1 / 15

NAESB OASIS Subcommittee Long Term Competition

NAESB OASIS Subcommittee Long Term Competition. Mike Norris, Rebecca Berdahl May 13, 2014. Recap from April OS Meeting. Two LT Competition Options Presented ‘ Strawman ’ BPA’s current implementation Fundamental difference between the two options is what triggers the competition

anise
Download Presentation

NAESB OASIS Subcommittee Long Term Competition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NAESB OASIS SubcommitteeLong Term Competition Mike Norris, Rebecca Berdahl May 13, 2014

  2. Recap from April OS Meeting • Two LT Competition Options Presented • ‘Strawman’ • BPA’s current implementation • Fundamental difference between the two options is what triggers the competition • ‘Strawman’ – a new request is submitted • BPA’s – a Renewal request is submitted

  3. Recap from April OS Meeting (cont’d) • Depending on which option is chosen, additional differences result such as: • Competition Time Horizon • ‘Strawman’ – competition time horizon could be years • BPA’s – competition time horizon never more than several weeks • Competition Inventory Management • ‘Strawman’ – new type of persistent inventory created that must be actively managed (e.g., ‘Unexercised Renewal Rights) over the long term • BPA’s approach – ‘Unexercised Renewal Rights’ inventory is attached to a specific Renewal TSR and is limited to the amount in that Renewal TSR

  4. Overview – Questions to be Answered • Illustration - State Diagram (‘Strawman’ Rule Set) • Three Confirmed Reservations • Two Contingent Reservations • Describe areas of LT C complexities • TSR Assessment • Relationship Management and Types • Competition Rule Set • Inventory Management

  5. “Strawman” State Diagram

  6. “Strawman” State Diagram Assumptions • All capacity buckets are sold out except for Unexercised Renewal Rights Bucket (reality the offer would be filled 0-100% from that bucket) • Contingent offers were made and accepted resulting in CONFIRMED reservations

  7. Relationships between Reservations with Renewal Right and Contingent Reservations • There are many possible relationships that could be established between reservations with unexercised renewal rights and contingent reservations: • One to One: a specific contingent reservation is linked to a specific reservation • One to Many • Many to One • Many to Many • For each of the relationships listed above there are a set list of questions/issues that must be worked through • TSR Assessment (Pending Requests) • Relationship Management (CONFIRMED Contingent Reservations) • Competition Mechanics • Inventory Management (Unexercised Renewal Rights Bucket)

  8. One to One: TSR Assessment • New bucket of inventory is now available to satisfy requests (Unexercised Renewal Rights) • Current assessment process would remain the same there would simply be a new offer type available (Contingent Service Agreement) • Probable outcomes • Many requests would be satisfied via the Contingent Service Agreement offer type • Queue would shrink

  9. One to One: Relationship Management • For each Contingent Reservation, the TP must track the Reservations with unexercised renewal rights it is contingent on. • Given that it could be years before a Contingent Reservation may have an opportunity to challenge, the tracking solution will need to be robust.

  10. One to One: Competition Mechanics • How many Challengers (e.g., Contingent Reservations) must a Defender be required to ‘defend’ against? • One • Many • How many eligible challengers get to challenge the defender? • One • Many

  11. One to One: Inventory Management • Where does the released capacity not used by Contingent Reservation go? • Back to market? • Back to Unexercised Renewal Rights Capacity Bucket? • How to reconcile the Inventory Bucket (mW) with the Tariff language (Duration)?

  12. Competition Mechanics: Many to One • Tariff language uses duration as the single criteria used in LT C to determine who gets the capacity. • If there are many Challengers (e.g., Contingent Reservations) what criteria should be used for competition • Individually by queue time (Many Challengers to one Defender, TP runs several iterations) • Batch the Challengers to determine a ‘winner’. (One Challenger to one Defender, TP runs one competition)

  13. Other Complexities • Deferrals • Redirects • Resales • Timing, Inventory Management, etc… associated with the above

  14. Proposal • Strong preference for creating a new project to do Long Term Competition NAESB standards development work • A case can be made for creating a new project: • Complexities • Examples noted in previous slides • LT C project implementation timeline is longer than what is available in the current C&P project • Additional complexities associated with the current ‘Strawman’ • BPA’s Point/Counterpoint

  15. Proposal (cont’d) Proposed Motion Language Exclude the development of Long Term Competition standards and implementation from the current NAESB OS Competition and Preemption project. Create a new project, ‘Long Term Competition’, to complete this body of work.

More Related