Summer School
‘Economics of Electricity Markets’
August 25-29, 2014

In August 2014, the Centre for Environmental Economics and Environmental Management (CEEM/ Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, http://www.ceem.ugent.be/en/index.htm) of Ghent University will organize its second international summer school on the economics of electricity markets. During this one-week summer school (August 25-29, 2014), national and international experts will elaborate the institutional frameworks, business landscape, market and investment models and long-term economic dynamics of electricity markets.

The unique feature of this summer school is the combination of academic analysis and presentations by insiders from various electricity sectors (generation, transmission, retailing, regulatory affairs). All participants of last year’s edition highly appreciated this approach.

The focus of the summer school is on European electricity markets. An overview of the relevant European legislation is presented, followed by an assessment of the long-term consequences of the European projects related to energy systems and electricity markets in particular (i.e. market liberalization, 20/20/20, ETS, long-term decarbonization targets...).

Electricity markets are not typical commodity markets but have very specific technical and regulatory characteristics. As supply should always equal demand, the electricity supply side needs to be managed and approached from a collective action perspective. To explore this technological imperative, a basic overview on the technologies to generate and distribute and transport electricity is presented, followed by a discussion on electricity system requirements such as adequate balancing and the availability of back-up assets. In this overview, (intermittent) renewable electricity generation technologies are central.

The technological overview is complemented by an economic analysis of generation and investment costs for all the considered technologies. The basic tools of economic methodology are presented and used in the context of changing electricity markets (LCOE, option valuation, cost/benefit and investment analysis).

European electricity markets evolved from rigid national monopolistic markets into regionally connected markets with multiple players and a growing variety of electricity products. Electricity is today traded under various contracts (day-ahead, intraday,…) and new markets are expected in due course (e.g. a European market in balancing capacity). During the summer school, the electricity market architecture is assessed.

The functioning of European electricity markets is not only determined by technologies, generation costs or international trading in electricity products. Multiple policy goals strongly interact with electricity markets. The European Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) attaches a price on every ton of CO2 emitted and the electricity sector is among the most important ETS-sectors. Member States have national targets for the reduction of CO2-emissions (in ETS and in non-ETS sectors), for the share of renewable technologies in the energy mix and for achieving energy-efficiency savings in all economic sectors. To realize these targets, Member States established policy schemes such as production subsidies for renewable electricity generation (Feed-in Tariffs, Green Certificates,…), investment subsidies, fiscal subsidies for efficiency investments, labeling instruments and product regulation. All these existing policy schemes somehow interact with the functioning of electricity markets. Some of these interactions can support the realization of European policy goals while other interactions risk being counterproductive. The possible interactions between markets, technologies and policy targets is analyzed from various perspectives. The possible impact of the new climate and energy policy goals by 2030 of the European Commission (Jan.2014) will be discussed during the summer school.

Finally, the current evolutions on European electricity markets should in principle prepare and support the transition of our energy system into an efficient and sustainable low-carbon economy by 2050. To illustrate the nature of this challenge, the main energy transition scenarios – such as Energy Transition Perspectives 2012 of the International Energy Agency (IEA) – is discussed during the summer school. In this (part of the) course, the focus is on the role of the electricity sector in the energy transition.

The goal of the summer school is to provide the building blocks needed to assess the dynamics of European electricity markets. Students will be confronted with multiple perspectives. The public policy perspective will be complemented by the perspective of electricity companies, electricity traders, households and electricity-intensive industries.


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"Summer School Economics of Electricity Markets"

August 25-29, 2014

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