Title :
Electricity deregulation in Alberta: a national and international perspective
Author :
Rao, N.D. ; Sporea, S.I.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Calgary Univ., Alta., Canada
Abstract :
The Electric Power Industry is undergoing a major structural change. As in companion network industries, i.e., transportation and telecommunications, the market for electric power is evolving from monopoly to competition. The Province of Alberta has taken a leadership role in restructuring its power industry through the introduction of the Electric Utilities Act in 1995. Subsequent consultations between stakeholders led to Bill 27, the Electric Utilities Amendment Act passed in 1998. The old model is one of vertically-integrated, regulated monopoly comprising the 3 elements: generation, transmission and distribution. In the new model, generation, transmission and distribution are treated separately, with generation and retail services set free from the deregulation mechanism. To ensure a level playing field, the “wires” (transmission grid) are spun into a separate entity and governed by an independent transmission administrator. This ensures system access to the pool to all generators and importers on a nondiscriminatory basis irrespective of the “wires” ownership. Customer choice at distribution level is scheduled for January 1, 2001
Keywords :
electricity supply industry; Alberta; Bill 27; Electric Power Industry; Electric Utilities Act; Electric Utilities Amendment Act; competition; electricity deregulation; independent transmission administrator; power distribution; power generation; power transmission; transmission grid; Communication industry; Economies of scale; Electricity supply industry deregulation; Monopoly; Power generation; Power generation economics; Power industry; Power systems; Transportation; Wires;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2000 Canadian Conference on
Conference_Location :
Halifax, NS
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5957-7
DOI :
10.1109/CCECE.2000.849683