Title of article
Pros and cons of exposing renewables to electricity market risks—A comparison of the market integration approaches in Germany, Spain, and the UK
Author/Authors
Corinna Klessmann، نويسنده , , Christian Nabe، نويسنده , , Karsten Burges، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
16
From page
3646
To page
3661
Abstract
The article examines how renewable electricity (RES-E) producers are integrated into the electricity market under the support legislations and regulatory frameworks of Germany, Spain, and the UK. Focus is on wind power, which faces the highest market integration challenge of all RES-E. The analysis shows that the three countries follow contrasting approaches of exposing RES-E producers to the market risks of forward electricity markets, balancing markets and system planning requirements. Risk exposure is highest in the UK and lowest in Germany. From a policy makerʹs perspective, there is a trade-off between a “high risk” and a “low risk” approach. When RES-E face high market risks, a higher level of financial support is required to stimulate RES-E development than in a low risk environment, but the exposure to market risks may also give an incentive to make efficient use of the respective market, thus limiting the indirect costs to society. The special characteristics of wind energy, however, put natural limits to the response of wind power plants to market prices and locational price signals and will increasingly influence electricity markets and grid infrastructure. These interdependencies should be recognised in the design of RES-E policies and market regulations.
Keywords
Support policy , Renewables , Electricity market
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
972307
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