Title: Introduction to Electricity
1 Introduction to Electricity
- Part II The Changing Electricity Industry
2The Electricity Industry
- Electricity systems worldwide are changing for
one or more reasons - Technological advances
- Financial/management crisis/inadequate investment
- Public opposition
- Consumer demand for lower costs, better service
- Political cronyism. . .
3Vertically Integrated Model
Energy Finance Ministry
UTILITY Generation
UTILITY Transmission
UTILITY Distribution
Industrial
Commercial
Residential
4The Changing Industry Structure
- Vertically Integrated Model generation,
transmission and distribution controlled by one
or several utilities (usually state owned). - Government grants utility monopoly power
- Regulated by government
- Centralized planning, operation
- Government-guaranteed investment/regulator
ensures cost recovery from consumers - Captive consumers/ratepayers
- Key problems high cost AND/OR low quality
service -
5Single Buyer Model
Government Regulator
UTILITY National Transmission System Owner/Opera
tor
State Owned Power Plants
UTILITY Distribution Municipal or Provincial
Private Independent Power Producers IPP
Industrial/Rural Cogeneration
Consumers/ Small Producers
Small/Renewable Power Producers
6The Changing Electric Industry Structure
- Single Buyer Model
- Private and state producers selling to central
utility/no competition - Centralized planning, operation
- Transmission centrally owned/operated by central
utility - Large industrial consumers can buy electricity
from central utility or direct from private power
producers or self-generate - Key Problems
- Small consumers still captive/no choice
- Government still conflicted as owner/regulator
- Central utility can shut out competitors
- NOTE World Bank promotes this model in China,
Thailand, Vietnam but its own experts admit it
encourages over-investment, corruption, high-cost
power purchase deals, poor regulation.
7The Changing Electricity Industry
- Market-Oriented Restructuring
- Privatization and unbundling of Generation,
Transmission, Distribution - New competitive procedures for power producers
- New forms of regulation
-
8Restructuring Theory/Objectives
-
- To raise capital
- To improve regulation
- To eliminate government/investor conflict of
interest - To boost economic efficiency
- To lower rates and improve service
- To give producers and consumers competitive
choices.
9General components of market-oriented
restructuring
- WHICH ONES CAN YOU IDENTIFY IN YOUR COUNTRY?
- CAN YOU SAY WHICH TRENDS ARE POSITIVE FOR
CONSUMERS? WHY? - 1. Unbundling of generation, transmission, and
distribution into separate businesses. - 2. Open transmission access.
- 3. Operation of the transmission system assigned
to a few distinct organizations. - 4. Creation of a new class of non-regulated
generators. - 5. Formation of new organizations for dispatch of
all generation. - 6 Competition in power production with dispatch
based on quoted prices. - 7Construction of many gas-fired plants by
independent owners. - 8. Payments for some power production based on
market clearing price, which is the highest of
any accepted bid prices. - 9. Retail wheeling increasing in stages to
smaller and smaller size customers (unsuccessful
in many places). - 11. No central planning, no government guarantees
to purchasers. - 12. Hedging contracts to guarantee prices to
power purchasers in a volatile market.
10Competitive Market Model
Policy Laws Regs
Industry Regulatory Authority ENFORCEMENT COMPETI
TION TD Rates
Investors
CONSUMERs CHOOSE SUPPLIERs
POWER PRODUCERs State/Private
DISPATCH Independent System Operator
BUY/SELL Electricity Market Operator
TRANSMISSION PROVIDERs State/Private
DISTRIBUTION Companies/ Rural
Energy Cooperatives
11Multiple producers
- Rice husk cogeneration
- Industrial cogeneration
- Reduced demand on central grid
12Distribution companies
- Can buy power from supplier of their choice or
from market exchange - Consumers can sell direct to distribution
companies
13Old vs New utility regulation
- Old regulated utilities make money building new
power supply projects, biggermore revenue/profit - New regulated utilities help customers save
energy help customers buy less of utility
product electricity!
14New utility regulation
- Utilities earn a return for investment in saving
energy that is equivalent to what they earn from
investments in new power supply capacity. - More state funding for energy efficiency
improvements across sectors - Governments allow utilities to collect money from
ratepayers to pay for energy efficiency projects - State-led emission reduction targets
15Examples
- California Pacific Gas Electric Co. helping
Subway (30,000 restaurants) install
energy-efficient breadbaking ovens - Working with wineries 2,600 wineries consume
one-third of energy consumed by food processors - In California, state law requires utilities to
meet new supply needs first through energy
efficiency then renewables, then building new
(conventional) power plants - Utilities in California rate structure rewards
them for cutting electricity use, not for pushing
energy sales
16New Utility Business - Conservation
- Iowa Power Light advising pig farmers on
energy-efficient lighting and ventilation
energy-efficient lighting can save 10,000 a year
in electricity cost - Pinnacle West Capital Arizona utility is
working with district school board to install new
efficient heating and cooling systems in schools,
adding solar to school rooftops
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18Consumers as Producers
- Homeowners install 10kW solar system
- Send surplus to the grid and get paid by utility
- Utilities (Sacramento Municipal Utility) willing
to pay retail rate because solar systems produce
power during peak (mid-day) hours, improve
performance and reliability of grid. - 19 states give homeowners credit to reduce their
bill, but not cash - 10 states require utilities to pay homeowners
wholesale rate for surplus solar
19Which policy leads to most solar at lower cost?
- Still too early to tell
- Critics say solar homeowners are getting a free
ride - They get a cash rebate for installing system,
which comes from ratepayers - They get credit at retail rate even though they
dont pay any transmission maintenance charge - Interconnection charge is waived while other
producers have to pay gtgt critics say unfair
subsidy - Critics say paying people for surplus will
encourage larger-than-necessary systems (See Thai
solar producers)
20Examples
- Duke Energy (North Carolina) helping Budweiser
make its beer chillers more efficient, saving Bud
big - Duke looking to regulator to get special
incentives to expand energy efficiency business
21Electricity Reform in the Mekong Region
22Whats the Future of Big Hydro?
23Whats the Future of Coal and Nuclear Power?
24What role environmental/community advocates in
the Mekong region?
- System is changing, for better or worse
- Know your power
- Bright ideas vs dim bulb policies
- Define public interest
- Transparency
- Accountability
- Participation
- Democratize the grid!
25END Introduction to Electricity
- Part 2 The Changing Electricity Industry