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Locational ICAP Draft Market Design

Locational ICAP Draft Market Design. Power System Resource Adequacy Working Group   The Sheraton Springfield Hotel, MA August 27, 2003 M. Karl Market Development. Locational ICAP Background. FERC Compliance Order requires filing by March 2004 and Implementation by June 2004

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Locational ICAP Draft Market Design

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  1. Locational ICAPDraft Market Design Power System Resource Adequacy Working Group  The Sheraton Springfield Hotel, MAAugust 27, 2003M. KarlMarket Development

  2. Locational ICAP Background • FERC Compliance Order requires filing by March 2004 and Implementation by June 2004 • Order was in response to Devon cost-of-service request • RMR Contracts not acceptable to FERC and a market solution is required • Order requires Locational ICAP or a Deliverability mechanism • While PJM deliverability tests are mentioned, implementation of such a process will require years and will not deal with issues addressed by FERC (revenue adequacy in load pockets) • Imposition of “full deliverability” is one response to a locational ICAP market and is not in conflict with this market

  3. Locational ICAP Background (Cont) • Additional FERC Compliance Order Issues • “PUSH” bids eliminated when Locational ICAP is implemented • Order directs NEPOOL/ ISO-NE to address issues in export constrained regions as well as in load pockets • Order essentially requires assignment of ICAP obligations on a regional basis • Based on ISO-NE planning studies, import regions with local sourcing requirements are Greater Southwest Connecticut, Connecticut, and NEMA/Boston while Maine is the export constrained region

  4. Locational ICAP Market Design Options

  5. Locational ICAP Market Goals • Recognize differences in locational value of capacity • Provide sufficient revenue to load pocket resources to ensure reliability is maintained • Address the binary pricing problem • Address export constraints as well as import constraints • To the extent possible maximize market liquidity in the ICAP product • Readily accommodate bilateral contracts • Manage Market Power in load pockets

  6. LICAP Market Design Choices • As currently defined the LICAP market contemplates three import constrained zones, an export constrained zone, and “rest of pool” • A number of market design choices were considered by ISO-NE. Common features were: • Assignment of zonal obligation to load and mapping of generation to zones • Different sourcing percentages based on transfer capabilities • Need to allow generation to meet requirements in other zones based on transfer capability

  7. LICAP Market Design Choices (Cont) • Decision came down to a choice between two market approaches • These approaches deliver similar results but approach the problem differently • Key Difference between the two is the approach to bilateral contacting • Choices are: • Zonal ICAP LMP Model • Zonal Cascaded Market Model

  8. Zonal ICAP LMP ModelDesign Summary

  9. Zonal ICAP LMP Model Summary • As suggested by the title this approach uses an LMP calculator to optimize selection of ICAP resources • ICAP Obligations assigned by zone • Generators mapped to zones • Each Participant has a net “Zonal Position” • In auctions Participants offer resources and bid for resources as needed by zone. • LMP Objective Function minimizes total pool cost of ICAP while respecting zone to zone transfer limits • Prices separate by zone when transfer capability is exhausted and local resources are required to meet local demand

  10. Gen: 250 mw Load: 400 mw Gen: 550 mw Load: 400 mw Gen: 1000 mw Load: 500 mw Gen: 200 mw Load: 400 mw Gen: 800 mw Load: 200 mw Zonal ICAP LMP Example System Maine Greater CT Rest of Pool 200 mw 150 mw 300 mw 160 mw (Arrow is in direction of binding constraint – counter flow assumed unrestricted) NEMA/ Boston Greater SWCT

  11. Zonal ICAP LMP Model Issues • Advantages • Flexible Solution which is easily adapted to changes in topology • Determinate solution even with a networked zonal topology • Completes the auction in a single pass • Implicitly allocates transfer capability prorata to load in import constrained zones and to generators in export constrained zones. • Disadvantages • Participants responsible to manage out of zone requirements to ensure that they are met. • LMP has not been applied elsewhere (no model to follow, but share some similarity with NYISO). • At this point, it is not clear how to incorporate the demand curve.

