viernes, marzo 28, 2008

IMEUC False Facts

Based on the article “The Power of False Facts,” readers need to be very aware of that power while reading those False Facts to be able to rate them as false. The following False Facts need to be well understood: 1) IMEUC doesn’t need to satisfy the Ultraquality Transportation requirement. 2) EWPC has a Free Rider Problem; no answers are given in mentioned article. 3) EWPC has no answers to 11 questions. 4) IMEUC operates on the Economic Level.

IMEUC False Facts

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 28th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

This article is not written to attack Len Gould, nor his friends, which are very intelligent and important persons. It aims to their opinions, about some False Facts they apparently believe in and are entitled to keep them. Every time Len retracts, as a result of a False Fact becoming evident, he goes on usually with the help from friends.

I have taken a brief article “The Power of False Facts,” from the book Powerful Times (see page 41) by Eamonn Kelly. The source of the article is: Sharon Begley, “People Believe a ‘Fact’ That Fits Their Views Even if it’s Clearly False.” The Wall Street Journal, February 4, 2005. Permissions to reprint this and other quotes in earlier EWPC articles will be considered later on for the publication of the EWPC Book.

“What we remember depends on what we believe…. ‘People build mental models,’ explains Stephan Lewandowsky, a psychology professor at the University of Western Australia, Crowley. ‘By the time they receive a retraction, the original misinformation has already become an integral part of that mental model, or worldview, and disregarding it would leave the worldview a shambles.’ Therefore, he and his colleagues conclude in their paper, ‘People continue to rely on misinformation even if they demonstrably remember and understand a subsequent retraction’…. Even many of those who remember a retraction still rated the original claim as true.”

Readers need to be very careful to the insidious power while reading those False Facts to be able to rate them as false. Since the end of 2005, Len has retracted many times from False Facts that were found out. Now I will restrict myself only to four False Facts under this specific article.

A successful transformation of the power industry needs to be based on three essential requirements that I have uncovered: 1st) Active Demand, 2nd) Retail Competition and 3) Ultraquality Transportation. EWPC has emerged to satisfy all three requirements.

I used to say that the first and second requirements lead to Demand Integration to power system planning, operation and control on the open (retail and wholesale) market value chain. The third requirement leads to the transportation utility under a regulatory compact with a responsibility to transport is also a needed for Demand Integration, as can be seen next.

False Fact #1. IMEUC doesn’t need to satisfy the Ultraquality Transportation requirement. Len writes “Level of Reliability should be simply a market factor purchased as needed just like Level of Power etc.,” to justify the lack of Ultraquality transportation of IMEUC. My response was that ““Demand Integration is based on the fact [the third requirement emerges] that reliability has two sides: ‘On one side, system crashes are mitigated by a least cost mix of supply and demand risk management tools that may be applied in time and space [that is the Ultraquality Transportation requiremen]t. On the other, DR is the key to the segmentation of customers [based on the Retail Competition] supply security (a kind of insurance).’” After that, Bob came to the rescue by changing the subject. Readers should not forget that fact.

False Fact #2: EWPC has a Free Rider Problem; no answers are given in mentioned article. Len wrote “As an example of above. I invite readers to read the blog entry Jose Antonio refers to above, and evaluate in what way it constitutes an answer to my "Free Rider Problem in EWPC" question (NOT), at No Need for Regulated Price Caps - II .” As the next sequence of posts after that showed, it is very clear that the my “assumption ‘the default service will have essentially all the free riders being subsidized by peers.’" was available, right where I said, in the link of just mentioned EWPC article. Once gain, Bob changes the subject. But the lie goes on. He later tries to continue discussing the issue of free riding, but the real issue the False Fact.

False Fact #3: EWPC has no answers to 11 questions. Len writes for the third (not the second) time “My problem with EWPC are myriad eg. it's precisely identical to every existing failed attempt at de-regulation in N. America. And it's promoter flatly refuses to answer any difficult questions about it. Questions which I have posed before, such as:…” I showed a copy of each of the answers, to identify the False Fact that I had answered those questions earlier. Len takes those answers and ads new questions, but that was not the issue at hand, but a False Fact. Todd comes to help Len with an “abridge version” of the old responses – the evidence of the False Fact - as my explanation of EWPC, which in fact were on the link that I referred in my response to Ken as “Your good intentions are no longer necessary. The EWPC article EWPC Leadership (w/o links) has a better approach: that of essential business requirements, as the breakthrough tipping point to promote leadership.”

