Using experiments to inform the privatization/deregulation movement in electricity.
Rassenti, Stephen J. ; Smith, Vernon L. ; Wilson, Bart J. 等
At the University of Arizona, electronic trading (now commonly
known as e-commerce) in the experimental laboratory began in 1976 when
Arlington Williams conducted the initial experiments testing the first
electronic "double-auction" trading system, which he had
programmed on the Plato operating system. The term "double
auction" refers to the oral bid-ask sequential trading system used
since the 19th century in stock and commodity trading on the organized
exchanges. This system of trading has been used in economics experiments
since the 1950s, and is extremely robust in yielding convergence to
competitive equilibrium outcomes (Smith 1962, 1982a). Since information
on what buyers are willing to pay, and sellers are willing to accept, is
dispersed and strictly private in these experiments, the convergence
results have been interpreted (Smith 1982b) as supporting F.A.
Hayek's thesis "that the most significant fact about this
(price) system is the economy of knowledge with which it operates, or
how little the individual participants need to know in order to be able
to take the right action" (Hayek 1945: 526-27).
As with all first efforts at automation, the software developed by
Williams allowed double-auction trading experiments that previously had
kept manual records of oral bids, asks and trades, to be computerized.
(1) That is, it facilitated real-time public display of participant
messages, recording of data, and greater experimental control of a
process defined by preexisting technology. It did not modify that
technology in fundamental ways. This event unleashed a discovery process
commonplace in the history of institutional change: the joining of a new
technology to an incumbent institution causes entirely new, heretofore
unimaginable institutions to be created spontaneously, as individuals
are motivated to initiate procedural changes in the light of the new
technology. Electronic exchange made it possible to vastly reduce
transactions cost--the time and search costs required to match buyers
and sellers, to negotiate trades, including agreements to supply
transportation and other support services. More subtly it enabled this
matching to occur on vastly more complicated message spaces, and allowed
optimization and other processing algorithms to be applied to messages,
facilitating efficient trades among agents that had been too costly to
be consummated with older technologies. Moreover, resource allocation problems thought to require hierarchical command and control forms of
coordination, as in regulated pipeline and electric power networks,
became easily susceptible to self-regulation by entirely new
decentralized pricing and property right regimes. Coordination economies
in complex networks could be achieved at low transactions cost by
independent agents, with dispersed information, integrated by a
computerized market mechanism. This realization then laid the basis for
a new class of experiments in which the laboratory is used to test-bed
proposed new market mechanisms to enable a better understanding of how
such mechanisms might function in the field, and to create a
demonstration and training tool for potential participants and
practitioners who become part of the "proving" process. Of
course, once adopted, this modification and proving process continues in
light of field experience.
We provide a short history of the application of the conception of
smart computer assisted markets to the design of electricity markets
here and abroad.
The Privatization/Deregulation Movement in Electricity
We use the term "privatization" to describe generically
the process of reform of foreign government command forms of
organization of the electric industry. In all cases major components of
the industry have not had their ownership transferred from public to
private entities. Reform has focused on the use of decentralized spot
and futures markets to provide price signals to improve the short and
longer term management of the industry. The term
"deregulation" applies to electricity reform in the United
States, where 50 state and one federal regulatory body have regulated an
industry already predominantly owned privately, but not decentralized
except through recent reforms in some regional transmission systems that
are still very much in transition.
The Arizona Utility Study
In 1984 the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) contracted with
the University of Arizona experimental economics group to study
alternatives to rate-of-return regulation of the utilities, with
particular emphasis on electric power. The study consisted of two parts:
incentive regulation (Cox and Isaac 1986) and deregulation (Rassenti and
Smith 1986; also see Block, et al., 1985). Only the second part will be
discussed here since this was the study that led to a long and
continuing research program, encouraged by the privatization/
decentralization movement abroad, with applications first in New
Zealand, then Australia, and most recently in the United States.
Recommendations
The deregulation portion of the study led to many detailed
recommendations that can be briefly summarized in the following key
points (see Rassenti and Smith 1986):
1. The energy (generation) and wires (transmission and
distribution) businesses would be separated, with generator plants
(gencos) spun off from parent integrated utilities through the issuance
of separate ownership shares to form independent companies.
2. An economic dispatch center (EDC) would be formed that would
operate a computerized spot auction market for determining prices and
allocations based upon hourly location (node) specific offer price
schedules submitted by gencos. The spot market would be constituted so
as to facilitate and incentivize the eventual inclusion of demand side
bidding by discos (distribution companies and any other commercial and
industrial bulk or wholesale buyers). Thus, ultimately and ideally,
prices would be determined in an hourly two-sided auction in which
discos would submit location specific bids to buy energy delivered to
their location just as gencos would submit offers to inject energy at
their respective locations on the grid.
3. Discos and transcos (transmission companies) would not be
protected by exclusive franchise permits, and would be subjected to the
price discipline of potential, if not actual, entry.
4. Important functions of existing institutions would be preserved
but operate through a computerized spot market bidding mechanism based
on decentralized ownership of gencos.
By "existing institutions" we referred to
optimization--historically, computerized dispatch based on the
engineering cost characteristics of generators and the network of
integrated utilities--joint ownership by utilities of shared
transmission capacity, and power pooling rules for security (spinning)
reserves. In the proposed competitive reorganization, optimization
algorithms would not be applied to production and transmission
"cost" as in the regulated, hierarchical, integrated utility,
but to the offer supply schedules and bid demand schedules submitted to
the computer-dispatch center. The algorithms would maximize the gains
from exchange (rather than minimize engineering cost as under
regulation) in response to the real-time decisions of all buyers and
sellers in the wholesale market. This specification was motivated by the
recognition that (1) supply cost is subjective and measured by the
willingness to accept payment for energy produced on location, and (2)
demand is subjective and measured by the willingness to pay for
delivered energy, where both types of information express the particular
real-time circumstances of individuals. Coordination was a consequence
of a new form of property rights: (1) rules for processing messages
generated by decentralized agents themselves empowered by rights to
choose offers and bids; (2) contingency rules for accepting offers and
bids based on their merit order (higher bids and lower offers have
priority in the rank ordering of bids and of offers), but importantly
qualified by technical and security constraints that are essential if
each agent is to bear the true opportunity cost that the agent imposes
on all others.
