Clean Power

Published on October 2nd, 2015 | by Important Media Cross-Post

16

Current Energy Markets Discourage Renewable Energy

October 2nd, 2015 by  

Originally published on Red, Green, and Blue.
By BruceMcF

A concept that has been percolating into debates over the feasibility or desirability of moving to an all-renewables, no/low carbon solar power at workenergy supply system is the ceiling on what percentage share of our total energy supply we can take from variable renewables. At The Energy Collective, in the second of a two part May 2015 series on  Wind and Solar energy, Jesse Jenkins looked at the question of Is There An Upper Limit To Variable Renewables?.

Now, as the Sunday Train has covered many times, there is an upper limit, and so an all-renewable no/low carbon energy system requires dispatchable renewables as well as variable renewables … and all cost-optimizing models of all-renewable energy systems that I have seen confirm this.

However, Jesse Jenkins proceeded to mis-characterize the policy question at hand, when he wrote:

First, as a growing body of scholarship concludes, the marginal value of variable renewable energy to the grid declines as the penetration rises. Indeed, where renewable energy earns its keep in the energy market — and is not supported outside the market by feed-in tariffs — the revenues wind or solar earn in electricity markets decline steadily as their market share grows.

Well, not so fast. There is a fundamental flaw in the assumptions behind this claim. It turns out that kind of market situations that allow market prices to measure a resource’s “ability to earn its keep” quite clearly exclude this particular situation he is talking about.

So it makes a difference how markets are put together, which is what this week’s Sunday Train takes a look at.

Wait, Isn’t Any Market Basically the Same Kind of Thing

The remark above is treating “markets”, as a generic thing, as the magic measuring sticks for whether something is “earning its keep”. And this is of course nonsense. “Markets in general” is a concept with weight in the folktales we tell ourselves about the economy and value, but in a reality-based discussion it is a meaningless term, devoid of content.

Markets are social institutions, based on the regular rules of behavior (that is, the regular ways that people actually behave, not the ways they “ought to” behave), and whenever we are building a real world system with regularities of human behavior, we are building with crooked timber.

While the general idea of the limits on the share of renewable energy is valid, the particular  limits that Jesse is seeing are artificially low. They are artifacts of the ways that markets originally designed and built for fossil-fueled energy supply systems work when variable renewables are introduced. These are markets that, in fact, will refuse to pay for some variable renewables that are in fact earning their keep.

The good news is that if f we design new market rules that give appropriate weight to the value of variable renewables, then we can built markets that will, in fact, reward variable renewables that earn their keep … and, indeed, reward the complementary dispatchable renewables that would be needed to round out an all-renewable energy system.

“Breaking News: Status Quo Systems Reinforce the Status Quo. Film at 11″ (pt. 1)

Consider a wind turbine. It has installation costs. It has operating costs. It has maintenance costs. And it has no fuel costs. The installation cost does not change based on how much energy is actually delivered to the grid. And, for wind turbines, the operating and maintenance costs are almost completely independent of the amount of energy delivered to the grid. The “marginal cost” of energy from a wind farm is close enough to zero that if we round to the closest tenth of a percent, its normally 0.0%.

Now, in a spot market for electricity, natural gas generators drop out if they cannot cover the cost of natural gas fuel. Coal generators drop out if they cannot cover the cost of coal fuel. But wind farms can always cover the cost of the wind that is blowing past. So if they are generating, it always makes sense for them to accept a spot price, no matter how low the spot price is.

So, suppose that you have wind farms with a Capacity Factor of 40%. That means that on average they deliver 40% of the maximum generating capacity of all of the wind turbines. But suppose that sometimes they deliver 100%.

Once you have 40% of your energy coming from wind turbines, then at the times they are delivering the largest amount of energy … the competitive market price for that energy is close to $0.00.

It is, however, a trained incapacity if you think that $0.00 is the price that represents the wind turbines “earning their keep”. This comes from a conclusion of economic theory that the market price under a long list of assumptions if an effective measure of the economy value of a produced commodity.

But someone would only apply that conclusion to this situation if they don’t understand the logic behind the conclusion.

