TY - RPRT AU - Craig Glazer AU - Jay Morrison AU - Paul Breakman AU - Allison Clements AU - National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates AU - Lisa C Schwartz AB -
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory hosted a webinar on March 24, 2017, titled "The Future of Centrally-Organized Wholesale Electricity Markets." To view a video of the recording, click here.
Despite enormous complexity, diversity and challenges, bulk power markets in the United States are functioning reasonably well. However, some aspects of their design — particularly, the long-term functioning of wholesale markets administered by regional transmission operators and independent system operators — remain a work in progress and in some cases are subject to an ongoing debate.
Four questions in particular lack consensus and are the subject of this report:
These questions are debated in the report by authors representing a market operator (PJM), utilities (National Rural Electric Cooperative Association), environmental interests (Natural Resources Defense Council) and consumers (National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates).
BT - Future Electric Utility Regulation Report Series C1 -FEUR Report No. 7 authored by: Craig Glazer (PJM), Jay Morrison and Paul Breakman (National Rural Electric Cooperative Association), Allison Clements (Natural Resources Defense Council), National Association of State Utility Advocates. Click the publication title above to see all documents related to this publication and for a link to the related webinar.
C2 - LBNL-1007226 DA - 03/2017 N1 -This report was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability – Electricity Policy Technical Assistance Program and the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy – Solar Energy Technologies Office under Task 1.4.29 – Future Electric Utility Regulation of DOE’s Grid Modernization Initiative. Lisa Schwartz, with Berkeley Lab's Electricity Markets and Policy Group, is the project manager and technical editor.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory hosted a webinar on March 24, 2017, titled "The Future of Centrally-Organized Wholesale Electricity Markets." To view a video of the recording, click here.
Despite enormous complexity, diversity and challenges, bulk power markets in the United States are functioning reasonably well. However, some aspects of their design — particularly, the long-term functioning of wholesale markets administered by regional transmission operators and independent system operators — remain a work in progress and in some cases are subject to an ongoing debate.
Four questions in particular lack consensus and are the subject of this report:
These questions are debated in the report by authors representing a market operator (PJM), utilities (National Rural Electric Cooperative Association), environmental interests (Natural Resources Defense Council) and consumers (National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates).
PY - 2017 T2 - Future Electric Utility Regulation Report Series TI - The Future of Centrally-Organized Wholesale Electricity Markets VL - FEUR Report No. 7 ER -