The term "property rights" as we shall use it, provides a
guarantee allowing action within the guidelines defined by the right.
Such guarantees are against arbitrary reprisal in that they restrict
punitive strategies that can be levied against actions taken by the
rights holder. Such guarantees provide only limited certainty of
protection. Most specifically, property rights, as a guarantee allowing
action, do not guarantee outcomes, since outcomes depend upon the
property rights of others, and in electricity markets, as we shall see,
upon global constraints affecting local outcomes that must be honored if
the system is to be efficient, dynamically stable, and to incentivize
the direction and level of capital investment.
Defining Competitively Ruled Property Rights to Unique
"Monopolistic" Facilities
It was the ACC project that alerted us to the existence of
"cotenancy contracts" for the joint ownership and operation of
some large generation and transmission facilities. For us this was an
illuminating empirical discovery, since this institution, that we
modified with competitive property right rules, offered the potential to
render the concept of natural monopoly null and void. Thus, suppose a
city demand center can be adequately served by a unique physical
facility such as a pipeline or transmission line. Under American-style
regulation it is decreed that an exclusive franchise will be awarded to
a single owner of the facility, whose price will be set so as to
regulate the owner's rate of return on investment. Alternatively,
in our proposed competitively ruled joint ownership property right
regime it is decreed that (1) the facility must have two or more
co-owners each having an agreed share of the rights to the capacity of
the facility (In practice a common cotenancy contract rule is for each
cotenant to receive capacity rights in proportion to his contribution to
capital cost). Two additional competitive rules would allow (2) rights
to be freely traded, leased or rented, and (3) new rights to be created
by agreement to invest in capacity expansion by any subset of the
co-owners, through unilateral action by any co-owner, or by outsiders if
the existing owners resist expansion to meet increased demand. In
historical practice cotenancy contracts had prohibited sale by
individual rights holders without the consent of the other cotenants,
and capacity expansion was allowed to occur only by joint agreement. The
proposed new property rights structure creates multiple rights holders
to compete in marketing downstream services utilizing the unique
facility, and encourages new investment in response to increased demand.
Subsequent to the ACC study, new research uncovered other examples of
cotenancy contracts, a common one being the joint ownership of
specialized printing facilities by a consortium of newspapers in a city.
Clearly, who prints the newspapers is a production issue potentially
separable from the competition of newspapers for subscribers and
advertising services. The courts repeatedly affirmed this principle when
such cotenancy contracts attempted to include marketing and pricing
conditions in what was ostensibly a shared production agreement
(Reynolds 1990). Thus, our conception of a joint venture property right
regime had already been well articulated in court cases involving
newspapers. There was no new principle, only the question of how it
might be reformulated for application to network industries.
This model of cotenancy as an instrument of competition was further
elaborated in Smith (1988, 1993) and tested experimentally in the
context of a natural gas pipeline network funded by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Rassenti, Reynolds and Smith 1994). The model
would also play a facilitative role in our consulting on privatization
in New Zealand. But such discussions are far from culminating in a
completed instrument, with many practical implementation difficulties
remaining. (2)
Aftermath of the Arizona Study
By 1985 when the study report was filed and presentations made to
the ACC, the political composition of the commission had altered, and
the immediate impact of the recommendation for deregulation on Arizona
policy was nil. By the time our final report was completed the
commission was composed of new elected office holders and they
considered our proposal to be impractical, idealistic and politically
infeasible. Of course the commission's actions made the last claim
a self-fulfilling truth. Unknown to us at the time, subsequent
developments would reveal that this experience was a minor battle in a
wider war for institutional change that would begin abroad but would
ultimately spread to the United States, but with less success, we
believe, than abroad.
Contrary to the position of the new commission, we considered our
proposal eminently feasible in the electronic age, though in need of far
more fundamental research, and resolved to undertake controlled
experimental studies of various issues in the deregulation debate.
Progress on this objective, however, was slow due to inadequate funding,
and the fact that the cost of software development for the laboratory
study of electronic trading in the context of electric networks was
higher than for traditional forms of experimental research.
Nevertheless, by 1987 we had conducted several pilot experiments in a
six-node electric power network with three fixed inelastic nodal demand
centers, and nine gencos (described in Rassenti and Smith 1986). The
gencos, located at various nodes, submitted sealed offer price schedules
each trading period to supply power over transmission lines whose energy
losses were proportional to the square of energy injected. A valuable
lesson from this unpublished research was the ease with which gencos
could push up prices against inelastic demands by bulk buyers using a
mechanism that did not permit demand-side bidding to implement consumer
willingness to have deliveries interrupted conditional on price. This
was our first brush with the important principle that competition is
compromised in supply-side auctions in which buyers are passive and are
unable through the mechanism to enter demand-side bid schedules. The
California electricity market is now experiencing this principle in
spades, but it was foreshadowed in the experience with privatization in
England, and in other spot markets abroad and in the United States. We
report experiments below that provide a rigorous demonstration that when
the spot auction mechanism in common use around the world is
supplemented by demand-side bidding it provides a property right regime
that is a remarkably effective antitrust remedy.
Domestically, through the 1980s and into the 1990s, electric power
would remain subject to American style rate-of-return regulation, while
abroad government owned electric (and other) utilities were under
political pressure to explore the use of markets for the management
electrical energy allocations. Industry performance was seen as abysmal in the 1980s, causing countries such as Chile, the United Kingdom, and
New Zealand to think the unthinkable: decentralization might be
preferable to either government planning or direct regulation. But how
might it be done?
How Experiments Were Used to Inform Privatization: New Zealand and
Australia
Beginning in 1986 we initiated software development and a series of
experiments to study mechanism design, industry structure, pricing,
transmission and market power issues in electricity markets. (Rassenti
and Smith 1986; Backerman, Rassenti, and Smith 1997; Backerman et al.
1997; Denton, Rassenti, and Smith 1998; Rassenti, Smith, and Wilson,
2000.) While this research was proceeding, one of the authors (Smith)
consulted for the New Zealand Treasury in 1991 and two of us (Rassenti
and Smith) in 1993, and also for Australia's Prospect Electricity
in 1993 and National Grid Management Council in 1994. The impetus in New
Zealand was our 1985 ACC report that fell unceremoniously on deaf ears
in Arizona, but attracted attention abroad.