What is “value”? Bring a Classical Marxist, a Catholic Theologian, and a Phenomenological Philosopher into the discussion of what is value, and your typical mainstream economist will quickly become either frustrated or entirely baffled by the direction that the discussion takes. What a mainstream economist thinks value is (and some may have to refer back to their notes from grad school coursework to refresh themselves on things they have been taking for granted for a while) is a price that people are willing and able to pay.

However, different people are willing and able to pay different prices, so the relevant economic value that she or he will point to for real commodities is the price that people are willing and able to pay that covers the full opportunity cost of producing the largest feasible amount.

What is opportunity cost? That is what it was necessary to give up to have the commodity. This is a far broader concept than Dollar cost. For example, if some herbicide results in children of mothers exposed during pregnancy being born without eyes … that tragic side-effect is part of the opportunity cost of the commodity, whether or not the herbicide manufacturer is ever required to pay anything in compensation.

Now, under a particular set of assumptions, you can describe a market where the market price tends, over the long term, to either be at, or to be tending toward, the economic value of the item being produced.

But the way you get there is by constructing a scenario where the market price tends toward the average cost of production, while also considering a scenario where all opportunity costs are imposed on either the buyer or the seller.

And, by direct, real world observation, the markets that Jesse is talking about do not qualify, because:

  • Fossil fuel generators of power impose massive opportunity costs from increased risk of catastrophic climate change, so their producer cost is a much smaller share of total opportunity cost than for wind turbines or solar PV panels; and
  • A price of about $0.00 is far below the average cost of production required to cover the installation, maintenance and operating costs of wind farms and solar farms, so if the market is frequently paying these a market price of about $0.00, it can’t be the kind of market that tends to cover the average cost of production.

To see why 100% variable renewables makes spot markets break down at measuring opportunity cost of renewable energy, suppose that there was only 99% of market demand available from renewable electricity. Then the cheapest fueled generator available would set the spot market price.

In reality, the actual economic value of that last 1% of power includes the fact that we do not need to consume the fuel from the fueled energy source. So the real economic value of the 100% renewables is an incremental amount larger than the value of 99% renewables. Indeed, if that 1% is from a fossil fueled generator, actual economic value of that 1% additional variable renewables is substantially greater than the market price at 99% renewables, because of the massive subsidy in not paying the cost of CO2 emissions.

Under the current market design, the market value of 100% variable renewables in a spot market is massively less than the market value of 99% renewables.

Under the current spot market design, the more often we are at 100% renewables, the better off the economy is, and the worse off the variable renewables are.

Physical Laws Are Not Subject to Amendment by Legislature ~ But Social Laws Are (pt 1)

So, at 99% variable renewables, a normal spot electricity market rewards variable renewables for the cost of the fuel they are saving the economy, and at 100% variable renewables, a normal spot electricity market refuses to do so.

The simplest fix is straightforward: spot electricity markets must take non-dispatchable variable renewables (or other qualifying no/low carbon electricity) offered at or below market price for up to 99% of electricity demand, and may not take more. When more than 99% is offered at or below market price, the market takes the same percentage from each amount offered.

Now, this adjustment makes sense because it is rational to sometimes “overproduce” by 10% of current demand if that is the effective way to satisfy current demand. Therefore when variable renewable suppliers are generating a surplus over current demand, it makes sense to reward them for the part of their supply that is being demanded, instead of building the market system to require them to supply it for next to nothing.

However, doing this means that it will be more common for there to be a surplus. And the more common a surplus of variable renewables is, the more cost-effective it becomes to (1) store it for use during periods that harvest is less than current demand and (2) develop demands that can be shifted to take advantage of the surplus.

And this calls for a new market, which is in some respects the mirror image of the market for reserve supply: markets for dispatchable demands.

So, the grid operator knows the portfolio of variable renewables that are bidding into the day ahead electricity markets. They know their day-ahead offers, they know their total capacity if they happen to be operating flat-out, and they know, from their previous history, the probability of how much they will be offering in the hour ahead markets during that day. They also know the probability of various levels of demand in their system in the day ahead.

