Date: 2009
Type: Working Paper
Long term issues to be addressed by regulators in liberalised electricity systems: generation adequacy and indicative planning. Justification, available mechanisms, and a simulation study on some concrete policies
Working Paper, EUI RSCAS, 2009/67, Loyola de Palacio Programme on Energy Policy
LÓPEZ-PEÑA, Álvaro, CENTENO, Efraim, BARQUÍN, Julián, Long term issues to be addressed by regulators in liberalised electricity systems: generation adequacy and indicative planning. Justification, available mechanisms, and a simulation study on some concrete policies, EUI RSCAS, 2009/67, Loyola de Palacio Programme on Energy Policy - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/13017
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
For ensuring electricity security of supply in the long run, liberalised electric systems’ regulators have
to worry, not only about the presence of enough installed capacity, but also about the generation mix.
Hence, indicative planning must be taken into account as well, for limiting dependence upon nonindigenous
fuels, for instance. This can, simultaneously, help in meeting growing environmental
constraints: renewables promotion is a clear example. There exist several mechanisms for addressing
the adequacy problem (having enough megawatts) and for promoting renewables (having the good
megawatts).
In this study, a brief review of these mechanisms is done, and some are chosen for assessing their
efficacy and efficiency over a system similar to the Spanish one, concretely capacity payments and
capacity markets for the first problem and renewable energy premiums for the second. A simulation
study is performed, which confirms the better characteristics of capacity markets in stabilising reserve
margins, but whose effects may be damaged by an inadequate renewables promotion policy.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/13017
ISSN: 1028-3625
Series/Number: EUI RSCAS; 2009/67; Loyola de Palacio Programme on Energy Policy