Are Fundamentals Enough? Explaining Price Variations in the German Day-Ahead and Intraday Power Market
European electricity market participants are encouraged to balance intraday deviations from their day-ahead schedules via trades in the intraday market. Together with the increasing production of variable renewable energy sources, the intraday market is gaining importance. We investigate the explanatory power of a fundamental modeling approach explicitly accounting for must-run operations of combined heat and power plants (CHP) and intraday peculiarities such as a shortened intraday supply stack. The fundamental equilibria between every hour’s supply stack and aggregated demand in 2012 and 2013 are modeled to yield hourly price estimates. The major benefits of a fundamental modeling approach are the ability to account for non-linearities in the supply stack and the ability to combine time-varying information consistently. The empirical results show that fundamental modeling explains a considerable share of spot price variance. How-ever, differences between the fundamental and actual prices persist and are explored using regression models. The main differences can be attributed to (avoided) start up-costs, market states and trading behavior.
Year of publication: |
2015-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Pape, Christian ; Weber, Christoph |
Institutions: | Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Universität Duisburg-Essen |
Subject: | Intraday market for electricity | fundamental price modeling |
Saved in: