Title :
Nodal, uniform, or zonal pricing: distribution of economic surplus
Author :
Ding, Feng ; Fuller, J. David
Author_Institution :
Ontario Minist. of Health & Long Term Care, Toronto, Ont., Canada
fDate :
5/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Competitive markets for electricity determine either a uniform marginal price (UMP), a set of nodal marginal prices (NMPs), or a smaller set of zonal marginal prices (ZMPs). In theory, the NMP system is best, as it correctly accounts for transmission constraints (and losses in some versions), but critics allege that the large number of prices is confusing. Since the UMP or ZMP solution must be adjusted to account for transmission constraints and losses, it is reasonable to consider a market design in which actual dispatch corresponds to an NMP model that accounts for losses, and if a UMP or ZMP model is used at all, it is only to compute prices for settlements and compensation for constrained-on or -off generation or load. We prove that, if used in this way, the UMP or ZMP models a) do not affect the total economic surplus, b) redistribute the surplus among generators and loads at the different nodes, and c) give perverse incentives for generation expansion. We illustrate on a realistic system.
Keywords :
power markets; power system economics; pricing; economic surplus; generation expansion; locational marginal price; transmission constraints; uniform marginal price; zonal marginal prices; Constraint theory; Councils; Load flow; Power engineering and energy; Power generation economics; Power supplies; Power system economics; Pricing; Propagation losses; Voltage; Economic surplus; locational marginal price; nodal marginal price (NMP); uniform marginal price (UMP); uplift; zonal marginal price (ZMP);
Journal_Title :
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPWRS.2005.846042