Title: A Brief History
1(No Transcript)
2A Brief History
The Power Commission-Electric Power Commission
1907
Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission 1910
3Regulated 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
4Regulated 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
5Brief History
IMO
96
98
99
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97
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6A Brief History
Ontario Hydro
7Hydro One
8OEFC
9ESA
10OPG
11IMO
12The 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
13The 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
14The Markets
IMO - Administered Markets
Financial
Physical
Real-time
Operating Reserve
Capacity Reserve
Energy
Procurement
Energy Forward
Transmission Rights
Ancillary Services
Must Run Contracts
15Who 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
16Who Can Participate?
17Becoming a Participant
- Three steps
- Become an Authorized Market Participant
- Registration of facilities
- Registration of metering installations
18Types 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
19The Energy Market
20The 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
21Market Clearing Price
22Market 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
23Electricity - 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
24Electricity - 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)
25Daily Demand Fluctuations
26Daily Demand Fluctuations
27Determining Market Price
28Market Clearing Price
29Bids and Offers
30Bid and Offers
IMO - Administered Markets
Real-time Energy
31Energy 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
32Energy Offers
MW
33Components of Supply and Demand
34Dispatchable 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
35What 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
36PKI
- 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)
37How 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
38Non-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
39The 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
40Inputs
- 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
41Price
42Setting the Market Clearing Price - An Example
43Offers Are Selected Economically
44Demand
Quantity
250 MW
200 MW
150 MW
100 MW
50 MW
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Time
45Offers and Demand
46/MW
MW
47Hourly Ontario Price
48Hourly Ontario Price
49Operating Instructions
50Dispatch Instructions
IMO - Administered Markets
Registered Facility
51Interjurisdictional Trade
52Interjurisdictional Trade
Quebec (8)
Manitoba
Minnesota
New York
Michigan
53Settlement
54Who Is Settled by the IMO?
55Your Bill
56Your Bill
57IMO 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
58Looking Ahead
- Open futures market
- Possible move to locational pricing
- Long term planning and signaling the market
- Green Energy
- Maintaining complex systems through contract
59Ontarios Wholesale Electricity Market
Suppliers
Purchasers
IMO - Administered Markets
Energy Market
MCP calculated
Transmitters
Transactions / Information
Electricity
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