What Were the Questions?
The two following research questions, addressed in laboratory
electricity network experiments after 1986, and motivated by our ACC
study, provided the primary information base for informing our
contribution to the privatization process in electricity down under.
1. Is decentralization feasible and, if so, is it efficient to
combine decentralized property rights in energy supply with a computer
coordinated spot market and optimization schemes for dispatching
generators?
2. How is the answer to question i affected by demand-side bidding?
Before the first experimental observations were made it was an open
question whether it was feasible to replace engineering cost
minimization in large integrated utility hierarchies with independent
gencos submitting node-specific asking price schedules, bulk buyers
submitting node-specific bid price schedules, and allocations determined
by algorithms maximizing the gains from exchange implied by these
marginal bid/ask schedules and the physical characteristics (loss
characteristics and capacity constraints) of the grid. Engineers and
managers to whom we made presentations were overwhelming skeptical-in
fact were openly hostile--that such a system could be relied upon.
("You can't control electricity flows with markets--I know,
because I'm an engineer.") The conventional wisdom of
economists had been stated as follows:
Generation and transmission are intimately and fundamentally related by the
interconnections that the transmission system provides and the associated
opportunities for area wide optimization ... Because of these
relationships, decisions either short-run or long-run, made at any point in
a power system affect costs everywhere in the system. These effects raise
potential externality problems. If a power system's components are owned by
more than one firm, it is crucial for the efficiency of short-run and
long-run decision making that all owners of parts of the system take into
account all effects of their actions, not just the effects on the part of
the system they own [Joskow and Schmalensee 1983: 63].
Experimental markets, in which all energy sales and purchases were
expressed as offers to sell and bids to buy so that allocations were
determined simultaneously given the physical properties of the grid,
demonstrated that energy market deregulation was eminently feasible.
Furthermore, short-run efficiency was high-on the order of 90-100
percent of the maximum economic surplus, or gains from exchange were
achieved in markets with very few participants. Figure 1 shows a plot of
efficiency for two experimental sessions consisting of a series of 30
trading periods using experienced subjects in a 3-node radial network
with 4 bulk buyers and 6 gencos (Backerman, Rassenti, and Smith 1997).
Why are there no important efficiency losses due to short-run
externalities? The answer resides in the condition that all allocations
are determined simultaneously. Power loss on shared transmission lines
varies as the square of total power injected. Therefore, genco A suffers
higher costs of energy loss if genco B is using the same line. But if
optimization is based upon every agent's marginal willingness to
pay or to supply, with price and allocations determined simultaneously,
then each agent bears the appropriate opportunity cost that his action
imposes on all others at the margin. The problem is solved by the
simultaneous submission of bid/ask schedules to which are applied
algorithms for maximizing the implied gains from exchange taking account
of system transmission losses.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
But there are many other potential "external effects,"
besides shared system energy losses, that in principle are or can be
internalized via mechanisms that link bid/ask schedules with system
constraints through rule governed coordination: (i) voltage
"constraints" (as they are so treated, technically, in all
operating systems today), requiring "reactive power" to be
produced, and therefore priced in the market if such constraints are to
be incorporated into the market process; (3) (ii) intertemporal links on
both the demand and generator sides of the market historically have
implied the need for optimization over time, not just in the current
spot market, but as shown by Kaye and Outhred (1989) and Kaye, Outhred,
and Bannister (1990) the primary intertemporal coordination requirements
can be met by forward markets; (iii) contingency provisions such as
generator and transmission reserves to avoid blackouts from unscheduled equipment outages, and to avoid unstable cascades of outages that spread
through the network. (4)
Turning to the second question, both regulation and government
ownership have produced industries with a strong supply-side
orientation. The politics of power yields a system in which (i) there
are severe political repercussions if consumers "lose lights"
too often, and (ii) consumers making decisions have no means of directly
(or indirectly through wholesale markets) comparing the cost of new
capacity with the cost of interruptions on peak or in emergencies.
Consequently, adequate reserve capacity in generation and transmission
requires supply-side investment sufficient to meet all demand, plus a
large margin for security of supply. The regulatory and government-owned
systems had no incentive to install technologies for relieving load
stress by introducing time-of-demand pricing, and voluntary
interruptible contracts for customers. For this to occur power users
must have the real-time spot market capacity to either directly reduce
consumption in response to price increases, or indirectly by contract
with the distributor to effect reduced deliveries in response to price
increases. As we shall see below, the capability for interruption of
energy flows must be expressible in the spot market if prices are to be
adequately disciplined.
New Zealand
ESL's consulting work in New Zealand was directed entirely to
questions of how a privatized NZ electrical industry, and a wholesale
power market, might be structured. Intellectually, in the early 1980s,
the sea change in issues of privatization versus government ownership
and regulation was so drastic in the direction of economic
liberalization that electricity reform seemed certain. The election of a
new reform-committed Labour government was followed by a foreign
exchange crisis the next day. All government enterprises had performed
so poorly, and were such a drain on the Treasury that the country was
soured on the "NZ (socialist) experiment." Everywhere in New
Zealand, by 1991, were to be found people expressing the "user
pays" principle as a slogan of reform. (5) This exuberance, strong
in the late 1980s and early 1990s is now much abated, even reversed.
New Zealand ... retains large state-owned corporations that are suitable
for privatization, but ... its privatization activity has been muted for
much of the 1990s. This decline reflects political perceptions of the
privatization act as well as the resolution of property right issues, some
of which arise from considerations of industry structure that is suitable
for light-handed regulation, and some from the potential settlement of
Maori claims on the crown [Evans 1998: 3].
ESL consulting for the New Zealand Treasury in 1991, and later for
Transpower, NZ in 1993, created as the state-owned enterprise that
maintained and operated the high voltage grid, emphasized privatizing
transmission, transmission pricing, and demand-side bidding.
Privatizing Transmission
What might be the incentive and ownership structure that should be
implemented for the New Zealand grid, and for the market dispatch center
that would determine allocations of energy supply among decentralized
generator owners who bid into the spot market?
