The EU power sector needs long-term price signals. CEPS Special Report No. 135/April 2016
Data(s) |
01/04/2016
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Resumo |
By 2030, half of the EU’s electricity demand will be covered by renewables and will need to be accompanied by flexible conventional back-up resources. Due to the high upfront costs inherent to renewables and the progressively lower running times associated with back-up capacity, the cost of capital will have a proportionately greater impact on total costs than today. This report examines how electricity markets can be designed to provide long-term price signals, thereby reducing the cost of capital for these technologies and allowing for a more efficient transition. It finds that current market arrangements are unable to provide long-term price signals. To address this issue, we argue that a system for long-term contracts with a regulated counterparty could be implemented. A centralised system where capacity or energy or a combination of both is contracted, could be introduced for conventional and renewable capacity, based on a regional adequacy assessment and with a competitive bidding system in place to ensure cost-effectiveness. Member states face a number of legislative barriers while implementing these types of systems, however, which could be reduced by merging legislation and setting EU framework rules for the design of these contractual agreements. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://aei.pitt.edu/75464/1/SR135_LongTermPriceSignals_0.pdf Genoese, Fabio and Drabik, Eleanor and Egenhofer, Christian (2016) The EU power sector needs long-term price signals. CEPS Special Report No. 135/April 2016. UNSPECIFIED. |
Relação |
https://www.ceps.eu/publications/eu-power-sector-needs-long-term-price-signals http://aei.pitt.edu/75464/ |
Palavras-Chave | #energy policy (Including international arena) |
Tipo |
Other NonPeerReviewed |