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Modeling investment decisions from heterogeneous firms under imperfect information and risk in wholesale electricity markets

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  • Anwar, Muhammad Bashar
  • Stephen, Gord
  • Dalvi, Sourabh
  • Frew, Bethany
  • Ericson, Sean
  • Brown, Maxwell
  • O’Malley, Mark

Abstract

Investment decisions in the electricity sector are complex and depend on wholesale market and policy structures, attributes of investor firms that impact risk and financing, and the location-specific economics of investment options. This paper introduces the Electricity Markets and Investment Suite - Agent-Based Simulation (EMIS-AS), which models the evolution of the electricity generation mix under various market structures while explicitly capturing the aforementioned investment factors and imperfect information. EMIS-AS advances the state-of-the-art of generation expansion planning and agent-based modeling by incorporating various aspects of investor heterogeneity (e.g., differences in financial characteristics, technology preferences, and attitudes towards risk under uncertainty), a robust price prediction methodology, a methodology for updating investors’ forecast parameters using Kalman Filters, and endogenous representation of a customizable set of wholesale electricity markets including energy, ancillary services, capacity, and renewable energy certificate markets. Implementation of EMIS-AS on a test system highlights the strong role that firms’ heterogeneous attributes have on the investment decisions, generation portfolio, and resulting resource adequacy. In multiple instances, investment and retirement results diverge not only due to each firm’s own parameters, but also due to the actions and characteristics of other firms. Results also demonstrate how imperfect information and risk preferences can lead to suboptimal investment outcomes, which can require firm-level recourse actions with severe profitability implications. In addition, a comparison with a traditional generation expansion planning model highlights the ability of EMIS-AS to capture resource scarcity and early retirements caused by real-world imperfections that traditional models cannot represent.

Suggested Citation

  • Anwar, Muhammad Bashar & Stephen, Gord & Dalvi, Sourabh & Frew, Bethany & Ericson, Sean & Brown, Maxwell & O’Malley, Mark, 2022. "Modeling investment decisions from heterogeneous firms under imperfect information and risk in wholesale electricity markets," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 306(PA).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:appene:v:306:y:2022:i:pa:s0306261921012198
    DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.117908
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    Cited by:

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    3. Chang, Xin & Wu, Zhaoyuan & Wang, Jingting & Zhang, Xingyu & Zhou, Ming & Yu, Tao & Wang, Yuyang, 2023. "The coupling effect of carbon emission trading and tradable green certificates under electricity marketization in China," Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Elsevier, vol. 187(C).
    4. Sheybanivaziri, Samaneh & Le Dréau, Jérôme & Kazmi, Hussain, 2024. "Forecasting price spikes in day-ahead electricity markets: techniques, challenges, and the road ahead," Discussion Papers 2024/1, Norwegian School of Economics, Department of Business and Management Science.
    5. Lebeau, Alexis & Petitet, Marie & Quemin, Simon & Saguan, Marcelo, 2024. "Long-term issues with the Energy-Only Market design in the context of deep decarbonization," Energy Economics, Elsevier, vol. 132(C).
    6. Fraunholz, Christoph & Miskiw, Kim K. & Kraft, Emil & Fichtner, Wolf & Weber, Christoph, 2021. "On the role of risk aversion and market design in capacity expansion planning," Working Paper Series in Production and Energy 62, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute for Industrial Production (IIP).
    7. Tan, Jinjing & Pan, Weiqi & Li, Yang & Hu, Haoming & Zhang, Can, 2023. "Energy-sharing operation strategy of multi-district integrated energy systems considering carbon and renewable energy certificate trading," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 339(C).
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    9. Frew, Bethany & Bashar Anwar, Muhammad & Dalvi, Sourabh & Brooks, Adria, 2023. "The interaction of wholesale electricity market structures under futures with decarbonization policy goals: A complexity conundrum," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 339(C).

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