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The German Power Market – Recent Developments. Lorena Vinueza Stefan Trück. Department of Statistics and Econometrics University of Karlsruhe, Germany stefan@lsoe.uni-karlsruhe.de lorena.vinueza@lsoe.uni-karlsruhe.de. Contents. Historical overview Ownership and Market structure
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The German Power Market – Recent Developments Lorena Vinueza Stefan Trück Department of Statistics and Econometrics University of Karlsruhe, Germany stefan@lsoe.uni-karlsruhe.de lorena.vinueza@lsoe.uni-karlsruhe.de
Contents • Historical overview • Ownership and Market structure • Power Trading in Germany • The Leipzig Power Exchange – a case study • Outlook
Historical Overview (I) 1935 “Energiewirtschaftgesetz” State monopoly 1996 The EU-directive guidelines Liberalization of the power markets in Europe 1998 The German Energy Sector law: opened the German power market to competition
Historical overview (II) 1998 Verbändevereinbarung I (VV1) Agreement regarding access to and use of the power network 1999 Verbändevereinbarung II (VV2) New competitors CEPI Index
Historical Overview 2000 Gridcode2000 DistributionCode 2000 LPX Leipzig, 06/200 EEX Frankfurt, 08/2000 2001 Guidelines for information exchange regarding trading of physical power in Germany
Lack of competition – Open Access for everyone? Theory: since 1998 open access for all network users in former Western Germany Practice: many obstacles remain for many network users on low network levels like: • few players with a lot of market power, • rather high prices for consumers remain, • lack of real competition, • open access
Electric power prices Source: Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Technologie
Market Structure and Market Shares Six “super-regional” companies large power plants and regional high voltage grid ~ 50 regional distributors regional distribution grids and smaller power plants ~ 600 municipal utilities regional distribution grids and smaller power plants ~30% ~30% ~40% End user sales
Markets – Ownership Structure • Internationalisation of market • Mergers and Acquisitions – some of them • PE + Bayernwerk E.ON • RWE + VEW RWE • VEAG HEW Vattenfall • Local/regional units “super-regional”/global units
Power market statistics(year 2001) Source: VDEW
International Markets – Trade in the EU and with East European Countries Total Import: 44,9 Billion KWh Total Export: 42,7 Billion KWh Balance: -2,2 Billion KWh Source: VDEW
Sources of power production(year 2000) Source: VDEW
Consumption of alternative energies (year 2001) Source: VDEW
Consumption according to group of consumer Source: VDEW
CO2 Emissions Source: VDEW
Energy Trading Institutions in Germany • OTC – Market • Internet Market Places • Power Exchanges (EEX and LPX)
Energy Trading – OTC Markets (I) • More than 300 parties registered in German market, about 20-30 active traders • Turnover estimated 50-70 TWh/month • Mainly Bilateral Trades • Also cross-border auctions and active trading with e.g. Denmark, Netherlands, Czech Rep etc.
Energy Trading – OTC Markets (II) • Intermediate Brokers often act between Market Participants (~ 10-15 brokers active) • Different sorts of contracts are traded - spot and future products • Transparency is not guaranteed • No real „Trading“ of Energy
Energy Trading – Internet Platforms • Alternative Platform to common OTC- Telephone trades • Several Market Places (e.g. EnronOnline, netstrom.de, HEW click&trade) • Only very small proportion is traded via Internet Market Places so far • Poor Liquidity of Internet Markets
Energy Trading – Power Exchanges • Offering Standardised Products (Spot and Future Market) • more Transparency in markets than in OTC • many Market Participants • More „real“ Trading • (Especially Futures) Market is rapidly growing
Power Exchanges in Germany I Leipzig Power Exchange (LPX) in Eastern Germany - first German Exchange for Energy • Main partner: Nord Pool ASA • Spot market Started 16th of June 2000 60 parties have signed trading agreement • Future market Started in July 2001
Power Exchanges in Germany II European Energy Exchange (EEX) in Frankfurt • Main partner: German Stock Exchange • Spot market Started 8th of August 2000 30 parties have signed trading agreement • Concentration on Future market Started 1st of March 2001 24 parties have signed trading agreement Turnover in May-01: 0.6 TWh
Base Load – for 24 hours Base Load 24 h Peak Load – from 8 am – 8 pm Peak Load 8-20 h Single hour loads Power Exchanges – Spot Market Products Main Products Use of Spot Market • Portfolio optimization • short term trades for peaks • buy extra capacities • speculative traders • etc.
