The Hedge Value of Renewable Energy

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The Hedge Value of Renewable Energy

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Future Gas Prices are Highly Uncertain, and Forecasting Performance to Date Has Been Dismal ... Gas prices are high, volatile, unpredictable, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Hedge Value of Renewable Energy


1
The Hedge Value of Renewable Energy
  • Ryan H. Wiser
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • RHWiser_at_lbl.gov (510-486-5474)
  • http//eetd.lbl.gov/ea/EMS/
  • NREL Energy Analysis Forum
  • Golden, Colorado
  • November 9, 2004

2
Motivation - To Enhance the Economic Value
Proposition of Renewable Energy
Renewable energy (RE) has attributes that can
decrease certain electricity-sector portfolio
risks
  • Historically RE has been supported by policy
    and green marketing, with some vague connection
    to risk reduction benefits
  • Now It is possible to make the case for RE on
    economic grounds, by quantifying risk reduction
    benefits
  • Declining cost of renewables
  • Increased wholesale price volatility (electricity
    and gas)
  • Application of risk analysis and portfolio
    theory

3
The Hedge Value of Renewable Energy
  • This presentation emphasizes the benefit of RE in
    reducing natural gas price risk, focusing on
    recent research by LBNL, and ends with a summary
    of additional research needs
  • Renewable energy (RE) provides a hedge against
    volatile and escalating natural gas prices in two
    ways
  • Mitigates Fuel Price Risk Unlike
    natural-gas-fired electricity generation, the
    cost of RE is not tied to the cost of natural gas
  • Reduces Natural Gas Prices Increased RE reduces
    gas demand, and may consequently put downward
    pressure on gas prices

4
Mitigating Fuel Price Risk
  • Developing a base-case gas price forecast
  • Analyzing uncertainty in the base-case gas price
    forecast
  • Making cost-risk tradeoffs

5
Developing a Base-Case Gas Price Forecast Its
Not Easy!
Base-Case Gas Price Forecasts Vary Substantially
Across Western IRPs
6
Developing a Base-Case Gas Price Forecast Make
Sure the Forecast Is Recent Because Expectations
Are Changing
  • EIAs AEO Reference Case Forecasts Have Risen
    Consistently and Significantly Over Last 7 Years

7
Benchmark Near-Term Gas Prices to NYMEX, which
Arguably Represents Markets Best Forecast of
Prices
Over last 4 years, forward gas prices have
exceeded EIA reference case forecasts gas price
forecasts used by some utilities have also
differed from 6-year NYMEX forward curve Use of
gas price forecasts (rather than forwards) over
this time period may have biased investment
decisions towards variable-price gas-fired
generation, and away from renewable energy When
possible, use forward prices, not price
forecasts, when comparing the levelized costs of
gas-fired and RE generation
8
Analyzing Uncertainty in the Base-Case Gas Price
Forecast
Do Not Place Great Emphasis on the Base-Case
Price Forecast!!!
National Petroleum Council (2003)
9
Future Gas Prices are Highly Uncertain, and
Forecasting Performance to Date Has Been Dismal
10
Analysis Techniques for Evaluating Price
Variability, and the Value of Different Resource
Portfolios, Vary
Analysis Techniques to Evaluate Price Variability
and Value of Renewable Energy in Reducing Fuel
Price Risk Have Improved, but Their
Implementation is Uneven
Scenario analysis with more realistic assessment
of probability of alternative futures
Deterministic analysis with only one gas-price
forecast
Scenario analysis with focus on base-case
forecast
Stochastic/ simulation analysis
  • Analytic Studies of the Costs and Benefits RE
    Deployment (e.g., national RPS, state renewable
    energy development, EERE RD benefits analysis)
  • Have not begun to regularly use sophisticated
    analysis techniques
  • Optimizing for least-cost in deterministic
    framework, with limited scenario analysis
  • Utility Integrated Resource Plans
  • Increasingly using more sophisticated techniques
    (stochastic and scenario analysis)
  • Wind increasingly viewed as an important part of
    a least-cost/low-risk portfolio

11
Making Cost-Risk Tradeoffs
  • Utilities are beginning to conduct sophisticated
    analysis of cost-risk tradeoffs, and selecting
    wind as part of the selected portfolio
  • Little work conducted so far on how to
    appropriately make the tradeoff
  • Little guidance from regulators or customers on
    risk management goals and expectations
  • Can further research help answer this question?
  • Should risk-adjusted discount rates be
    considered?
  • Should customers be given a choice of portfolios
    with different risk profiles, including a
    lower-risk green power option?

