Impacts of Responsive Load in PJM: Load Shifting and Real Time Pricing

B-Tier
Journal: The Energy Journal
Year: 2008
Volume: 29
Issue: 2
Pages: 101-122

Authors (2)

Kathleen Spees (not in RePEc) Lester Lave

Score contribution per author:

1.005 = (α=2.01 / 2 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

In PJM, 15% of electric generation capacity ran less than 96 hours, 1.1% of the time, over 2006. If retail prices reflected hourly wholesale market prices, customers would shift consumption away from peak hours and installed capacity could drop. We use PJM data to estimate consumer and producer savings from a change toward real-time pricing (RTP) or time-of-use (TOU) pricing. Surprisingly, neither RTP nor TOU has much effect on average price under plausible short-term consumer responses. Consumer plus producer surplus rises 2.8%-4.4% with RTP and 0.6%-1.0% with TOU. Peak capacity savings are seven times larger with RTP. Peak load drops by 10.4%-17.7% with RTP and only 1.1%-2.4% with TOU. Half of all possible customer savings from load shifting are obtained by shifting only 1.7% of all MWh to another time of day, indicating that only the largest customers need be responsive to get the majority of the short-run savings.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:sae:enejou:v:29:y:2008:i:2:p:101-122
Journal Field
Energy
Author Count
2
Added to Database
2026-01-25