What Could Possibly Be Better than Real-Time Pricing? Demand Response
✍ Scribed by Fereidoon Sioshansi; Ali Vojdani
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 453 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1040-6190
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
What Could Possibly Be Better than Real-Time Pricing? Demand Response
For decades, technical people in the industry have been talking about the virtues of bringing the demand side into play. Concepts such as interruptible loads, time-of-use pricing, and real-time pricing are not new, but have had limited application in the past. There are compelling reasons to employ them now.
Fereidoon Sioshansi and Ali Vojdani
veryone has heard about the recent episodes of extremely high prices in California's wholesale market. What may not be equally well known is that a number of aluminum smelters in the Pacific Northwest have been making good money by taking advantage of high electricity prices and shutting down their operationsre-selling their allotment of cheap power from Bonneville Power Administration on the wholesale market. This is perfectly logical. It makes no economic sense for aluminum smelters in Washington to con-tinue to use very expensive electricity to produce low-cost aluminum when customers in Silicon Valley are willing to pay many times more for the same juice. The electrons, like everything else, should-and do, if given the chance-flow to the highest bidder.
In the case of aluminum smelters, the choice was obvious and the transactions relatively easy. This is not the case for smaller, less sophisticated customers; however, the principle still applies. The missing link is an intermediary who could aggregate and facil-
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES