Abstract While on-going and future developments will likely increase the short-term elasticity of the electricity demand, capacity markets are often put forward as a possible remedy to ensure generation adequacy.… Click to show full abstract
Abstract While on-going and future developments will likely increase the short-term elasticity of the electricity demand, capacity markets are often put forward as a possible remedy to ensure generation adequacy. In this paper, we provide a model formulation of a stochastic non-cooperative capacity planning problem reflecting short-term elastic energy demand, risk-averse investors, and a capacity market. The Conditional-Value-At-Risk is used as a coherent risk-measure. For solving the model, we deploy an Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers. We analyze the impact of short-term demand elasticity on the social welfare, agents’ surpluses, and Loss-of-Load-Expectation of an energy-only market and a market complemented by a capacity market. Moreover, we consider the impact of set capacity targets. For the energy-only market, we show that short-term demand elasticity even amplifies the negative effect of risk aversion on social welfare. A capacity market can be used to hedge against the negative effects of risk aversion, even if the capacity target is not set ideally. Furthermore, we show that a capacity market can be used to mitigate welfare transfer to investors and lower the loss-of-load-expectation induced by scarcity times.
               
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