Title: Floyd Trefny Director of Product Development
1Future of Demand Response In ERCOT A
Presentation to the Workshop September 15,
2006
Project Number 32853 Evaluation of
Demand-Response Programs in the Competitive
Electric Market
Floyd TrefnyDirector of Product Development
2Topics
- Market Load Response to Support the Resource
Adequacy Rule - Market Load Response and Reliability Load
Response - Amount of Price Responsiveness that is needed
- Where could it come from?
3Market Load Response to Support the Resource
Adequacy Rule
- Necessary Conditions for a Successful Energy-Only
Market Design - Adequacy must be able to be treated as a private
good - Each individual customer must carry the burden
for assuring Resource Adequacy - Consumers must be willing to pay the energy price
for scarcity or interrupt voluntarily so that
ERCOT is not forced to de-energize other
customers on an involuntary basis - Consumers must be charged proportionally with the
cost to provide energy - Adequate Market Load Response must exist to
respond to high prices - Free ridership can be overcome if there is
sufficient voluntary demand response - Market participants must believe regulators can
withstand pressure not to mitigate high prices
due to scarcity
4Characteristics of Market Load Response and
Reliability Load Response
- Market Load Response
- Private Good, individual providers get a benefit
only if interrupted - Provided only by Load
- Responds to high Market Prices
- Amounts needed are determined by a balance of
market dynamics of supply and demand - Deployed by individual consumers or by REPs in
response to scarcity pricing that is so severe no
other alternative is available to maintain supply
- Reliability Load Response
- Public Good, capacity costs are charged to all
retail loads - Generators also may provide and price mitigation
rules for generators cap prices paid by retail
customers - Amount is specified by ERCOT and procured from
qualified suppliers by bid award - Amounts needed are determined by engineering
analysis of the reliability consequences of not
having supply reserves - Deployed as a matter of routine control of the
power grid, e.g. Regulation, Non-Spin, Responsive
The same Load can not be used for Reliability
Load Response at the same time as it is being
used for Market Load Response
5Required Amount of Price Responsiveness
70,000 -
- 116.7
Market Reserve 2,500 Mw or 4.2
67,500 -
- 112.5
Reserve for Forced Outages LF Error 3,400 Mw
or 5.7
64,100 -
- 106.8
Ancillary Services 4,100 Mw or 6.8
60,000 -
- 100.0
Reserves for Forced Outages Load Forecast Error
Only 5.7 - 3400 Mw of Capacity
Operating Range
30,000 -
- 50.0
3400 Mw of Response is needed for 100 - 150 hours
a year
0 -
- 0
Peak ERCOT Load
6Load Response OpportunitiesPrepared by DSWG
September 2006
AC Frequency Switch Hot Water Heaters
Similar to Residential
AC Frequency Switch Target loads lt 1 MW Back up
Diesel Pumping Loads
AC Frequency Switch Back up Diesel
LaaR (RRS, NSRS) RGS and RPRS Balancing
Energy Tiered FR RRS from CLRS
On site generation Boiler management Pumping Loads
Smart Meters Critical Peak Pricing Day Ahead
Market Air Conditioners Household Devices
Similar to Residential IDR Meters Day Ahead Market
IDR Meters BUL Back up Diesel Day Ahead
Market Grid Lighting
Day Ahead Market Grid Lighting Chillers and
Coolers
Real Time Response Back Up Diesel Direct Load
Control Day Ahead Market Irrigation
Day Ahead Market Waste Water Pumps Personnel
Hours Grid lighting Thermal Storage
Cost of Meter Sub Metering Issues Incentives
(Landlord) Inconvenience Loss of production Air
Permits Time Response Notification
Mechanism Lack of Firm Price Signals ISO System
Cost to Implement Cost of Meter Forward
Pricing REP or No REP? Cost of Meter
Read Customer Acquisition Fractured Value
Chain Lack of Firm Price Signals ISO System
Cost of Meter Cost of Meter Read Many tenants
lease Customer Acceptance Lack of Firm Price
Signals ISO System Upgrades
Time Response Notification Mechanism Lack of
Firm Price Signals ISO System
TCEQ Permits Metering ERCOT EMS Lack of Firm
Price Signals ISO System
Non Specific Profiles Lack of coordination Lack
of incentive Focus on efficiency ISO System
Reliability Capacity Payments and Firm
Obligation to perform Price Responsive
Energy Payments and Voluntary Performance
Requirements
7Questions????