  12. Zonal LMP Allocation of Congestion • All load in import constrained region required to purchase fixed percentage of all obligation at local LMP. • All generators in export constrained are effectively allowed to sell limited portion outside the zone. • Bilateral transactions full supported – stipulated as change of position in any zone. • Constraints are enforced in the auction in the LMP optimization. • Any Ability to Import/Export Not Used in Bilateral Market is Settled at Supply or Deficiency Auction Price • Participant has option of whether to purchase/sell in Supply Auction • Any remaining imports/exports settled in Deficiency Auction

  13. Zonal ICAP LMP Model – Business Process • Obligations are assigned to load based on peak contributions (same as now) except the obligations are assigned by zone • Locational sourcing requirement is communicated to Participants but not enforced in the bilateral process • Trades exchange capacity entitlement without changing zone • A bilateral between Maine and Boston must be specified as in Maine Zone or in Boston Zone. • Participants required to track positions by zone and account for the amount of credit expected from capacity purchased in other zones • When purchasing from an export constrained zone the purchaser must account for the constraint and adjust the deal accordingly.

  14. Zonal ICAP LMP Model – Business Process • Supply auction clears zonal supply and demand without transfer constraints • Supply auctions function same as current market • Allows for virtual trades • LMP process is applied to the deficiency auction • Capacity in one zone not netted against obligations in another zone • Capacity chosen in the auction is the most economic set of resources based on offers • The Boston load Participant with Maine capacity is treated as deficient load in Boston and as a supplier in Maine • Separate zonal prices calculated based on loads, offers, and constraints

  15. Zonal Cascaded Market ModelDesign Summary

  16. Cascaded Market Model Summary • Assigns obligations and maps generation on a zonal basis • Enforces transfer constraints directly in the mapping process rather than through an LMP • Applies to both Load and Generation. For example. • Assume 50% of Maine generation is “locked in” • The owner of a 100 MW Maine generator would get 50 Maine zone MW and 50 “rest of pool” MW • A Maine load obligation can be met with MW from either zone • Assume 60% SWCT sourcing requirement • A 100 MW SWCT load would get 60 MW of SWCT obligation and 40 MW of Connecticut obligation

  17. Cascaded Market Model Summary (Cont) • Participants track position by zone, and Participants may have obligations in multiple zones • Multiple obligations arise out of less than 100% local sourcing requirement • Total obligation is assigned, then broken into the piece that must be acquired locally and the piece(s) that may be imported • Participants buy and sell to meet obligations in zones where they have obligations • Different zonal prices reflect supply and demand conditions in each zone

  18. Cascaded Market Model Issues • Advantages • Increased contracting certainty because export and import constraints are dealt with prior to the contracting period • Mapping process is capable of accommodating asset-specific deliverability if required • Fits well with existing market and software design • Disadvantages • Somewhat less adaptable to changes in system topology (May be dealt with in software design) • Could pose problems if a networked zonal configuration is required (Works well in the current daisy chain structure)

  19. Cascaded ICAP Model – Business Process • Total obligations assigned zonally based on peak contributions • Local sourcing requirement enforced by distributing obligations across zones. For example: • Assume a SWCT Participant has a 100 MW obligation with sourcing requirements of 60% SWCT, 30% CT, 10% ROP • 100 MW obligation distributed across these zones • SWCT Participant can meet obligation 100% with SWCT resources if desired but may also meet 30% and 10% with less expensive resources • Generators in export constrained areas also distributed

  20. Cascaded ICAP Model – Business Process • Bilateral contracts identify the zone involved in the trade • Capacity credited to a zone does not move when sold • Participants know with certainty that purchased capacity will count toward zonal obligation • Boston Load Participant can buy “rest of pool” capacity from a Maine resource and apply it to the “rest of pool” portion of the Boston obligation. • Supply auctions conducted in each zone using same process as current market (virtual trades allowed) • Deficiency auction conducted in each zone to meet zonal deficiencies • Auctions and offers cascaded from import constrained to export constrained zone

  21. LICAP Market Model Choice • Choice between the Zonal LMP and Cascaded Market approaches is required • The LMP approach has perceived advantages: • Flexibility, Adaptability to changes, and Ability to resolve networked zones is desirable • Significant Issues must be resolved to make ICAP LMP viable • Issues with integrating an LMP calculator in settlement software • Uncertain on hot to integrate the demand curve.

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