False Fact #4: IMEUC operates on the Economic Level. As “Many on the GridWise side start out with a control orientation, a continuation of the load limiting approaches most recently in the news in California’s short-lived thermostat proposals. As they work the problem, and become more aware of the complexity and diversity of the problem, they inevitably migrate more toward an agent-based approach. (Someone, I think it was Apperson Johnson, once said, “an agent is an object that can say no!”). … Eventually these agents have to be able to negotiate around the issues of scarcity and value; and of the desires of their owners. Such complex negotiations cannot be handled at the control level, but only at the economic level. This will push things toward the EWPC model.” Todd came to help Len and deviate the False Fact of IMEUC. BTW Todd is now silent and Bob followed him. In 2005 Len explained that his approach was a “prices to devices,” when he wrote “Jose: You're close…”

It is very important to understand that “Prices to Devices” has potential for being a market segment, but NO for the whole market.


eMail Enviado: La Hora de la Tierra es Mañana Sábado 29

Este eMail es dedicado al apreciado, distinguido y notable Dr. Rafael Molina Morillo, en compensación por lo negativo que pudiese haber sido mi artículo No hay Apagón de 5 Minutos Hoy sin que obrara en mi ninguna mala intención.

Estimados líderes, lectores y público en general,

El 29 de marzo del 2008, de 8 a 9 de la noche, millones de personas alrededor del mundo se unirán para “apagar las luces” por el lapso de una hora para demostrar su preocupación sobre el cambio climático.

Podemos promover mucho esta iniciativa y tomar parte de ella apagando las luces y computadoras, cada quien en su hora local y así combatir de manera directa el cambio climático.

Los que se quieran sumar a la campaña pueden reenviar este mensaje.

En un momento histórico en que se insiste en que el petróleo va a llegar a 200 dólares el barril y cuando ya existe un amplio consenso del potencial impacto de los combustibles fósiles en el cambio climático se estará celebrando mañana La Hora de la Tierra para que los ciudadanos de la aldea global tomen conciencia de esa posible catástrofe.

Pero, hay algo práctico, importante y urgente que se puede hacer también. Reformar los sectores eléctricos para desacoplar eficazmente el incentivo perverso de que las rentas de las empresas eléctricas suben con las ventas de electricidad.

Es precisamente en ese desacoplamiento, por medio del desarrollo de los recursos del lado de la demanda que descansa la electricidad sin control de precios (EWPC, por sus siglas en inglés). Uno de los más importantes desarrollos es la inversión coordinada en la eficiencia energética que puede facilitar en los próximos cuatro años una reducción del 25% del consumo de petróleo (ver email enviado abajo).

En el último artículo EWPC Leadership (w/o links) que publiqué en EnergyBlogs.com se resume y traduce de la forma siguiente: “Esta es una síntesis (sin ningún enlace) de la apertura de la brecha EWPC, la cual trae claridad absoluta y dirección para habilitar un cambio cultural a la industria eléctrica de la tercera revolución industrial. La Integración de la demanda por los 2GRs (detallistas de segunda generación) resultará en grandes ahorros de coordinación para la sociedad, tanto en las inversiones multianuales y en los costos de operación de los clientes. Dejar a los clientes a sálvese quien pueda es una debilidad … que es suplida por la EWPC.

Esperando la buena acogida de esta propuesta.

Muy atentamente,

José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Consultor Sistémico: Electricidad
Promotor de la EWPC y del GMH

P.D.: Se sugiere dar hoy y mañana la más amplia divulgación de este mensaje. Gracias!

