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Mandatory electricity contracts as competitive device

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Title: Diapositiva 1 Author: Federica MANCA Last modified by: Edwige Sauv Created Date: 4/12/2005 9:35:33 AM Document presentation format: Affichage l' cran – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mandatory electricity contracts as competitive device


1
Mandatory electricity contracts as competitive
device
  • ANNA CRETI
  • LERNA and CEA
  • University of Toulouse I

FEDERICA MANCA Autorità Garante della Concorrenza
e del Mercato
Conference on the Economics of Electricity
Markets, Toulouse 2-3 June, 2005
2
Why Mandatory Contracts?
  • To prevent the insurgence of strategic conducts
    and to control for excessive power prices
    regulators tend to promote
  • the implementation of pro-competitive
    interventions (micro regulation of prices in the
    spot markets, measures to foster final consumers
    responsiveness to prices )
  • introduction of bilateral trading to supplement
    spot markets
  • However, from a theoretical view critics has been
    raised on the effectiveness of a contract market
    to mitigate market power in the electricity
    industry
  • At the same, some forms of contractual regulation
    have been discussed or implemented in several
    countries

3
Idea of the paper
  • Our contribution to the debate is twofold
  • provide a comprehensive screen on
    country-specific contractual regimes
  • model contractual obligations as to mimic
    practical experiences and examine their potential
    as a competitive device
  • We drive policy recommendations regarding the
    effectiveness of a contract market regulation to
    ensure competitive outcomes

4
Contract market regulation
  • Bilateral contracting accomplish several goals
  • hedging against the risk of spot price
    volatility
  • ensuring generation or supply adequacy as an
    alternative tool to promote entry (ex. auctions
    virtual capacity release) or to secure the system
    (capacity obligations ex. must run plants)
  • Thus contractual obligations on capacity or on
    supply are not incompatible with a system of
    voluntary exchanges
  • Mandatory contracts have been implemented in
    several deregulated industries the motivation
    and the implementation differ, still a power
    market mitigation intent can be detected

5
Country-specific contractual practices
  • Regulation can require generators to contract
  • Successful upstream regulation experiences are
    given by England, Australia and Brazil that
    required incumbent generators to subscribe 3-5
    years contracts with distributors. Quantities and
    prices were subject to regulatory approval
  • Ineffective upstream contractual regulation has
    been experienced in Alberta and New Zealand.
    Extensive usage of hedge contracts but among
    vertically integrated firms deterrence of entry
    downstream

6
Country-specific contractual practices
  • Regulation can require retailers to enter into
    long-term agreements
  • Italy is the most significant example. The Single
    Buyer was imposed to auction supplying contracts
    with generators for no less than 30 of its total
    energy sales to non-eligible consumers
  • Under the new Energy Law (2004), regulator in New
    Zealand have been given the power to mandate
    generators or retailers with minimum quantity
    agreements
  • The EU Commission and the Californian regulator
    have both recommended suppliers to contract as a
    measure to secure supply adequacy

7
Related Literature
  • Green (2003) shows that the benefits of a
    contract market are weak when contract demand is
    not risk-neutral and retailers face increasing
    downstream rivalry
  • risk-aversion reduces elasticity of demand
  • downstream competition makes retailers reluctant
    to enter into long-term agreements, as they fears
    to be looked-in
  • inefficient contracting emerges as an equilibrium
    and spot prices are far above the competitive
    level

8
Greens game formulation
  • Three stage game
  • in the first stage, the contract market, Cournot
    generators choose their forward positions (x)
    under uncertainty
  • in the second stage, the spot market, demand
    becomes known, and generators select quantities
    (q)
  • the third stage solves for contract demand that
    is a negative function of the margin between the
    forward and the expected spot price
  • Results are
  • a contract market is not likely by it self to
    mitigate market power
  • positive contracting emerges only for an expected
    spot price exceeding the forward price

9
The Model mandatory measures
  • We introduce a contractual obligation in Green to
    investigate the conditions under which this
    behavioral measure can be effective to restore a
    competitive equilibrium in the spot market
  • The measure is such that agent is total
    contracting becomes
  • mandatory contracts represent a constraint, while
    private ones are the strategic variable for
    hedging purpose
  • at the decentralized equilibrium all contracts
    depend on the measure
  • Two opposite effects on generators incentives to
    trade
  • a pro-competitive effect
  • a crowding-out effect, as mandatory contracts are
    strategic substitutes for private ones.

10
The Model mandatory measures
  • We study Nash solutions for six different
    regulatory designs that mirror country-specific
    experiences
  • the measure is set horizontally on generators
    (upstream) or on retailers (downstream)
  • for each of the above cases the measure further
    affect only one agent (asymmetric) or on all
    agents (symmetric)
  • the measure can be vertical when it links one
    generator to a retailer or all generators to all
    retailers

11
An example asymmetric upstream measure
12
Comments on reaction functions
  • The sensitivity of either firm i and j in terms
    of private contracts increases compared to the
    case of no measure
  • the larger the share of public contract the
    flatter the reaction functions but an adverse
    quantitative effect of M shifts inwards both
    reaction functions
  • The overall impact is stronger on firm i since
    the measure is asymmetric
  • firm i is more aggressive in the contract market,
    relying on a given source of revenue,
  • but is adversely affected by a larger
    crowding-out effect

13
Optimal Policy
  • For each scenario, but the vertical one, we can
    target the optimal measure that solves the
    inefficient contracting and retrieve a
    competitive outcome
  • The optimal measure maximizes consumer surplus
    subject to generators break-even constraint
  • a symmetric upstream measure crowds out both
    generators private contracting, while imposed
    asymmetrically it enhances only bilateral trade
    for those who are not mandate to contract
  • downstream measures preserve forward exchanges
    for all generators, but only if structural
    conditions are satisfied
  • Marginal cost pricing in the spot market allows
    to compute the amount of total (private and
    mandatory) contracts and to rank Nash solutions

14
Ranking of Nash solutions
15
Ranking of Nash solutions graphic
16
Ranking of Nash solutions
  • Results
  • firms private contracting the upstream
    asymmetric measure grants the highest level
  • total private contracting downstream measures
    induce all generators to engage in more bilateral
    contracting compared to the upstream regulation
  • mandatory contracting the largest share of
    mandatory long-term agreements corresponds to the
    asymmetric upstream case in which there is the
    strongest crowding out effect
  • private versus mandatory contracting downstream
    measures do not eliminate the crowding-out effect
    thus mandatory contracting is larger than the
    private one upstream asymmetric measure
    reintroduces a pervasive regulation on one
    generator

17
Conclusions and Policy Implications
  • Mandatory contracts imposed vertically do not
    solve the inefficient contracting problem
  • the impact of the measure is perfectly
    anticipated by agents firms substitute away
    private contracting to exactly compensate the
    level of the mandatory ones
  • Greens total amount of contracting is retrieved
  • As for the others contractual regimes, the
    balance between pro-competitive and crowding-out
    effects has to be accounted for
  • optimal upstream symmetric measure is not
    compatible with a private trade
  • optimal upstream asymmetric measure comes at the
    cost of totally regulating one generator
  • optimal downstream measures smooth risk-aversion
    but limits the size of private trade with respect
    to mandatory contracts.
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