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Renewable energy technologies and electricity forward market risks

Authors :
Derek W. Bunn
Wolfgang Ketter
Derck Koolen
Department of Technology and Operations Management
Business Intelligence
Source :
The Energy Journal, 42(4), 21-45. International Association for Energy Economics
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We analyse how the introduction of the same renewable energy technology at different parts of the electricity supply chain has different price formation effects on wholesale power markets. We develop a multi-stage competitive equilibrium model to evaluate the effects on short-term price formation of a technology shift from conventional to both large-scale renewable energy production (e.g. wind and solar farms) and distributed renewable energy sources (e.g. rooftop solar). We find that wind and solar technologies oppositely affect the forward risk premium, and this is related to technology-varying, risk-related hedging pressures of producers and retailers. We form a multi-factor propositional framework and empirically validate the model by analyzing data from California and Britain; two markets which recently experienced significant increases of renewable power, in terms of utility scale and distributed sources. The work is innovative in showing theoretically and empirically how different types of renewable technologies influence market price formation differently. This has implications for market participants facing wholesale price risks, as well as regulators and policy-makers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01956574
Volume :
42
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Energy Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....26e3200fc8e0fc88ef3511c4d715993b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5547/01956574.42.4.dkoo