Our recommendations had their genesis in our 1985 ACC study of
cotenancy, but the basic idea--a cotenacy property right system--was
substantially extended and tailored to fit the special physical
properties of electric power flows in interconnected alternating current
(AC) networks. Primarily these properties are twofold: (a) flows on
individual links in the network cannot be precisely controlled because
in AC networks there has not existed anything analogous to the valves on
links in fluid and gas pipeline networks; (b) optimization in such
networks requires knowledge of willingness-to-pay bid demand values at
delivery nodes, offer supply terms at power injection nodes, and the
physical properties (loss characteristics and capacity constraints) of
all elements of the network. One can then solve simultaneously for the
pattern of energy injections and deliveries that satisfy all demands and
constraints while maximizing the short-run gains from exchange based on
all such information. These two characteristics combined imply that it
is not possible to specify well-defined path rights from any source node
to and delivery node. The flow on a given path may be optimal at one
time, but with a change in the supply and demand pattern, and with
different transmission constraints binding, the flow on that path may be
much different, even reversed at another time.
We proposed that these characteristics of the electricity industry
be supported by a property right regime with the following commensurate
features when the system is privatized as a joint (competitively ruled)
venture, or cotenancy, owned by all users.
(a) At each energy injection node is connected a set of generators
with some specified capacity that has occurred in history up to the time
of privatization. That capacity is assumed to reflect the benefits,
based on historical utilization rates, and site value of locating the
capacity where it resides.
(b) Similarly, each delivery node will have associated with it a
capacity to withdraw power.
(c) Rights to inject (or withdraw) power at each node can then be
defined and certificated in capacity terms based on historical
investment.
(d) Each generator has the right to submit a bid supply schedule
indicating the various quantities the supplier is willing to inject at
corresponding stated asking prices, where the schedule is restricted not
to exceed a total offer of that generator's capacity rights at its
connection node. How much of this offer is accepted by the dispatch
center, depends on the offer terms of competing suppliers at the same or
other nodes, the nodal pattern of demand, and the physical properties of
the grid at any time. Stability, security and voltage considerations may
require certain key generator offers to be accepted in exception to the
general merit order rule that the lowest priced generators have priority
over higher priced ones. Such key generators are likely to change with
the network load configuration. Thus, each generator merely has a right
to offer up to its capacity in units of power, not the right for the
offer to be accepted. Such uncertainties are inherent in the nature of
the system, and property rights must reflect these contingencies.
Technological and institutional innovation may alleviate exposure to
these risks, and such developments must be allowed, and have an
incentive, to happen.
(e) These capacity rights can be freely traded, leased or rented to
others subject only to contract laws applicable to any industry; but as
in other industries, electricity may leave its own footprints on the
form of those contracts.
(f) Any individual user in this structure, or any group of users
forming a consortium, is free to invest in increasing the capacity of
any line or lines in the system. Those making the investment will
acquire rights, as in (c)-(e) above, to any increase in capacity at
individual nodes that is made possible by the investment. Any such
increases in capacity will be uncertain, and based on imperfect
engineering simulations that are commonly used to evaluate and site
capacity expansions.
(g) Finally, since incumbent users may not be well motivated to
expand capacity, the cotenants cannot prevent the entry of new investors
who invest in line capacity expansion, and acquire rights to the
consequent increase in nodal rights to inject (or withdraw) power.
Transmission Pricing
Given the joint ownership structure indicated above, all users
share output-invariant operating and maintenance costs in proportion to
their respective capacity rights. The primary variable cost of
transmission is the energy lost in the transfer of power from source
nodes to delivery nodes. This loss (per mile of line) in high voltage
lines varies approximately as the square of energy injected--less energy
is received than is sent. Hence, if the average loss per unit is A
(usually a number between .02 and .2) for a given line, the marginal
loss is M = 2A. This implies that if the price at an upstream injection
node is P, then at any downstream node the price is P' = P + PM,
i.e. the delivery price is the price at the injection point plus the
marginal cost of energy lost in delivery. Note that PM is the true
opportunity cost of energy lost in transmission, and all buyers served
by remote generators must pay this cost in an efficient energy supply
network. On long lines where the average loss at peak demand can be up
to 20 percent (A = .2), the nodal price difference, P' - P = 2AP
can be up to 40 percent of the delivered price. (6)
Demand-Side Bidding
Competition is greatly enhanced if wholesale buyers can bid into
the spot market using discretionary demand steps that define price
levels above which they are prepared to interrupt corresponding blocks
of power consumed. As we shall see, demand-side bidding also reduces
price spikes on peak. Moreover, interruptible flows can substitute for
security reserves of generation capacity, while reducing the prospect
that transmission lines will become constrained.
New Zealand deliberations on structuring the grid continue.
However, the functions of the spot market, called the New Zealand
Electricity Market (NZEM), have been structured as a ruled-governed
joint venture. (For a detailed report see, Arnold and Evans, 2001; also
see NZEM 1999). Only three countries have implemented policies requiring
the grid users to fund investment expansions: Chile, Peru, and
Argentina. In all three cases, however, the multiple owners operate
under regulated prices (Kleindorfer 1998: 69). Thus, no country has
implemented a completely privatized grid regulated only by property
rights, nor is this likely to be achieved in the near future.
Although our fledgling proposals for structuring joint ownership of
the grid have not been implemented, and indeed require a lot more
intensive work to be operational, the New Zealand spot market implements
both the marginal loss pricing of transmission and demand-side bidding.
It is important, however, to note that nodal energy pricing in New
Zealand does not provide ex ante real-time prices that can be avoided by
action of buyers and sellers in the current period. Prices are an ex
post cost recovery and distribution scheme, and effect decisions only
insofar as events/conditions are repeated and anticipated by decision
makers. The same is true for the systems implemented in California and
the Middle Atlantic regions in the United States. This is partly the
result of industry traditions in which people think of prices as cost
recovery devices rather than signals of avoidable opportunity costs, and
partly a consequence of implementing the appropriate technology and
institutional arrangements. New Zealand, however, is moving to implement
true avoidable cost pricing as used now in Australia (see below).
