Basically the new model proposes that spot market price for electricity per MW/hr, as set by supply/demand, will remain unaffected. Electricity generators with the lowest costs of generation - and thus the highest profits (solar and wind, nuclear) - are to have a greater proportion of their profits taken away. Higher-cost generators - thus lower profit margins, e.g. those that use coal or gas to produce electricity - are to have a smaller proportion of their profits taken away.
Classic economist line there - The market is working great, it just produces a terrible outcome.
This Twitter thread suggests this is already the case in the UK. It also implies that marginal costing is not really the free market your link suggests.
*I find this stuff pretty fascinating and it couldn't be much more relevant to people's lives than this year. But I'm sure many won't. Also am I the only one amused at the irony of a mainstay of capitalism - the marginal pricing mechanism for commodities in a free-market - being rendered unworkable due to a Russian invasion?
the current excess electricity profits arising because prices are based on the cost of gas production already flow to the government, a little-known fact.
Yep, referring to Pete's summary rather than the link.Quotethe current excess electricity profits arising because prices are based on the cost of gas production already flow to the government, a little-known fact.
What isn't clear to me is whether marginal pricing is the true free market your link claims, or subject to a lot of fixing to stop energy firms going bust, as that fella on twitter implies.
I don't know what proportion of solar in the UK is on a fixed price, but historically these have been pretty common - I was under the impression that "merchant" solar (selling at grid prices) was relatively uncommon in Europe until recently and most projects will have been using a fixed price either via government or a commercial PPA arrangement?
Either way, as Sean points out, we're seeing the limitations of the correct functioning of markets aren't we?
The power market, the mechanism that clears demand and supply, works smooth and fine. It’s notdysfunctional or broken. It works exactly as you would expect it to work, given sky-high gas prices.What’s wrong is not the market, but the outcome it produces. That’s a hell of a difference. High pricesare an existential threat to many households and firms.None of the above implies electricity markets produce outcomes that are desirable. Currently, I thinkthey do not. I’ve been advocating for cushioning policies for those affected since March. But claimingthat “this market system does not work anymore” is, in my view, simply not true.
The Low Carbon Contracts Company (LCCC) has said it expects to return more than £39 million of Contracts for Difference payments to suppliers as result of exceptionally high power prices over the last three months of 2021. The body said the final quarter of the year was the first in the scheme’s history in which generators returned more money than they received.
How's your German?
it feels to me like we shouldn’t be too far away from a time where renewables are sufficiently big and reliable that a company could provide all green power AND undercut the whole gas-based marginal pricing model. Say Uk wind & solar plus French nuclear & Norwegian hydro bought in to cover gaps?
Apologies if I'm misunderstanding the point/question here, but I understand that Denmark regularly generates more than 100% of its electricity needs from wind - 115% yesterday, 120% last Friday. I can't see that the country enjoys any great natural advantages over the UK when it comes to wind power, so of course it should be possible. No idea about what it means for energy prices though I'm afraid.
I’m still of the opinion that the fire which shut down the IFA UK-France interconnector last year was Russian sabotage and a warning shot by Russia, pre-Ukraine
My ignorance showing, I didn't realise the UK also manages this quite regularly. Clearly reliability is the main issue and though I get the impression it happens more than semi-regularly here there must be times when it doesn't - but I don't know how often that is. Yes, the surplus is exported elsewhere in the EU.