Missing markets and missing pipelines: the problem of resource adequacy in a natural-gas-fired dominated system
Abstract
Since the beginning of the century, US electric power systems have increasingly become dominated by
natural gas-fired power plants. In this context, the traditional concern of electricity regulators to ensure
that market agents take efficient power generation investment decisions expands to the gas system, as
the system requires adequate investments also in pipeline or regasification capacity. The problem is that
ensuring pipeline capacity, even or particularly under tight supply conditions, involves entering into
very long-term firm transportation contracts, and therefore introduces a major source of risk for power
generators: the possibility that electricity demand does not evolve as forecasted, or probably more
importantly that renewable energy sources massively deploy in the future, creates a significant quantity
risk to the gas-fired generator which as a result tend to just contract for interruptible gas supply. This is particularly the case in New England (Black and Veatch, 2014), whose high dependency on
natural gas has become troublesome in the last few years during cold winter months, due to the lack of
natural gas pipeline capacity. When temperatures drop significantly, natural gas demand for both space
heating and electric generation rises. Since most of New England’s natural gas is imported through
pipelines, high gas demand results in pipeline capacity shortage events that have a significant impact in
the electric power system. Bringing new pipeline capacity to the system is seen as fundamental today. In this paper we analyse this problem of the gas and electricity long-term planning coordination and the
security of supply consequences. Since pipeline contracts are capital intensive and therefore subject to
long-term risk, in the absence of any financial tools that allow investors to hedge the market price risk
in the long-term, uncertainty in general reduces the incentives to enter into such firm contracts. We
assess how a risk-averse natural gas power plant owner underinvests in pipeline capacity when no
hedging tools are available. We discuss how this market incompleteness leads to a socially inefficient
result, and how the gap could be bridged by creating markets for risk, for example via any sort of longterm
capacity obligation,. The present theoretical analysis addresses the investment problem in gas-fired thermal capacity and
pipeline capacity in a context characterised by (i) perfect competition, (ii) risk-averse agents and (iii)
missing long-term financial markets. It explores the impact derived from these missing markets, which
translate into less socially efficient investments. The model simultaneously represents and solves the
short-term electricity and gas markets. Following a similar approach as the one developed by Rodilla et
al. (2009), four different settings are considered in the analysis: a (cost-minimizing) context with a risk neutral centralized planner who decides both the thermal
capacity and the pipeline capacity to maximize social welfare. This framework constitutes the
benchmark solution. a market in which risk-averse generators have to decide the thermal capacity to be installed and the
firm pipeline capacity contracts to be signed to maximize their profit, and where no long-term
financial instruments are available.
a market setting similar to the previous one, but where a long-term forward contract for electric
energy is available. a market setting similar to the previous one, but where both a forward and an option contract are
available The market equilibrium model developed is stochastic (different renewable generation scenarios are
considered) and solved by means of an MCP. Risk constraints are modelled through the conditional
value-at-risk (CVAR) (Rockafellar and Uryasev, 2000). The gas market is modelled in such a way that
generators which do not enter into contracts for firm pipeline capacity have still access to gas supply,
but they are exposed to the short-term market price of natural gas (endogenously calculated). Agents
must first take long-term investment decisions (in both pipeline capacity, and power plant investment),
as well as the hedging instruments, and then they decide in the short term the hourly power plant
production.Results show an equivalence between the central planner’s welfare-maximizing decisions and the profit
maximizing decisions of risk-neutral agents. Nevertheless, if agents are risk-averse and no risk-hedging
instruments are available, results deviate from the central planner’s. Risk-averse agents base their
decisions on lower profit scenarios, rather than using expected profit, which generates long-term
inefficient investment decisions. However, when given the possibility to hedge their risk by participating in a forward market, agents’
decisions come closer to replicating those of a central planner, thus improving social welfare. Moreover,
if an option is included in addition to the forward market, results come even closer to the social
optimum. These findings concur with Willems and Morbee (2010) where conclusions show that
increasing market completeness is welfare enhancing.
Trabajo Fin de Máster
Missing markets and missing pipelines: the problem of resource adequacy in a natural-gas-fired dominated systemTitulación / Programa
Master in the Electric Power IndustryMaterias/ UNESCO
33 Ciencias tecnológicas3322 Tecnología energética
332205 Fuentes no convencionales de energía
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