Marginal cost pricing of transmission is politically very difficult
to implement in democratic regimes--three other countries (Chile, Peru,
and Australia) have adopted it (Kleindorfer 1998: 69). Strong political
pressures favor averaging transmission losses across all customers. This
creates an incorrectly priced external effect that is avoidable by
appropriate specification of property right rules, and illustrates one
of the many externality problems created, not solved by collective
action. With minor exceptions averaging losses over all customers was
the universal practice in both state owned and American style regulatory
regimes, and this practice dies very hard. People do not understand the
opportunity cost/efficiency principle here: each agent pays the cost
that his consumption imposes on others, thereby eliminating external
effects. But collective agreement is necessary to implement the
application of this principle to grid pricing. (Note that the principle
creates no problem in the airline or accommodation industries, where
on-peak prices emerge spontaneously in competition, a la Hayek's
1945 perceptive argument, and collective agreements are not needed. This
illustrates one of the many hazards in decentralizing interdependent
network industries using some collective agreement process.)
Most of the New Zealand population and electricity demand is on the
North Island, while most of the generation capacity is on the South
Island. It is some 900 miles from the bottom of the South Island, where
the most remote generators are sited, to the top of the North Island,
where the largest concentration of population is located (Auckland).
Consequently, at peak demand, with no constrained lines causing a
further price difference due to congestion, there is a price difference
of approximately 33 percent between the two most remotely separated
nodes. Figure 2 provides a chart of New Zealand electricity prices at
the inter-island link, Haywards and Benmore in the South (not at the two
extreme nodes), for the winter months of July and August, when the
heating demand for energy is greatest.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Relevant to demand-side bidding the New Zealand Electric Market
(NZEM) rules specify that "Each trading day, each Purchaser Class
Market Participant will submit to the Scheduler the bids pursuant to
which ... (that Participant) ... is prepared to purchase Electricity
from the Clearing Manager for each trading period of the following
trading day" (NZEM 1999: B.2.1). Such bids specify the relevant
trading periods, the grid exit node, must represent reasonable endeavors
to predict demand, and specify up to 10 prices (price steps or
"bands") and corresponding quantities. There are no upper or
lower limits on prices "The highest price band for each bid will be
deemed to start at a quantity of zero" (NZEM 1999: B.2.3). Note
that this provision defines the strike price where the Marshallian bid
demand schedule intersects the price axis. Since the technology for
interrupting flows is limited, these provisions of the NZEM are
currently little used (as reported to us in private conversation with
Lewis Evans at Victoria University, NZ), but the institutional stage is
set for more extensive demand-side bidding as the appropriate technology
becomes more available and cheaper. They will become more significant
when New Zealand implements real-time pricing.
Australia
We were invited to visit Australia in 1993 by Prospect Electricity
(now part of Integral Energy) in New South Wales, the second largest
distribution company in that state. Australia, unlike New Zealand
(initially), was not committed to privatizing electricity, although the
political debate had begun. Rather, the commitment was to
decentralization, setting up a national wholesale market. This was the
charge of the National Grid Management Council (NGMC). (Privatization if
it occurred was the providence of the states, which were the owners of
existing power system assets. All generation, transmission, and
distribution systems remain publicly owned even today, with the
exception of Victoria where all are privately owned, while South
Australia has executed 200 year leases of its assets to private
entities.) (7) It was during this visit that we learned that the
constituency for privatization was made up of bulk buyers--commercial,
industrial, and distribution companies who expressed the belief that the
state government-owned electricity industries were producing power at
exorbitant cost, and this was hampering the ability of Australia's
energy intensive industries to compete in world markets. Primarily our
sponsors consisted of the buyer side of the industry, and our task was
to supply market information and deliver demonstration technology: give
lectures, seminars and conduct experimental workshops with a wide
spectrum of industry and government representatives who would
participate in our prototype wholesale electricity experiments,
demonstrating feasibility, efficiency, and possible structural features
for a decentralized wholesale market, with the extent and form of
decentralization yet to be determined. These lectures and workshops were
well attended, but with understandably more enthusiasm coming from the
demand side than the supply side. Such was the political environment as
we saw it.
Subsequently, the central government created the National Grid
Management Council to plan and oversee a wholesale energy market
embracing the states, integrated by a national interconnected grid. This
led to a controversial "paper trial" (cost, $2 million) in
which participants walked through proposed procedures for bidding and
clearing in a spot energy market. Our Australian contacts pressed, and
won, approval to conduct laboratory experiments with a prototype for the
proposed market. We were consultants on software specifications, and
experimental design, but with all development and experiments to be
conducted in Australia. This ultimately led to a two-week (7 hours per
day) electronic trading experiment using nonindustry participants
trained in the exchange procedures, and earning significant cash profits
based on induced costs, and demands, and on Australian parameters and
grid characteristics. We advised against using any industry participants
because of their known political biases for or against the impending market reforms.
On December 13, 1998, the National Electricity Market began trading
Australian electricity. Prior to that period separate markets traded
power in the States of Victoria and New South Wales as early as 1996.
In summary, experimental methods in economics served to facilitate
the development of a wholesale electricity market in Australia in the
following ways:
1. It provided a pre-1991 experimental database demonstrating the
feasibility of using a smart market, price signals to coordinate
production and transmission over huge geographical areas, and to help
inform the political decision process.
2. Treatment results from specific experimental designs suggested
that overall market efficiency, price volatility and the distribution of
surplus among the buyers, sellers and the transmission system were
significantly impacted by the following: transmission and auction market
pricing rules, whether or not there was demand-side bidding, and whether
or not transmission line constraints were binding.
3. As noted in communication with Hugh Outhred, the new experiments
"at UNSW also demonstrated the importance of forward markets in
containing market power" (see Outhred and Kaye 1996).
4. It provided hands-on experience and training for managers and
technical staff, and alerted the principal agents involved in the
wholesale market to some of the potential design issues in the process.
5. It enabled the Australians to go through the process of market
prototype software development, to conduct experiments using Australian
grid and generator cost parameters, and to learn much more about how
their proposed market system might work prior to actual trading in
Victoria and New South Wales.