Power Exchanges – Future Market Products • Futures • Options (planned) • Swaps (planned) • Etc. • Traded are mainly long-term futures like monthly, quarterly and yearly products
Power Exchanges – Turnover Total Consumption in Germany 2001: ~500 TWh Turnover LPX, 01–06/2001: 5 TWh Turnover EEX, 01–06/2001: 4,36 TWh only small fraction of Energy is traded at Exchanges
Trading / Strategies of Market Participants • Combination of long-term OTC contracts with fixed prices and short-term trades at Power Exchanges as popular strategy • Rapidly Growing Futures Market due to more transparency for complex products at exchanges compared to OTC trades
Prices per MWh – 1999-2001 • As the prices for the consumers became cheaper, power is not traded at significantly cheaper prices at the Exchanges
Power Exchanges - Developments Merge of LPX and EEX in 2002 – EEX in Leipzig Spot market Turnover in July 02: 2,5 TWh Future market Trading Volume: 30,1 TWh in July 2002 (Yearly Contracts: 21,5 TWh Quarter Contracts: 3,1 TWh Monthly Contracts: 5,5 TWh) Especially Futures Market is growing rapidly
The Leipzig Power Exchange – Organisation of the Exchange • Public law structure • Exchange as an institution under public law • LPX acts through organs under public law • Supporter • LPX Leipzig Power Exchange GmbH • Private law institutions • Shareholders
The Leipzig Power Exchange – Market Participants (excerpt) • Aare Tessin AG • Bewag Aktiengesellschaft • DISAM A/S • EDF Trading Limited • Electrabel • Elektrizitäts-Gesellschaft-Laufenburg AG • EnBW Gesellschaft für Stromhandel • enercity trade • Energieunion AG • EWMR • Entega Trade GmbH • E.O.N. Energie AG • Fortum Energie GmbH • GEW Köln AG • HEW AG • Kom-Strom AG • Kraftübertragungswerke Rheinfelden AG • MVV Energie AG • Norsk Hydro Energy Deutschland GmbH • NWS Energiehandel GmbH • Österreichische Elektrizitätswirtschafts AG • RWE Energie AG • Southern Energy Europe bv • Stadtwerke Düsseldorf AG • Stadtwerke Leipzig, • Statkraft Energy Deutschland GmbH • Südwestdeutsche Stromhandelsgesellschaft mbH • Syneco GmhH & Co.KG • Tiroler Wasserkraftwerke AG • TXU Europe Energy Trading BV • VASA Energy GmbH & Co. KG • VEAG Vereinigte Energiewerke AG • VEW Energie AG
The Leipzig Power Exchange – Trading and Entrance Fees • Overview • Trading fees(mutual, i.e. to be paid by both the purchaser and the seller)0.04 Euro/MWh • Annual fee12500 Euro • Entrance fee (one-off)7000 Euro
The Leipzig Power Exchange –Auction Bidding • LPX supposes „Auction Bidding“ as best solution • Bundling up of demand and supply • Minimizes Strategic Influences and Market Power • Economical and Simple Solution
Time 00:00 06:00 14:00 24:00 10:00 18:00 Block 3 Block 4 Block 2 Block 5 Block 1 The Leipzig Power Exchange – Block Bids Periods Limits for block bids from start • Maximum size for an individual block bid is 50 MWh • A maximum of 3 block bids per block period and participant can be sent in addition to the hourly bid • These limits can change later on and if so LPX will inform its participants no later than on Thursday the week before implementation of new limits.
The Leipzig Power Exchange – Trade Data (II) – Anomalies • in December 2001 the „market-clearing-price“ reached a peak with 1000 Euro/MWh • the average weekly price moved to 50 Euro/MWh • ‚prices are economically not logical nor explainable‘ (MVV) • problem: data about production, network problems not available to all traders
Conclusions considering Prices (I) • Behaviour of prices suggests challenges associated with modelling these prices, e.g. • Volatility seen in Power Prices is exremely high and • unprecedented in other Commodity Markets • Prices vary substantially by time of day, week or year • Positive and Negative price „spikes“ can be observed • Frequency, Magnitude and complexity of • Fluctuations also unique in commodity markets
Conclusions considering Prices (II) • However..... • Prices follow similar daily, weekly and annual patterns • Even the price volatility follows certain patterns, price • volatility is strongly correlated with price levels • Basic relationships between power prices at different • geographic locations show e.g. similar volatility • .....the challenge is to build models that capture this complex behaviour of prices
Links in the Internet • www.strom.de • www.eex.de • www.lpx.de • www.bmwi.de • www.finance.wiwi.uni-karlsruhe.de • www.energy-more.de • www.bundeskartellamt.de • www.eu-kommission.de