European University Institute DSpace
 

Database of EUI publications >
Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS) >
RSCAS Working Papers >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/12815

Title: Regional Initiative: Which Appropriate Market Design?
Authors: MOEN, Jan
Keywords: market design
electricity
European Union
Regional Initiatives
Issue Date: 2009
Series/Report no.: EUI RSCAS
2009/60
Florence School of Regulation
Abstract: The European Union has a long experience and many success stories when it comes both to build a borderless Europe and to ensure that benefits are fairly distributed among producers and end-use customers. In some sectors results and benefits arise quickly, but sometimes borders remain difficult to cross despite numerous initiatives. A typical example of this is the completion of the single market for electricity. The process has been ongoing since the early 1990s and major progress has been made. However, we are still far from a borderless and truly competitive electricity market across Europe. A new legislative framework, the Third Package, will enter into force shortly and yield strong expectations. However, growing concerns become apparent among policy makers and in the market place on its ability to effectively foster the completion of the internal market and tackle market power issues. This paper argues that the approach adopted in the Third Package is not adapted to the challenges the European Union faces in electricity. The current lack of focus on implementing a better market design architecture leads the EU regulatory framework to overlooks important issues such as the promotion of power exchanges. The paper reviews the current state of the art on ‘smart’ market design in the economic literature and confronts it with the concrete experiences pursued at the regional level, in the European Union and beyond. Some of the issues discussed in depth include the TSOs’ roles and institutional design, generation adequacy and the design of capacity mechanisms and the development of demand-side response programs. It shows that the EU should learn from some of the on-going initiatives pursued at the domestic and regional level and that a sound market design based on a pool/TSO central dispatch is probably the way forward.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/12815
ISSN: 1028-3625
Appears in Collections:RSCAS Working Papers

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
RSCAS_2009_60.pdf206.15 kBAdobe PDFView/Open

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

Valid XHTML 1.0! DSpace Software Copyright © 2002-2007 MIT and Hewlett-Packard - Feedback