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LOCATION:Elinor-Ostrom-Saal,DIW Berlin,1.2.019,Anton-Wilhelm-Amo-Straße 58,10117 Berlin
SUMMARY:Electricity Market Design
DESCRIPTION:1st day 9:00 to 13:30h2nd day 9:00 to 15:00h // The course in a tweet. This is an advanced course on electricity markets: forward, spot, balancing and retail. It is a course at the intersection of energy, economics and finance that focuses on public policy and regulation: how should power markets be designed with security of supply and social welfare in mind?  The significance of electricity markets & trading. Electricity markets and the prices that emerge from trading on these markets drive the energy transition. It is traders, rather than power plant engineers, who decide which power station is dispatched. It is the prices that provide the incentives for investment and innovation and that they drive out (or not) polluting generators. It is the market that will ultimately determine if new energy technologies thrive or dive. But robust electricity market design is not only foundational for the energy transition, it is also foundational for energy poverty and for security of supply: in other industries, perverse incentives cause waste of resources, in electricity markets they can cause large-scale blackouts. Electricity market design is complicated, but too important to be left poorly understood.  Topics. After reviewing economic models of price setting in electricity markets (Merit Order Model and Screening Curve Model) and price drivers (fuel and carbon markets, weather), we will study short-term electricity markets that drive plant dispatch: spot markets, imbalance settlement and balancing reserve auctions. A long-time trader will share his first-time experience as a guest speaker. In the second half of the course, we will study the long-term investment incentives: financial markets and capacity mechanism. We will also discuss alternative ways to give electricity markets spatial granularity (zonal pricing, nodal pricing) and study retail markets. While this course is centered around European markets, in the last session we will contrast this to US market design.  Learning objectives. This course trains students in liberalized electricity markets, in particular in Europe. More specifically, it has a dual objective. First, it equips students with the knowledge to design robust and efficient electricity markets. Second, it trains students in trading on electricity systems (sometimes by exploiting weaknesses in market design).  
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240121T220000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240123T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20230511T220000Z
URL:https://www.diw.de/en/diw_01.c.885005.en/events/electricity_market_design.html
ORGANIZER;CN=Daniela Centemero:mailto:dcentemero@diw.de
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