Available:*
Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | 30000010321401 | HD9685.U5 G74 2012 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
On Order
Summary
Summary
Packed with case studies and practical real-world examples, Electricity Marginal Cost Pricing Principles allows regulators, engineers and energy economists to choose the pricing model that best fits their individual market. Written by an author with 13 years of practical experience, the book begins with a clear and rigorous explanation of the theory of efficient pricing and how it impacts investor-owned, publicly-owned, and cooperatively-owned utilities using tried and true methods such as multiple-output, functional form, and multiproduct cost models. The author then moves on to include self-contained chapters on applying estimating cost models, including a cubic cost specification and policy implications while supplying actual data and examples to allow regulators, energy economists, and engineers to get a feel for the methods with which efficient prices are derived in today's challenging electricity market.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction |
2 The Theory of Natural Monopoly |
3 Regulation and Policies pertaining to the Electric Utility Industry |
4 Economics and Econometrics of Cost Models |
5 Estimating Cost Models |
6 Case Study: Cubic Cost Model to Estimate the Marginal Cost of Providing Electricity to End Users |
7 Case Study: Cost Models to Illustrate Price and Substitution Elasticities Using KLEM Data |
8 The Theory of Efficient Pricing |
9 The Price and Substitution Elasticities of Demand Models |
10 Case Study: Real-Time Pricing of Electricity |