missing Money Problem in Power Markets With High RES Shares
Author :
Hildmann, Marcus ; Ulbig, Andreas ; Andersson, Goran
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Technol. & Electr. Eng., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract :
An on-going debate in the energy economics and power market community raises the question if energy-only power markets are increasingly failing due to growing feed-in shares from subsidized renewable energy sources (RES); the argument being essentially that the merit-order effect of RES production depresses day-ahead spot market prices, which in turn creates a situation where power plant owners cannot recover investment costs (missing-money problem). We argue in short that energy-only power markets are not failing in principle but are rather facing several market distortions that hinder proper market functioning, namely 1) the gap between the electricity volume actually traded at day-ahead spot markets versus the overall electricity consumption, and 2) the regulatory assumption that variable RES generation, i.e., wind and photovoltaic (PV), truly has zero marginal operation and grid integration costs. In this paper, we show that both effects over-amplify the well-known merit-order effect of RES power feed-in, and indirectly also the missing-money problem beyond a level that is explainable by underlying physical realities. We empirically analyze the impacts of wind and PV power feed-in on the day-ahead market for the EPEX German-Austrian market zone, a region that is already today experiencing significant feed-in tariff (FIT)-subsidized RES power feed-in (ca. 20% FIT share). Our analysis shows that, if necessary regulatory adaptations are taken, i.e., increasing the spot market´s share of overall load demand and using the true marginal costs of RES units in the merit-order, energy-based power markets remain functional despite high RES power feed-in.
Keywords :
demand side management; photovoltaic power systems; power generation economics; power grids; power markets; solar power; tariffs; wind power; wind power plants; EPEX German-Austrian market zone; FIT-subsidized RES power; PV power feed-in; RES generation; RES power feed-in; RES units; day-ahead spot market price; electricity consumption; energy economics; energy-based power market; feed-in tariff; grid integration cost; load demand; marginal costs; merit order effect; missing money problem; photovoltaic generation; renewable energy sources; wind generation; wind power feed-in; zero marginal operation; Europe; Power markets; Power systems; Production; Wind forecasting; Wind power generation; Electricity supply industry deregulation; power generation dispatch; power system economics; solar power generation; wind power generation;
Journal_Title :
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPWRS.2015.2412376