The wholesale market in Australia has implemented features that
make it among the most advanced anywhere from the perspective of
reflecting good economic design principles, although it is important to
emphasize that those principles are under ongoing review and
modification in the light of changing experience and technology. We
mention two features central to the issues discussed above that were in
the National Electric Code prior to their experiments (quoted from
personal correspondence with Hugh Outhred, February 2, 2001):
(a) "Network pricing in Australia does incorporate marginal
network losses in the following manner: the `notional interconnectors' between regions include ... (adjustment for) ...
marginal losses ... directly into the process for setting five-minute
prices; inter-regional transmission loss factors are set annually the
basis of average marginal network losses (the averaging on period may be
shortened at some future time) ..." Hence, the loss factors, as
such, are not based on current real-time conditions, as are the flows to
which the factors are applied.
(b) "The Australian National Electric Market Rules (NEM) ...
(also) ... incorporate the demand side--both formally as bids ... and
informally as price elasticity. The latter option exists because:
half-hourly prices are forecast at least 24 hours ahead and broadcast to
all market participants (supply and demand side); participants can
change their bids and offers from the time of their original submission
(one day ahead) down to the half hour to which they apply; the actual
spot price is set in `real-time' and broadcast to all
participants--a consumer can simply reduce demand in response to that
price signal and thus avoid paying the price. That facility is now being
used in practice, both by a consumer participating directly in the NEM
and by retailers backed up by discretionary demand reduction contracts
with final consumers." It is evident, however, that "much more
development (is) needed" [Outhred 2001: 20].
The United States
The deregulation of electricity did not impact the United States
until privatization/decentralization reform was well advanced abroad.
Viewed from the perspective of those of us interested in market design
for deregulation, the U.S. experience has been disappointing, and the
design details heavily politicized. At the start, the industry strongly
opposed deregulation. Nothing new here, as the same was predominantly
true for airline, gas, railroad, and trucking deregulation. But with
electricity there was the need for state or regional collective
agreement on how the industry would be restructured, and what rules
would govern market operation since there was clear need for computer
coordination of generator loads to meet instantaneous demand on highly
interconnected networks. (No need for such agreement in the deregulated
airline industry. The routes no longer had to be certificated, the
industry was regulated by free entry and exit, and what emerged
spontaneously in response to the demand for frequent low-cost service
was the hub-and-spoke structure that was anticipated and deliberately
planned by no one.) Originally, for example circa 1985 when we finished
our ACC report, the industry had argued that deregulation was not
technically feasible, but that proposition had been shot down all over
the world by decentralization programs none of which had followed
American style rate of return regulation. There were various forms of
"light-handed" regulation such as price caps on charges for
the "wires" business--high voltage transmission or local low
voltage distribution--but energy was being priced competitively limited
only by technology and the state of learning. No one abroad wanted to
use the American model, which was perceived to be broken just as badly
as the state owned or dominated models that were being reformed.
In this environment, once the writing was on the wall, the
utilities focused not on questions of market design and efficient spot
markets, but on lobbying for fixed new monthly charges to cover their
alleged "stranded costs." This was price design for revenue
protection not market design for efficiency. Most economists seemed to
accept the need for such compensation, either because it was
"fair" for utilities to recover the cost of investments made
in good faith under a regulatory regime that was being replaced (Baumol
and Sidak 1995), or because it was considered the political price to be
paid for utility support for deregulation (Block and Leonard 1998).
Since the utilities were already privately owned, had long engaged in
bilateral economy energy exchanges, and energy marketers, or
intermediaries, had emerged to facilitate such contracts, there was
opposition to the very idea of an open spot market. Bilateral interests
wanted to report only origin and destination flows to schedulers, with
prices remaining proprietary. Ironically, the bilateral special interest
groups had been fostered by legislation intended to move the industry
toward market liberalization: the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978, and the Energy Policy Act of 1992. These initiatives were
designed to facilitate transmission access by independent power
producers as a step toward fostering the development of wholesale power
markets. (Bear in mind that such access was being opposed by some
utilities, and federal action was seen as necessary). The bilateral
trading model was promoted, partly because of its perceived success in
reforming the gas industry, but also because gas marketing
intermediaries wanted to expand into electrical energy markets.
California followed the bilateral model in restructuring electricity. We
long regarded this model as misguided: bilateral bargaining in the
electronic age could not provide the foundation for an efficient market
model of interdependent (pipeline or transmission) networks. (8)
California, however, did require the demand of the Investor owner
Utilities to be processed through the CalPX, but these demand quantity
bids were "at market" (pay whatever is the supply-side asking
price that clears the market); they were not price contingent bids
implemented by interruptible service contracts.
Thus, in California and elsewhere, the new "wires"
utilities succeeded in instituting new fixed monthly charges to cover
their stranded costs, and fixed per unit energy charges for retail
customers, but no one was preparing for and investing in the technology
for demand-side bidding as an instrument to discipline prices in the
hourly spot market and to provide incentives for users to reduce demand
or switch their time-of-day consumption from higher to lower cost
periods. Imagine what would be the consequences to the airlines, and all
of their passengers, if, in order to be licensed, airlines were required
to charge all passengers an identical regulated monthly access fee and a
fixed price per mile traveled, independent of flight destination, time
of day, time of week, season or holidays, and independent of the
flier's willingness to pay!
