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A Brief History

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OH built infrastructure over 95 years, advocated use of power. OH also built up stranded debt ... Wholesale price is set every five minutes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Brief History


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A Brief History
The Power Commission-Electric Power Commission
1907
Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission 1910
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Regulated Monopoly
  • OH - crown corporation with obligation to serve
  • supply any and all power needs at lowest cost
  • OH built infrastructure over 95 years, advocated
    use of power
  • OH also built up stranded debt
  • Prices rose sharply in the early 1990s

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Regulated Monopoly
  • OH owned most of the value chain
  • OH could do central planning
  • schedule outages
  • stack production to minimize average cost
  • adjust location of generation to improve grid
    efficiency
  • Long term planning for new generation

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Brief History
IMO
96
98
99
02
97
00
01
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A Brief History
Ontario Hydro
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Hydro One
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OEFC
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ESA
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OPG
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IMO
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The IMO - As Impartial Market Administrator
  • We ensure accountability
  • Authorize/register participants
  • Run commercial activities of market
  • We ensure equal, unbiased access
  • Provide historical and forecast performance data
  • Monitor conduct of participants
    fair competition, level playing field

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The IMO - As Operator of Reliable System
  • We balance generation to meet constantly changing
    demand for electricity
  • Monitor conditions on IMO-controlled grid
  • Schedule production from suppliers
  • Maintain reliability to industry standards

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The Markets
IMO - Administered Markets
Financial
Physical
Real-time
Operating Reserve
Capacity Reserve
Energy
Procurement
Energy Forward
Transmission Rights
Ancillary Services
Must Run Contracts
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Who Can Participate in the Markets?
  • Anyone can apply to become a registered market
    participant
  • Anyone who wishes to inject energy into, or
    withdraw energy from the IMO-controlled grid MUST
    become a Market Participant

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Who Can Participate?
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Becoming a Participant
  • Three steps
  • Become an Authorized Market Participant
  • Registration of facilities
  • Registration of metering installations

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Types of Market Participants
  • Dispatchable
  • Bid and offer for energy based on price
  • Adjust operation based on dispatch
    instructions from IMO
  • Non-dispatchable
  • Price takers, accept market price
  • Consume or produce as required, no dispatch
    instructions

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The Energy Market
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The Energy Market
  • Previously electricity prices were set on a cost
    recovery basis by Ontario Hydro
  • All costs associated with electricity were
    bundled into one wholesale price
  • Prices now set by market forces
  • Overhead, reliability and administration costs
    are broken out

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Market Clearing Price
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Market Clearing Price
  • One uniform price for energy in Ontario
  • All suppliers paid the same price
  • All consumers pay the same price
  • Wholesale price is set every five minutes
  • An hourly average price is used for most
    wholesale consumers

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Electricity - A Unique Commodity
  • Electricity is something like a service
  • Electricity cannot be practically stored
  • (energy can, but not electricity)
  • Electricity must be generated to ensure supply
    exactly equals demand
  • mis-match leads to customer equipment failure

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Electricity - A unique commodity
  • Electricity is lost when moving long distances
    and when changing voltages
  • Demand fluctuates with time of day
  • Must have over capacity
  • Marginal cost of production can vary by ten to 20
    times (hydraulic, nuclear, coal, gas, alternative)

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Daily Demand Fluctuations
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Daily Demand Fluctuations
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Determining Market Price
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Market Clearing Price
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Bids and Offers
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Bid and Offers

IMO - Administered Markets
Real-time Energy
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Energy Supply - Offers
  • Dispatchable generators offer electricity to the
    market at a specific price.
  • A simple example
  • Generator A 200 MW if the price is above 20/MWh
  • Generator B 100 MW if the price is above 15/MWh
  • Generator C 150 MW if the price is above 25/MWh

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Energy Offers
MW
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Components of Supply and Demand
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Dispatchable Participants
  • Provide bids and offers hourly
  • Bids and offers come to IMO via internet
  • Use PKI for security. Digital certificates are
    legally binding
  • PKI service purchased from e-Scotia

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What is PKI?
  • PKI uses a combination of software, encryption
    technologies, procedures, and services to ensure
    that only authorized persons from authorized
    entities access IMOs systems

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PKI
  • Participant must be certain that they are
    interacting with authorized IMO systems
  • The IMO must be certain that the person sending
    the information is who they claim to be
  • Confident that a third party cannot intercept and
    read the information
  • Confident that the information sent via the
    Internet has not been tampered with
  • Everyone must be certain that once the above four
    items are satisfied, neither party can deny
    sending/receiving the data and must therefore
    honour the terms of the transaction
    (non-repudiation)

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How Does PKI Work?
  • Asymmetric encryption - two matched keys
  • One key is private one key is public
  • An Individual Subscriber has three certificates,
    each containing a public and private key
  • Verification
  • Encryption
  • Browser

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Non-dispatchable Components
  • Non-dispatchable Demand
  • Non-dispatchable loads (e.g., LDC)
  • System losses
  • IMO measures total demand in real-time
  • IMO anticipates total demand for next five
    minutes by adjusting actual demand from five
    minutes ago
  • Non-dispatchable Supply

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The Algorithm
  • IMO algorithm is at the heart of the market
  • IMO contracted out creation. Three vendors
    created new systems
  • Algorithm calculates prices and schedules
    production

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Inputs
  • IMO takes bids and offers from participants
  • IMO takes measurement data from over 2100 energy
    meters throughout the province
  • IMO measures weather conditions throughout the
    province
  • Algorithm includes model of electricity flow
    throughout the province
  • All activity monitored by operators

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Price
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Setting the Market Clearing Price - An Example
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Offers Are Selected Economically
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Demand
Quantity
250 MW
200 MW
150 MW
100 MW
50 MW
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Time
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Offers and Demand
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/MW
MW
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Hourly Ontario Price
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Hourly Ontario Price
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Operating Instructions
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Dispatch Instructions
IMO - Administered Markets
Registered Facility
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Interjurisdictional Trade
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Interjurisdictional Trade
Quebec (8)
Manitoba
Minnesota
New York
Michigan
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Settlement
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Who Is Settled by the IMO?
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Your Bill
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Your Bill
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IMO E-Market
  • IMO is a B2B, market enabler (10 Billion)
  • Transactions via the internet, low capital
    investment for participants
  • Web site is B2B but receives thousands of hits by
    public

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Looking Ahead
  • Open futures market
  • Possible move to locational pricing
  • Long term planning and signaling the market
  • Green Energy
  • Maintaining complex systems through contract

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Ontarios Wholesale Electricity Market
Suppliers
Purchasers
IMO - Administered Markets
Energy Market
MCP calculated
Transmitters
Transactions / Information
Electricity
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