Title of article
Deregulated power prices: comparison of diurnal patterns
Author/Authors
Ying Li، نويسنده , , Peter C Flynn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
16
From page
657
To page
672
Abstract
We examine electrical power price, and in particular its daily and average weekday vs. weekend pattern of change, for 14 deregulated markets. Power price in deregulated markets shows fundamentally different patterns. North American markets show a monotonic diurnal weekday price pattern, while all other markets studied show more than one price peak. Deregulated power markets differ in maximum vs. minimum daily average price and in average weekday to weekend price, in turn creating a different incentive for a consumer to time shift power consuming activities. Markets differ in the extent to which a small fraction of the days shapes the average diurnal pattern and value of price. Deregulated markets show a wide variation in the correlation between load and price. Some deregulated markets, most notably Britain and Spain, show patterns that are predictable and consistent, and hence that can encourage a customer to shape consumption behaviors. Other markets, for example South Australia, have patterns that are inconsistent and irregular, and hence are hard for a customer to interpret; a customer in such a market will have a higher incentive to escape risk through hedging mechanisms.
Keywords
Power Prices , Deregulated Electricity Market , Diurnal Power Price Patterns
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
970295
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