Figure 3 illustrates a typical 24-hour period of price variation on
the California PX (their open spot market exchange). Since most of the
power was either traded via bilateral contracts at secret prices, not
part of the spot market, or through the PX as bids "at
market," demand was not price responsive. Observe in Figure 3 that
the peak demand and most of the "shoulder" transition demand
(between peak and off peak) are at prices above 10 cents per kilowatt ($100 per megawatt), and are therefore far in excess of what local
distributors collect from their residential customers. There are
numerous other examples of on-peak price spikes of up to 10 or more
times the normal energy prices (in the $25-$30 per megawatt range). (See
the Bloomberg Daily Power Report, online, Summer 1999 for a report on
sharp price spikes in the Midwest and South.) These price differences
imply an enormous rate of return on investment in contracts for
voluntary selective interruption of energy deliveries, with gains shared
by both the distributor and its customers.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Demand-Side Bidding Controls Market Power and Price Spikes
Earlier experimental market research, cited above, used demand-side
bidding, and we observed very competitive results. New experiments study
this issue much more systematically in the design reported by Rassenti,
Smith, and Wilson (2000) comparing prices with and without demand-side
bidding. Bulk buyers submit discretionary bid steps reflecting the
prices above which they are prepared to reduce demand by invoking their
contracts for interrupting deliveries. It is important in a competitive
electricity market that bulk energy providers contract for discretionary
interruption of (suitably compensated) consumers. Why? Because then
their bids in the wholesale market cannot be known with certainty by the
supply-side bidders, and demand-side bidding can better deter
supply-side market power. The problem created by inadequate price
responsive demand in a supply-side dominated auction can be illustrated
with the chart shown in Figure 4, due to Outhred. In such a market, the
clearing price is sensitive to the asking prices submitted by peaking
generators in short supply, especially near peaks in demand. Thus, in
Figure 4, the price is $15 per MW with demand 7,700 MW, but if demand
had been 8,000 MW, the spot price would have been $45 per MW, and at a
demand level of 9,000 MW, the price would have been indeterminate forcing the dispatch center to use security reserves or to involuntarily
interrupt customers. Unquestionably, many consumers would have been
prepared to reduce demand to avoid such a price spike, provided that
they had been given the opportunity and incentives commensurate with the
savings. In the United States are such conditions to be judged a problem
in supply-side market power, or an institutional and incentive failure
of the market mechanism to implement responsive demand? The tendency is
to blame market power although in another industry--hotel/motel
accommodations, or airline seat pricing, where the product also is
nonstorable--demand is strongly responsive to time variable competitive
prices.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Figure 5 plots experimental data comparing prices with and without
demand-side bidding over the course of 5 "days" of trading.
Each day in an experiment consists of a cycle of four demand pricing
periods: shoulder, peak, shoulder, and off peak. Hence, the experiments
consolidate the shoulder transitions, peak, and off-peak hours (shown in
Figure 3) into four simpler time blocks for auction price determination.
Note that when there is no demand-side bidding, prices are much
increased, well in excess of the controlled experimental competitive
prices, especially on the shoulder and peak demand periods. Both
generator "market power" and upward price spikes are
effectively controlled by the introduction of demand-side bidding
leaving all other features of the market unchanged. In these experiments
a very modest proportion (16 percent) of peak demand is interruptible by
wholesale buyers; most of the on peak demand (84 percent) is what the
industry calls firm or "must serve" demand.
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
The chart in Figure 5 plots the data from just one of four
independent experimental comparisons reported in Rassenti, Smith and
Wilson (2000). Figure 6 provides a bar graph summarizing all of the
experimental results. With demand-side bidding the average level of
prices is reduced in all segments of the daily demand cycle, while the
great variability in price changes is nearly eliminated.
Implications for Electricity Deregulation in the United States
The computerization of laboratory market experiments using
profit-motivated human subjects in the 1970s unexpectedly revolutionized
our thinking about the purpose and uses of experiments. In particular we
soon came to recognize that the laboratory could be used to test-bed new
electronic trading systems for application to industries traditionally
perceived as requiring hierarchical organization and government
regulation to achieve proper coordination and control over the resulting
legally franchised monopolies. Electricity was a prime example, and we
attempted to use our first experience with what we called "smart
computer assisted markets" to inform Arizona's cautious and
tentative interest in restructuring its electrical industry to rely on
markets to regulate the energy segment of the industry. Failing at the
time to influence policy, our effort was not ignored abroad, and we
participated as consultants in developing proposals and the use of
experiments to help inform some of the key research issues in
decentralization, and to serve as a hands-on training tool for those
managing the transition. Decentralization required the creation of new
property rights: a governance structure and efficient pricing for the
grid, generator entry and exit rules, market rules governing messages
and contracts in the context of computer controlled coordination,
optimization, and communication, but with all outcomes driven by the
decisions of dispersed agents whose circumstances of time and place were
reflected in market bids to buy or offers to sell.
In the United States the industry was already privatized, but
subject to centralized state and national price regulation based on a
"fair" return on investment. With the proposed deregulation of
electric utility prices and consumption each state or region needed to
develop a plan for restructuring their industry and specifying the
auction market rules for determining the real-time wholesale price of
energy. Without exception, the resulting market designs, hammered out by
regulators, consultants, industry representatives, and various
power-marketing intermediaries, all employed supply-side bidding
mechanisms for the hourly spot market. These spot markets were
supplemented with wide ranging freedom for power users, producers, and
intermediaries to engage in a variety of bilateral contracts outside of
direct price discipline by the spot market. For the spot market this
supply-side emphasis meant that any user, regardless of the individual
circumstances of that consumer's need for an uninterruptible flow
of energy, would be guaranteed that this demand would be served.
Bilateral contractors could agree to allow various degrees of firmness
of demand to impinge on contract terms. But in this longer-term contract
market prices are negotiated and secret, and are not subject to the
direct real-time opportunity cost constraints provided by the spot
market.
The "must serve" demand policy in the spot market was
inherited from a rigid regulatory regime that politicized the
reliability of electricity flows to all consumers, whatever the cost.
This cost was collectivized by averaging it across all users regardless
of individual consumer differences in willingness-to-pay for keeping the
lights on. The local utility was expected to maintain service, or
restore it quickly, even in inclement weather, spreading the cost of
this super-reliability thinly over all customers. This cost included the
maintenance of substantial reserves in generation and transmission
capacity. Thus system reliability and the capacity to satisfy all retail
demand were exclusively a supply-side adjustment problem. In providing
this superior service to all, the supply side was always justified in
claiming 100 percent cost recovery plus a fair profit. The consequence
of this supply-side mind-set was uncontrolled cost creep that increased
to a gallop and ultimately became part of the political outcry for
deregulation. Implicitly, however, the process of deregulation assumed
that this built-in supply-side bias did not require fundamental
rethinking when it came time to design spot markets for the new world of
competition. As always in market institutions, the devil was in the
details.
Beginning three years ago in Midwestern and Eastern markets peak
prices hit short-run levels of 100 or more times the normal price level
of $20-$30 per megawatt hour. This was the predictable direct
consequence of completely unresponsive spot demand impinging on
responsive discretionary (bid) supply. More recently the California spot
market has been plagued by exorbitant increases in prices as illustrated
in Figure 3. This has led to political action to impose price caps on
this market, which, of course, can only discourage a positive supply
response to the shortages. The move to replace American-style regulation
with what may become known as American-style deregulation is in danger
of being derailed by these interventions.
