Rethinking the Role of Financial Transmission Rights in Wind-Rich Electricity Markets in the Central U.S.

Date Published
01/2023
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
https://doi.org/10.5547/01956574.44.6.jkim
Abstract

Transmission congestion can cause a divergence between wholesale power prices at the individual pricing nodes where power is generated and the more-liquid trading hubs where that power is often delivered and sold. This nodal price difference is commonly referred to as the “locational basis” (or just “basis”). Because the basis varies over time, it can—if not hedged—unpredictably affect a wind plant’s revenue and/or value, which increases investor risk and potentially slows deployment. We find wind plants typically face a larger and more-negative basis than do thermal generators, and hence are more-negatively impacted by congestion. Moreover, while most thermal generators can effectively hedge basis risk by purchasing conventional fixed-volume financial transmission rights (FTRs), these fixed-volume FTRs do not effectively hedge basis risk for variable wind generation. More-effective hedging mechanisms may be required to support those generators most-impacted by congestion, and to promote continued investment in variable generation resources in congested markets.

Notes

An open-access version of this article published in The Energy Journal can be downloaded here. A brief overview of this research can be read here

A webinar recorded on February 7, 2023, discussing this research can be viewed here

Journal
The Energy Journal
Volume
44
Year of Publication
2023
Issue
6
URL
Organizations
Research Areas
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