Title of article
An exploratory analysis of California residential customer response to critical peak pricing of electricity
Author/Authors
Karen Herter، نويسنده , , Patrick McAuliffe، نويسنده , , Arthur Rosenfeld، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
25
To page
34
Abstract
This paper summarizes the results from an exploratory analysis of residential customer response to a critical peak pricing (CPP) experiment in California, in which 15 times per year participating customers received high price signals dispatched by a local electricity distribution company. The high prices were about three times the on-peak price for the otherwise applicable time-of-use rate. Using hourly load data collected during the 15-month experiment, we find statistically significant load reduction for participants both with and without automated end-use control technologies. During 5-h critical peak periods, participants without control technology used up to 13% less energy than they did during normal peak periods. Participants equipped with programmable communicating thermostats used 25% and 41% less for 5 and 2 h critical events, respectively. Thus, this paper offers convincing evidence that the residential sector can provide substantial contributions to retail demand response, which is considered a potential tool for mitigating market power, stabilizing wholesale market prices, managing system reliability, and maintaining system resource adequacy.
Keywords
Residential electricity , Electricity pricing , Critical peak pricing , Demand response , Load response
Journal title
Energy
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Energy
Record number
416982
Link To Document