Controlled comparisons between markets with and without demand-side
bidding, in which only 16 percent of peak demand can be voluntarily
interrupted, show that the effect of demand-side bidding can
dramatically lower both the level of prices and their volatility.
The public policy implications are evident: wholesale spot markets
need to be strengthened institutionally by making explicit provision for
demand-side bidding. Distributors need to incentivize more of their
customers to accept contracts for voluntary power interruptions, or use
time of day meters and load control systems to manage their own price
responsivity. Industrial and commercial buyers who already have the
capacity to handle interruptible energy supply, but who contract outside
the spot market need adequate incentives to participate in the spot
market where their more responsive demands can impact public prices.
Distributors stand to gain by interrupting demand sufficiently to avoid
paying higher peak and shoulder spot prices, and these savings can be
used to pass on incentive discounts to customers whose demand, or
portions of it, can be reduced or delayed to off-peak periods when
supply capacity is ample. In California, news reports indicate that
distributors have lost some $10 billion buying high (Figure 3) and
selling at vastly lower residential rates.
The technology and capacity for implementing such a policy already
exists and can be expanded. This policy recognizes that adjustment to
the daily, weekly, and seasonal variation in demand, and to the need to
provide adequate security reserves, is as much a demand-side problem as
it is a supply-side problem. The history of regulation has created an
institutional environment that sees such adjustment as exclusively a
supply responsibility, and views prices as an ex post means of cost
recovery. The result is an inefficient, costly and inflexible system
that has produced the recent price shocks and involuntary disruption of
energy flows. Demand-side bidding and price feedback coupled with the
supporting interruptible-service incentive contracts can eliminate
unjustified price volatility, price increases and reduce the need for
reserve supplies of generator and transmission capacity.
FIGURE 6
PRICES AND VOLATILITY WITH AND WITHOUT DEMAND-SIDE BIDDING
Average Prices
Experimental Dollars
Time of Day
Competitive Demand-Side No Demand-Side
Price Bidding Bidding
Off-peak 20 46 64
Shoulder 76 86 137
Peak 166 163 179
Variance of Changes in Price from Day to Day
Variance of Price Changes
Time of Day
Demand-Side Bidding No Demand-Side Bidding
Off-peak 50 315
Shoulder 30 532
Peak 22 83
Note: Table made from bar graph.
They acknowledge the influence and support of the many people and
organizations who made possible the research program on which this paper
is based: the Arizona Corporation Commission (Commissioners: Richard
Kimball, Junius Hoffman, and Marianne Jennings) who in 1984 had the
vision to fund our first efforts to study electricity deregulation;
Penelope Brooke, who hosted Smith's tenure as a C.S. First
Boston/Victoria University Visiting Fellow consultant on electric power
reform in New Zealand, 1991; Prospect Electricity (now Integral Energy),
and our host, John McQuarrie, in Rassenti and Smith's first visit
to Australia as consultants, 1993; the National Grid Management Council
(Australia), Hugh Outhred and John Kaye (NSW School of Electrical
Engineering), who hosted our second visit, 1996; Hugh Outhred, who has
continued to provide inspiration to us and to many other U.S. nationals
in this country's deregulation debate, and specifically for his
many valuable comments and corrections on an earlier draft of this
paper. We also thank Lewis Evans of Victoria University, New Zealand,
for providing us with a recent update of electricity restructuring in
that country, and for his helpful comments on this paper.
(1) Williams (1980) reports comparisons of the oral and electronic
auctions. He found that oral auctions converged more rapidly for
inexperienced subjects, but for experienced subjects (one previous
session) the two systems were indistinguishable.
(2) Hugh Outhred (2001) notes that there is ongoing work in
Australia under the NECA code-review process to explore practical
implementations of network property rights (see www.neca.com.au).
(3) Maintaining voltage to avoid "brownouts" requires
generators, or special compensating devices, to provide local reactive
power. Since generators can produce either reactive or active power (the
latter is energy that does work) in variable proportions, (i) is a
source of "externality" only if it is not priced, which is the
universal practice inherited from centrally owned or regulated systems.
We plan experimental designs to price reactive power as just another
commodity.
(4) Generator (spinning) reserve can be supplied by a market for
standby capacity in addition to the energy market. (See Olson, Rassenti,
and Smith 2001 for an experimental study of such simultaneous markets).
A simple such market (without network complications) is provided when
you rent an automobile: if you use it you buy the gas in a separate
energy market; if you do not use it then it is in standby reserve for
contingent use. To maintain transmission reserves lines are typically
constrained to carry much less than their thermal capacities by
engineers whose zeal in minimizing the risk of losing a line, is not
necessarily economical. A standard rule, based on n-1 analysis, is to
set the capacity of each line in a network so that if any one line goes
out the remaining n-1 lines can carry the peak load; if you want still
more security n-2 analysis is applied and so on. Of course this approach
begs the question of what price security. Can catastrophic insurance
principles be applied with a variable premium that increases with
monitored capacity utilization?
(5) The impetus for reform was a drastic reduction in the
performance of the NZ economy from 1953 to the late 1970s. New Zealand
had the world's third-highest per capita income in 1953 (behind the
United States and Canada but tied with Switzerland) and by 1978 had
slipped to twenty-second (less than half the per capita income of
Switzerland). See McMillan (1998).
(6) As a practical matter, because of the cost of metering and
monitoring, network pricing always involves a certain amount of
aggregation of subsystems into representative nodes or paths. Hence, the
above principles are indeed conceptual, and only imperfectly captured in
any actual operating system. Moreover, low voltage distribution systems
do not follow the square loss law rule at all well, and losses are
commonly averaged across the high density of users.
(7) Based on private correspondence with Hugh Outhred.
(8) For a critique of this trend see Smith (1987, 1996), and for
studies of smart computer assisted markets in gas pipeline networks see
McCabe, Rassenti, and Smith (1989, 1990), and Rassenti, Reynolds, and
Smith (1994).
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Stephen J. Rassenti is Professor of Economics at the
Interdisciplinary Center for Economic Science (ICES) at George Mason
University. Vernon L. Smith is Professor of Economies and Law, and Bart
J. Wilson is Associate Professor of Economics, at ICES.