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Cover image for Electricity market reform : an international perspective
Title:
Electricity market reform : an international perspective
Series:
Elsevier global energy policy and economics series
Publication Information:
Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2006
ISBN:
9780080450308

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30000010159392 HD9685.A2 E434 2006 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Since the late 1980s, policy makers and regulators in a number of countries have liberalized, restructured or "deregulated" their electric power sector, typically by introducing competition at the generation and retail level. These experiments have resulted in vastly different outcomes - some highly encouraging, others utterly disastrous. However, many countries continue along the same path for a variety of reasons.

Electricity Market Reform examines the most important competitive electricity markets around the world and provides definitive answers as to why some markets have performed admirably, while others have utterly failed, often with dire financial and cost consequences.

The lessons contained within are direct relevance to regulators, policy makers, the investment community, industry, academics and graduate students of electricity markets worldwide.


Author Notes

Dr. Fereidoon Sioshansi is President of Menlo Energy Economics, a consulting firm based in San Francisco with over 35 years of experience in the electric power sectore working in analysis of energy markets, specializing in the policy, regulatory, technical and environmental aspects of the electric power sector in the US and internationally. His research and professional interests are concentrated in demand and price forecasting, electricity market design, competitive pricing & bidding, integrated resource planning, energy conservation and energy efficiency, economics of global climate change, sustainability, energy security, renewable energy technologies, and comparative performance of competitive electricity markets. Dr. Sioshansi advises major utility clients and government policy makers domestically and internationally on electricity market reform, restructuring and privatization of the electric power sector. He has published numerous reports, books, book chapters and papers in peer-reviewed journals on a wide range of subjects. His professional background includes working at Southern California Edison Co. (SCE), Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), NERA, and Global Energy Decisions. He is the editor and publisher of EEnergy Informer, a monthly newsletter with international circulation. He is on the Editorial Advisory Board of The Electricity Journal where he is regularly featured in the "Electricity Currents" section. Dr. Sioshansi also serves on the editorial board of Utilities Policy and is a frequent contributor to Energy Policy. Since 2006, He has edited nine books on related topics with Elsevier.


Table of Contents

Stephen LittlechildPaul L. JoskowFereidoon P. Sioshansi and Wolfgang PfaffenbergerGunter KniepsRicardo RaineriDavid NewberyEirik S. Amundsen and Lars Bergman and Nils-Henrik M. von der FehrAlan MoranGeoff BertramGert Brunekreeft and Dierk BauknechtReinhard Haas and Jean-Michel Glachant and Nenad Keseric and Yannick PerezJames L. SweeneyParviz Adib and Jay ZarnikauMichael J. Trebilcock and Roy HrabJoseph BowringRichard O'Neill and Udi Helman and Benjamin F. Hobbs and Ross BaldickTaff TschamlerJoao Lizardo R. Hermes de AraujoIsaac Dyner and Santiago Arango and Erik R. LarsenMika Goto and Masayuki Yajima
Contributorsp. vii
Foreword: The Market Versus Regulationp. xvii
Introduction to Electricity Sector Liberalization: Lessons Learned from Cross-Country Studiesp. 1
Part I What's Wrong With the Status Quo?p. 33
1 Why Restructure Electricity Markets?p. 35
2 Sector-Specific Market Power Regulation versus General Competition Law: Criteria for Judging Competitive versus Regulated Marketsp. 49
Part II Trailblazersp. 75
3 Chile: Where It All Startedp. 77
4 Electricity Liberalization in Britain And The Evolution of Market Designp. 109
5 The Nordic Electricity Market: Robust By Design?p. 145
Part III Evolving marketsp. 171
6 The Electricity Industry in Australia: Problems Along the Way to a National Electricity Marketp. 173
7 Restructuring the New Zealand Electricity Sector 1984-2005p. 203
8 Energy Policy and Investment in the German Power Marketp. 235
9 Competition in the Continental European Electricity Market: Despair or Work in Progress?p. 265
Part IV North America, New world, New Challengesp. 317
10 California Electricity Restructuring, The Crisis, and Its Aftermathp. 319
11 Texas: The Most Robust Competitive Market in North Americap. 383
12 Electricity Restructuring in Canadap. 419
13 The PJM Marketp. 451
14 Independent System Operators in The USA: History, Lessons Learned, and Prospectsp. 479
15 Competitive Retail Power Markets and Default Service: The US Experiencep. 529
Part V Other Marketsp. 563
16 The Case of Brazil: Reform By Trial And Error?p. 565
17 Understanding The Argentinean and Colombian Electricity Marketsp. 595
18 A New Stage of Electricity Liberalization in Japan: Issues and Expectationsp. 617
Indexp. 645
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