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Demand Response: Next Steps

Demand Response: Next Steps. OPSI Annual Meeting October 1, 2012. Howard J. Haas. Defining the Goal: Demand Response. A fully functional demand side of the electricity market means that end use customers will have the: the ability to see real-time energy price signals in real time

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Demand Response: Next Steps

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  1. Demand Response: Next Steps • OPSI Annual Meeting • October 1, 2012 Howard J. Haas

  2. Defining the Goal: Demand Response A fully functional demand side of the electricity market means that end use customers will have the: • the ability to see real-time energy price signals in real time • will have the ability to react to real-time energy prices in real time • will have the ability to receive the direct benefits or costs of changes in real-time energy use. www.monitoringanalytics.com

  3. Defining the Goal: Demand Response A fully functional demand side of the capacity market will be able to see current capacity prices will have the ability: • to react to capacity prices • to receive the direct benefits or costs of changes in the demand for capacity. www.monitoringanalytics.com

  4. Defining the Goal: Demand Response Price D S=D* MC S DWL PW P* MB PR S = DR MW* MWR MW www.monitoringanalytics.com

  5. Demand Response: Work in Progress Market failure when behavior is inconsistent with the market value. Occurs because: • Customers do not know the market price • Customer do not pay the market price • Do not benefit from response at market price • Disconnect between wholesale markets and retail pricing Assumes behavior would be different if prices and the costs of consumption were directly linked www.monitoringanalytics.com

  6. Demand Response: Work In Progress Today, most end use customers do not face the market price for energy or capacity: • Locational marginal price of energy (LMP) • Locational capacity market clearing price. Most end use customers pay a fixed retail rate with no direct relationship to the hourly wholesale market LMP, either on an average zonal or on a nodal basis. www.monitoringanalytics.com

  7. PJM’s Demand Response: Interim State PJM’s demand side programs, by design, provide a work around for end use customers that are not otherwise exposed to the incremental, locational costs of energy and capacity. PJM’s programs are a transitional step towards a fully functional demand side for its markets. The complete transition to a fully functional demand side will require explicit agreement and coordination among the Commission, state public utility commissions and RTOs/ISOs. www.monitoringanalytics.com

  8. PJM Demand Response Programs www.monitoringanalytics.com

  9. Energy Demand Response Program: Issues In PJM’s Economic Load Response Program • LMP signal is zonal not nodal • Nodal is the right price signal • Measurement challenges www.monitoringanalytics.com

  10. Energy Demand Response Program: Issues Order 745; March 15, 2011: Distorts energy price signal to load Net Benefits Test: • Pass the test • Get Full LMP vs. LMP-Generation Component of Rate • Fail the test • No payment (retail rate savings) • Double payment to LMP wholesale customers • Already getting the marginal signal: LMP savings • Paying LMP on top of realized savings is double payment www.monitoringanalytics.com

  11. Capacity Demand Response Program: Issues PJM’s Load Management (LM) Program • MW equivalence issue • Limited vs. Summer Only vs. Annual • Should have Annual Only • Current products distort capacity market price • Need Subzonal Designation • Subzonal dispatch, with target of nodal dispatch www.monitoringanalytics.com

  12. Capacity Demand Response Program: Issues PJM’s Load Management (LM) Program • Emergency vs. Economic (not a scarcity trigger) • Not offsetting emergency MW • Minimum Dispatch Price • $1,000 • $2,700? • No reason to pay minimum dispatch price • No call on the economic capacity they are surrendering • Should be paid: LMP – Generation Component of Rate www.monitoringanalytics.com

  13. PJM’s Demand Response: Goal Transition to a structure where customers do not require payments to have an incentive to respond to energy or capacity prices. • Real time nodal price transparency • Direct reduction in Capacity Obligations (save on the margin) • Still a role for third party aggregators/retailers to provide options • Active load response • Fixed price options www.monitoringanalytics.com

  14. Demand Response: Goal No need for programs if retail markets reflected hourly wholesale prices and customers received direct savings associated with reducing consumption in response to prices. • No need for a PJM Economic Load Response Program • No need for extensive measurement and verification protocols. In the transition to that point, however, there is a need for robust measurement and verification techniques to ensure that transitional programs incent the desired behavior. www.monitoringanalytics.com

  15. Monitoring Analytics, LLC 2621 Van Buren Avenue Suite 160 Eagleville, PA 19403 (610) 271-8050 MA@monitoringanalytics.com www.MonitoringAnalytics.com www.monitoringanalytics.com

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