Introduction to electricity economics1 ECON 4930 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 1 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Trade1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 6 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Advertisements

ENERGY VALUE. Summary  Operational Value is a primary component in the Net Market Value (NMV) calculation used to rank competing resources in the RPS.
Linear Programming Models & Case Studies
Technical Conference Avoided Cost Modeling January 6, 2015.
CREE Site Visit Oslo, September 19, 2013 Who Should Pay for Transmission? Nils-Henrik M. von der Fehr.
ECON 4925 Resource Economics Autumn 2010 Lecture 1 Introduction Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund Lecture 1.
1 Competition Policy and Regulation in Hydro-Based Electricity Markets Luiz Rangel Energy Centre, University of Auckland September 2007.
Energy Systems in Norway Kjersti Øyen Skjalg Holther VL Energiesysteme und Energiewirtschaft SS 2005 TU Berlin.
Aggregate Demand and the Classical Theory of the Price Level Chapter 5.
Lecture 14: Capital Utilisation and the Business Cycle L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.9 24 February 2010.
Lecture 9: Markets, Prices, Supply and Demand II L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.6 11 February 2010.
Review of Reservoir Problem OR753 October 29, 2014 Remote Sensing and GISc, IST.
EE 369 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS
Transmission1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 8 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Preliminary Analysis of the SEE Future Infrastructure Development Plan and REM Benefits.
1 1 Micro Power Plants Paper written by: Magne Holstad, Statistics Norway Presented by: Atle Tostensen, Statistics Norway OG4, Ottawa, 4 February 2009.
1 Least Cost System Operation: Economic Dispatch 2 Smith College, EGR 325 March 10, 2006.
Least Cost System Operation: Economic Dispatch 1
Computing Equilibria in Electricity Markets Tony Downward Andy Philpott Golbon Zakeri University of Auckland.
Environmental Economics1 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Environmental Economics Lecture 2 Chapter 6 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Water1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2006 Resource Economics Water as a natural resource Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
The Basic Theory Using Demand and Supply
Market power1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 10 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Hydropower and thermal1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 5 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
©2003 PJM Factors Contributing to Wholesale Electricity Prices Howard J. Haas Market Monitoring Unit November 30, 2006.
Economic and Financial Concepts in Resource Management Last Lecture.
Stock pollution 1 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Environmental Economics Lecture 9: Stock pollution Perman et al. Chapter 16 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Prof. H.-J. Lüthi WS Budapest , 1 Hedging strategy and operational flexibility in the electricity market Characteristics of the electricity.
Hydrology Days 2004 Applied Stochastic Hydrology Lessons Learned from the Brazilian Electric Energy Crisis of 2001 Jerson Kelman President of ANA (Brazilian.
1 System planning 2013 Lecture L8: Short term planning of hydro systems Chapter Contents: –General about short term planning –General about hydropower.
Electric vehicle integration into transmission system
EPOC Winter Workshop, September 5, 2008 Andy Philpott The University of Auckland (joint work with Kailin Lee, Golbon Zakeri)
Hydro and Wind Power By Tom Juzeler Phi Kha. HYDRO POWER Hydro Power is basically the power derived from the movement of water. Hydroelectricity comes.
Environmental Economics1 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Environmental Economics Lecture 1 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
The Goods Market Lecture 11 – academic year 2013/14 Introduction to Economics Fabio Landini.
Peak Shaving and Price Saving Algorithms for self-generation David Craigie _______________________________________________________ Supervised by: Prof.
ECONOMICS 101 Scott Acker. DEFINING Economics is the social science concerned with the problem of scarcity Economics is the social science concerned with.
Term paper ECON 4930 Term paper Finn R. Førsund.
Market power1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2006 Resource Economics Market power Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Leader-Follower Framework For Control of Energy Services Ali Keyhani Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Ohio State University
Reservoir and production constraints1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 3 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
1 Power Resource Management with assistance of Kevin Gawne Karl Reznichek and Dave Cormie.
1 Consumer Choice and Demand CHAPTER 6 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Trade1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2010 Hydropower economics Lecture 13 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
ECON 4910 seminar 21 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Second seminar Lecturer Finn R. Førsund.
Summing up1 ECON 4910 Spring 2007 Environmental Economics Lecture 12 Summing up Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Summing up1 ECON 4930 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 12 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Diagram from the publication
On/Off Operation of Carbon Capture Systems in the Dynamic Electric Grid On/Off Operation of Carbon Capture Systems in the Dynamic Electric Grid Rochelle.
Lecture 16 Economic Dispatch Professor Tom Overbye Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering ECE 476 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS.
1 Chapter 4 Prof. Dr. Mohamed I. Migdad Professor in Economics 2015.
Constraints1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 4 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Electricity pricing Tariffs.
Variable Load on Power Stations
1.2.8 Unit content Students should be able to: Distinguish between consumer and producer surplus Use supply and demand diagrams to illustrate consumer.
Trade and transmission1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 7 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Market power1 ECON 4930 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 9 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Seminar 41 ECON 4925 Autumn 2006 Resource Economics Seminar 6 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
- Oslo Centre of Research on Environmentally friendly Energy Carbon leakage via the oil market (some slides are in Norwegian, but should be understandable)
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Lecture 26: The Labour Market The supply of labour (consumer: leisure time/money trade-off). The demand for labour (theory.
Multiscale energy models for designing energy systems with electric vehicles André Pina 16/06/2010.
Hydroelectric Generation CEE 6490 David Rosenberg.
Reservoir constraint1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2006 Resource Economics Hydro with reservoir constraint Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
Energy and Fuels 2016 – Cracow
ME 312 PPE POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS
EE 369 POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS Lecture 15 Economic Dispatch Tom Overbye and Ross Baldick 1.
Security of supply - deriving a winter energy standard using the DOASA model EPOC Winter Workshop September 2018.
A sequential Simulation-Optimization Model for Water Allocation from the multi-Reservoir System in the Karkheh River Basin System, Iran M. Fereidoon1,2.
ECON 4925 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 11
Demand Prices within our economy are set by supply and demand.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to electricity economics1 ECON 4930 Autumn 2007 Electricity Economics Lecture 1 Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund

Introduction to electricity economics 2 Overview of the course Basic learning objectives  Know key qualitative results as to optimal social planning in electricity economics when hydropower is involved  Have a satisfactory understanding of how to formulate dynamic management models using standard non-linear programming  Understand how constraints on the generating system and uncertainty of inflows of water to hydro reservoirs affect the optimal path of social prices  Be able to discuss actual market organisations in view of theoretical results obtained from the social planning analyses

Introduction to electricity economics 3 Book: Hydropower Economics Finn R. Førsund (forthcoming)

Introduction to electricity economics 4 Introduction Why dynamics  Hydropower plants can store energy in the form of water if there is a dam or reservoir  Water used today can alternatively be used tomorrow; there is an opportunity cost attached to current water use  A dynamic analysis is then necessary in order to determine the time profile of the use of water in reservoirs

Introduction to electricity economics 5 Introduction, cont. Why standard non-linear programming  Can use more specialised methods (dynamics programming, Bellman)  But will use a more basic tool Baumol  the Kuhn – Tucker conditions may perhaps constitute the most powerful single weapon provided to economics theory by mathematical programming

Introduction to electricity economics 6 Overview of the course Main themes  Introduction to electricity and hydropower  The formulation of a dynamic social planning problem  Understanding price changes over time  Multiple hydro plants and aggregation  Introducing thermal generating capacity  Trade between countries  Transmission network  Market power  Uncertainty

Introduction to electricity economics 7 Electricity One of the key goods in a modern economy Supply and demand must be in continuous physical equilibrium Key variables  Power (kW)  Energy (kWh)  Volt

Introduction to electricity economics 8 The use of electricity in Norwegian households

Introduction to electricity economics 9 Load curves for consumption

Introduction to electricity economics 10 Load-duration curve Hours MWh

Introduction to electricity economics 11 Hydropower The dynamics of water accumulation: R t  R t-1 + w t – r t, t =1,..,T  Reservoir, stock of water R  Inflows w  Releases r Inequality implies overflow Converting water from the dam to electricity e H t  (1/a)r t Fabrication coefficient a assumed to be constant

Introduction to electricity economics 12 Storage and production of hydropower in Norway 2003

Introduction to electricity economics 13 A social planning problem The objective function: Maximising consumer plus producer surplus e t H : consumption of hydropower in period t p t (e t H ): demand function on price form, period t Discrete time, period from hour, week, month, season, year Variable production costs zero Illustration of the objective function Area under the demand curve p t (e t H ) etHetH 0

Introduction to electricity economics 14 A social planning problem, cont. Reservoir dynamics in energy variables  Assuming equality in the production function All variables expressed in energy units by deflating with the fabrication coefficient

Introduction to electricity economics 15 A social planning problem, cont.