An ex-post analysis of the effect of renewables and cogeneration on Spanish electricity prices

Growing concerns about climate change and energy dependence are driving specific policies to support renewable or more efficient energy sources such as cogeneration in many regions, particularly in the production of electricity. These policies have a non-negligible cost, and therefore a careful assessment of their impacts seems necessary. In particular, one of the most-debated impacts is their effect on electricity prices, for which there have been some ex-ante studies, but few ex-post studies. This article presents a full ex-post empirical analysis, by looking at use of technologies and hourly electricity prices for 2005–2009 in Spain, to study the effects that the introduction of renewable electricity and cogeneration has had on wholesale electricity prices. It is particularly interesting to perform this study in Spain where an active system of public support to renewables and cogeneration has led to a considerable expansion of these energy sources and electricity pricing is at the center of intense debate. The paper reports that a marginal increase of 1GWh of electricity production using renewables and cogeneration is associated with a reduction of almost 2€ per MWh in electricity prices (around 4% of the average price for the analyzed period).

[1]  Jeffrey M. Wooldridge,et al.  Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach , 1999 .

[2]  Eirik S. Amundsen,et al.  The danish Green certificate system: some simple analytical results , 2000 .

[3]  Carolyn Fischer How Can Renewable Portfolio Standards Lower Electricity Prices , 2006 .

[4]  M. Genoese,et al.  The merit-order effect: A detailed analysis of the price effect of renewable electricity generation on spot market prices in Germany , 2008 .

[5]  James G. MacKinnon,et al.  Numerical Distribution Functions for Unit Root and Cointegration Tests , 1996 .

[6]  W. Newey,et al.  A Simple, Positive Semi-Definite, Heteroskedasticity and Autocorrelationconsistent Covariance Matrix , 1986 .

[7]  David F. Hendry,et al.  Co-Integration, Error Correction, and the Econometric Analysis of Non-Stationary Data , 1993, Advanced texts in econometrics.

[8]  Pablo del Río González,et al.  Analysing the impact of renewable electricity support schemes on power prices: The case of wind electricity in Spain , 2008 .

[9]  Ignacio J. Pérez-Arriaga,et al.  Scenarios for the evolution of the Spanish electricity sector: Is it on the right path towards sustainability? , 2008 .

[10]  Un análisis cuantitativo de la convergencia entre el gas y la electricidad , 2007 .

[11]  H. Madsen,et al.  On the market impact of wind energy forecasts , 2010 .

[12]  M. Rathmann,et al.  Do support systems for RES-E reduce EU-ETS-driven electricity prices? , 2007 .

[13]  M. Ventosa,et al.  Coordination of carbon reduction and renewable energy support policies , 2008 .

[14]  W. Fuller,et al.  Distribution of the Estimators for Autoregressive Time Series with a Unit Root , 1979 .

[15]  Stine Grenaa Jensen,et al.  Interactions between the power and green certificate markets , 2002 .

[16]  J. Durbin,et al.  Testing for serial correlation in least squares regression. II. , 1950, Biometrika.

[17]  James Durbin,et al.  Testing for Serial Correlation in Least-Squares Regression When Some of the Regressors are Lagged Dependent Variables , 1970 .