12
Reducing Natural Gas Prices
13
The Impact of RE on Natural Gas Prices
  • Increasing number of studies show that increased
    RE will reduce natural gas demand, placing
    downward pressure on gas prices
  • While this price reduction is not strictly a gain
    in net social welfare, the effect is found to
    potentially be sizable enough to merit attention
  • Recent LBNL research has sought to
  • Review economic theory to better understand the
    impact of natural gas demand reduction on natural
    gas prices
  • Review previous modeling studies that have
    evaluated this effect, illustrating potential
    impacts of RE on reducing natural gas prices and
    consumer energy bills
  • Compare the results of various modeling studies
    to each other, and to the economics literature,
    to test for consistency over time, across models,
    and with economic theory
  • Determine whether existing models are treating
    this effect within reason, focusing on national
    impacts (regional impact analysis to come later)
  • Develop a simplified method for estimating the
    impact of RE investments on natural gas prices,
    without using a complex, integrated national
    energy model

14
Key Findings of Our Review
Models suggest that 1 drop in gas demand could
lead to 0.75 2.5 reduction in long-term
wellhead prices, with some models predicting
larger effects
  • Many uncertainties remain, but central tendency
    of NEMS output is consistent with limited
    existing knowledge (e.g., other energy models,
    and empirical literature on historical
    elasticities)
  • While a wealth transfer (and not a social gain),
    the effect of RE on gas prices is significant a
    reduction in gas bills due to RE could largely
    offset any expected incremental cost of RE
  • More thorough analysis is warranted effect
    should be better integrated into RE cost and
    benefits analysis

15
The External Consumer Benefit of Renewable
Energy
16
Conclusions
  • Gas prices are high, volatile, unpredictable, and
    diversification with RE can help hedge these
    risks
  • Directly hedge gas costs
  • Reduce gas consumption and prices
  • More sophisticated risk analysis tools have the
    possibility of expanding the use of renewable
    energy
  • Recent IRPs Those IRPs that have evaluated
    natural gas and carbon risks are now regularly
    finding that wind power is a beneficial
    contributor to a low-cost/low-risk portfolio
  • Secondary Gas Impacts Studies of the impact of
    renewable energy on gas prices show potentially
    sizable benefits that may tip the scales in favor
    of renewable energy

17
What Is Needed?
  • Apply more sophisticated risk analysis tools in
    assessments of the cost and benefits of renewable
    energy
  • Utilize the techniques that are increasingly used
    in utility IRPs
  • Develop better understanding of the range of
    plausible future gas prices
  • Understand different hedging options and their
    limitations, and what risks renewable energy can
    and cannot hedge cost effectively
  • Develop methods to quantify other risk benefits
    (and costs) of renewable energy, and popularize
    their use (e.g., risk of future environmental
    regulations)
  • Develop tools to better address the tradeoff
    between the cost and risk of different resource
    portfolios
  • Customer surveys of willingness to pay for price
    stability
  • Develop more green power options that provide the
    benefit of price stability
  • Generate a better understanding of the impact of
    RE on gas prices, focusing on the inverse price
    elasticity of gas supply

18
Contact Information
  • Ryan H. Wiser
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • 1 Cyclotron Road, MS 90-4000
  • Berkeley, California 94720
  • RHWiser_at_lbl.gov
  • 510-486-5474
  • Reports available at
  • http//eetd.lbl.gov/ea/ems
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