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CREE Site Visit Oslo , September 19, 2013

CREE Site Visit Oslo , September 19, 2013. Who Should Pay for Transmission? Nils-Henrik M. von der Fehr. Background. Large investment in European transmission networks in coming years expansion of renewables system security and reliability interconnecting different countries and regions

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CREE Site Visit Oslo , September 19, 2013

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  1. CREE Site VisitOslo, September 19, 2013 Who Should Pay for Transmission? Nils-Henrik M. von der Fehr

  2. Background • Large investment in European transmission networks in coming years • expansion of renewables • system security and reliability • interconnecting different countries and regions • But, who should pay? • network users vs. tax payers • users in different countries • households vs. industry • electricity consumers vs. electricity producers von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  3. Norwegian Central Grid Tariffs Source: Statnett, 2010 von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  4. Optimal Tariffs • Raising sufficient revenues, taking account of how tariffs affect use of network • Twoissues • price signals for efficient use of existing capacity • additional tariffs to ensure sufficient revenue • Goal: maximise economic value added • consistent with current regulation • fairness not an issue! von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  5. Efficient Use of Existing Capacity von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  6. Ensuring Sufficient Revenue • Tariffs for efficient use of existing capacity are insufficient to cover all network costs • Cost coverage requires higher tariffs or new tariff elements • Challenge: to do this with minimum distortion to network use • Principles • tariff base as broad as possible • higher rates on inflexible (inelastic) usage von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  7. Consumption versus Production • Network tariffs typically levied on both electricity consumers and electricity producers (generators) • What is the optimal distribution? • efficient price signals • raising revenues efficiently • Tariffs on producers will (partly or fully) be passed through to electricity prices • higher costs means higher prices von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  8. Tariff Incidence von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  9. Nominal versus Actual Payments • The tariff incidence analysis is independent of on which side of the market the tariff is levied • implies that it is immaterial where tariff is levied • who pays depends on demand and supply conditions • Result modified with interconnection and trade • incomplete pass-through • But, different tariffs in different countries distort competition and leads to productive inefficiency • cf. harmonisation of tariffs in Europe von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  10. Efficient Electricity Generation • Indirect taxation leads to inefficiency • distortions between different types of production • Example • generator with fixed unit capital costs f, variable unit costs v and operation time T, and tariff t • average unit costs: • with tariff on capacity: • with tariff on energy: • So, efficiency arguments for covering costs with tariffs on consumers, rather than on generators von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

  11. Conclusion • Network tariffs affect network utilisation • Should be taken into account if goal is economic efficiency • Tariffs should be set so as to optimise network utilisation, taking account of the need to raise sufficient revenue • Efficiency arguments for raising revenues from consumers, rather than generators von der Fehr: Who Should Pay for Transmission?

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