The largest amount of “surplus” power is the gap between committed demand in the regular electricity markets and the smallest of maximum yield from all variable renewables and the maximum power than the operator can transmit. Any generation in excess of the operator’s ability to transmit it must, of course, be curtailed, and does not count as part of the actually available surplus.

So for a three hour period, the operator can estimate how much surplus variable renewables will be available with 50%+ likelihood (Tier 1), how much with 25%-50% likelihood (Tier 2), and how much with 5%-25% likelihood (Tier 3). Each buyer bids a commitment to take power, and the maximum rate at which they will take up, and the dispatchable demand price is the highest price that clears the estimated surplus supply, with the price that was bid determining priority of access to the surplus power.

Now, when the market for dispatchable demand opens up, the amount of dispatchable demand available may not be very extensive. That means that quite often the market clearing price will be the minimum allowed bid. The minimum allowable bid is set based on a grid operators charge for marketing and transmission services, which is retained by the grid operator.

Now, this means that the surplus will start out being sold for a very low price. And this is, of course, part of the point: it provides a strong incentive to develop the means to take advantage of the surplus.

As the market for dispatchable demands matures, the market clearing bids in the dispatchable demands market will begin to rise above the minimum bid, and the dispatchable demands market will start to deliver additional revenue to the variable renewables generators. At the margin, it will lead to some increment in additional investment in variable renewables, which will lead to an increase in supply in the dispatchable demand markets.

Which, at the market level, is mirroring what we already know at the system level. The more storage and dispatchable demand is available in the system, the more variable renewables can be added to the system before hitting the limit of how much renewable energy can be accommodated.

But, more than that, the concept of system operators running markets for dispatchable demands points to one of the ways that we can help encourage people to put that storage and dispatchable demands in place.

Conclusions and Conversations

So, what do you think? Does delving into this topic give you greater confidence that we can make the no/low carbon energy transition that we must make, to survive as a national society and national economy? Or does it shake your confidence?

Or would you go about it some other way?

As always, the Sunday Train is not finished when the introductory essay is posted … that is just the start of the conversation. Feel free to respond on this topic, or on another other topic of sustainable transport and the sustainable energy needed to power it. (Though if you are making a point on another topic, a nod to that fact might help me avoid trying to read it through the filter of the topic of the essay).

And thanks for riding the Sunday{+} Train!

Reprinted with permission.


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  • Hans

    In any normal market consumer react to high prices with a decreased demand, and low prices with an increased demand. In the electricity world this is not the case because the consumer prices completely constant, or at best divided into three prices dependent on the hour of day. Introducing variable prices will certainly reduce or even remove negative prices.

    Introducing a carbon tax will take care that as long as one tiny fraction of the spot market demand is met by fossil fuels all renewables get at least the fuel costs + the carbon tax as price, greatly increasing their profitability.

  • eveee

    We should consider that the entire system, including economics, I.e. Energy markets, has been designed from a viewpoint based on the past. It consists of, but not limited to, the wholesale electricity markets, and a power system built on large thermal baseload power plus peakers to follow demand, and on the practice of meeting load primarily by building more generation.

    That entire paradigm is changing. We are shifting to meeting demand with a variety of solutions including distributed generation, conservation, demand management, and other non generation techniques.

    In the generation mix, we are shifting to variable renewables, and flexible sources of all types.

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    • Frank

      I totally agree, but would also like to point out that transmission can smooth things considerably, and I think with the cost of little embedded computers being so low, it would be completely feasible for the retail provider to provide real time pricing down to every significant electricity user in each home. Also consider what happens when you have many homes with solar pannels that also have battery backup. If you want things working efficiently, you want to be communicating with them so they can help you.

  • JamesWimberley

    There is no reason to take the spot wholesale price as gospel. When you have a lot of producers with zero short-run marginal costs, anomalies are likely. The 20-year PPAs are a better guide to resource allocation. Short-run allocation between different wind and solar farms in surplus may be of concern to their owners, but for economic efficiency it’s of no interest whatever.

  • mike_dyke

    The problem comes down to the fact that production is more than demand, so what I think we need to do is add in some extra demand – a batteries/storage company. This company would buy electricity at a fixed rate of, say, 0.5c and sell at a fixed rate of 0.6c so that during times of plenty/over production it would buy spare electricity at 0.5c to give the other producers something for the electricity they produced (albeit not a lot) but when there is under production then it would be the cheapest supplier at 0.6c. The 0.1c difference is for maintenance/profit/expansion etc.

    Would that work?

    • vensonata

      The stabilizer is energy storage. Although there are now quite frequent articles on battery storage on Cleantechnica, there are less glamorous storage mediums such as hot water and ice which should start making a regular appearance. There are also “leveling devices” such as heat pumps which eliminate demand for heating energy at times of “peak cold”.

      • Calamity_Jean

        Yes, I could see an electric utility contracting with a big hot water user, like a hospital. They install extra-big, extra-hot water heaters, with tempering valves to bring the water in the pipes down to the desired temperature. The utility turns the heating coil in the tank on when there’s plenty of power, off when it’s short. The hospital gets a cheaper rate for the water-heating power. In places where apartment rents customarily include hot water in with the rent, large apartment buildings could do the same. This would store energy over a span of about half a day.

  • vensonata

    The present grid is similar to shipping with engines and propellers and fuel. The new grid will be more like shipping with sailing ships. The fuel is free but variable, though not unpredictable.

    The gist of the article is that we need a different paradigm for variable energy resources such as wind and solar. The only traditional renewable that performs like a fossil fuel plant is hydro.

    There are certain “hidden” sources of non variable energy as well which will go into the “new” energy structure. Insulation, for instance, is not variable. It works in all circumstances. It is completely reliable and predictable and extremely long lasting. Note that poorly insulated houses are partly caused by the old grids “cheap” energy. When calculating insulation, one looked at ones heating bill. “Just turn up the thermostat!” said the magazine ads from the 1950’s. So buildings, vehicles and human behavior are what will deliver the leveling consistency to the new renewable grid.

    • Kevin McKinney

      “So buildings, vehicles and human behavior are what will deliver the leveling consistency to the new renewable grid.”

      That may well be true, but it’s not very comforting, since changing all three is not typically quick. (I’d say vehicles ~10 years, buildings ~decadal time scales, with human behavior ~wildcard, since it exhibits both stubborn inertia and quicksilver variability at various times and in various ways.)

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    • JamesWimberley

      “The only traditional renewable that performs like a fossil fuel plant is hydro.” Geothermal is completely despatchable – in fact it’s better than hydro, as rivers can run dry. Tidal is despatchable but not 24/7, though it is completely predictable on a timescale greatly exceeding the life of the plant.

      • vensonata

        Yes Geothermal is probably the most stable, although weird things do happen down in the bowels of the earth. The other form of Geothermal is “artificial geothermal”. Seasonal storage of heat in the soil. An entire community called Drakes Landing in Canada is 100% solar heated by storing summer sun in the ground. It is in Alberta, a very cold climate…colder than any area in Europe. And yet it has worked for the last 5 years. They have an excellent live website to see the process in real time.

    • AltairIV

      I don’t think sailing ships are a good analogy, because there weren’t (and still aren’t) a whole lot of other choices available for pushing ships around. That’s exactly why motor vessels took over in the first place. The future electric infrastructure, on the other hand, will have a plethora of options to choose from to get electrons to where they are needed, when they are needed.

      Indeed, I consider variability to be a boogeyman argument. To the uninitiated observer it looks like a huge problem that will be really difficult and expensive to overcome, but if you give just a bit of thought into how the future grid will work as a whole it becomes clear that it’s really not that big of an issue.

      Having a combination of different renewable sources working together already acts to create a partial leveling (e.g. solar and wind complement each other rather well), and a mix of overproduction, storage, distribution, and demand control technologies will finish up the job. Quite simple really. There isn’t even any real need for anyone to plan it out carefully, supply and demand forces will hammer out the mix that works best in any particular area.

      This “problem” is one that has long been understood and the technologies needed are already available or in development. When the market needs energy at a certain time and place, it will find a way to get it there.

  • Brent Jatko

    I think this is by design, with too much input given to “legacy” producers.

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