From: José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, PhD

Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 4:56 PM

To: 'Rsegura’; 'Francisco Mendez'; 'Rolando Gonzalez Bunster'; 'Manuel F. Perez Dubuc'; 'Lucio Monari'; 'Gilberto Chona '; 'Temístocles Montás'; 'Moisés Pineda'; 'Roberto Saladín '; 'Aliona Cebotari Ouanes'; 'J Portocarreiro '; 'Andres van der Horst Alvarez'; 'Jaime Moreno (CNC)'; 'René Villarreal '

Subject: Reducir 25% a la Factura Petrolera en 4 años

Estimados líderes, lectores y público en general,

Reducir a las tres cuartas partes la factura petrolera en los próximos 4 años es un mensaje de muy alta significación para el futuro del país.

Para lograr esa gran meta, similar a la de Kennedy de poner un hombre en la luna en una década, es absolutamente necesario un cambio estructural, el cual puede satisfacer la aparente disyuntiva en “El Discurso del Ahorro,” que aparece en la columna Espejo de Papel, de Diario Libre, y que expresa: “Los dominicanos necesitamos gastar petróleo para impulsar el crecimiento y ahorrar petróleo para sostenerlo. La disyuntiva hace que el problema de los combustibles sea de difícil solución…”

El sector más importante para alcanzar una meta como esa es el sector eléctrico. Una propuesta para alcanzarla aparece en la nota Una Crítica Eléctrica al Discurso Presidencial que se complementa en el artículo To EEI: “Let's Ban Regulation,” Starting in Ohio, aunque la idea subyacente sería que empezáramos lo antes posible en el país.

Evidentemente y por ejemplo, esta es una nota de esperanza, como la planteada por el presidente de la Asociación de Comerciantes e Industriales de Santiago (ver Empresarios apoyan con reservas el plan de ahorro), que no obstante se “quejó de que la disposición orientada a impulsar el desarrollo del gas natural en el transporte en general, no tomó en cuenta la actividad industrial y comercial nacional, y es precisamente ese sector que hace uso continuo de dicho combustible en las plantas de generación y de emergencia.”

Esperando la buena acogida de esta propuesta.

Muy atentamente,

José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Consultor Sistémico: Electricidad
Promotor de la EWPC y del GMH

P.D.: Se sugiere dar la más amplia divulgación de este mensaje. Gracias!




miércoles, marzo 26, 2008

EWPC Leadership (w/o links)

This is a synthesis (without any links) of the EWPC breakthrough, which brings absolute clarity and direction to enable a cultural shift to the power industry of the third industrial revolution. Demand Integration by 2GRs result in large coordination savings for society as a whole, both in customers' multiyear investments and operation costs. Letting every customer for himself is a weakness in Gridwise that is filled by EWPC.

EWPC Leadership (w/o links)

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 26st, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Electricity is a very complex subject, until we uncover its essence. The essence enables the personal side of leadership, which in turns enables a culture for the third industrial revolution to support the strategic side of leadership. Peter Koestenbaum wrote that “Paradoxical as it may seem, the personal [side of leadership] precedes the strategic; good strategy is created by a brilliant mind and implemented by a strong character, not the other way around.”

The articles in the Electricity Without Price Controls (EWPC) Blog can be though of as a holographic image from a different perspective of the whole EWPC market architecture and design paradigm shift. As Koestenbaum suggests in his Leadership Diamond Toolbox, “you do not sell a product or service; you help customers buy leadership in their affairs.”

EWPC emerged for the world of the third industrial revolution, where demand is no longer an externality and there is a need for a power system that should operate at ultraquality, with the help of demand response, in a wholesale, retail, customer value chain.

The essence of EWPC is "the generic market model paradigm: Retail Competition, Active Demand, and Ultraquality Transportation," which includes wholesale competition, as 2GRs link both markets.

Such essence is the basis for a breakthrough, which is the tipping point that shifts paradigms permanently. The breakthrough is … the epitome of the 'AHHA!' moment bringing absolute clarity and direction… that now … comes to the power industry for both the open (retail and wholesale) market (with competitive incentives for the development of business model innovations) and the closed (transportation) market (the new utility, with a responsibility to transport).

The Old utilities paradigm (with a responsibility to serve) comes from demand as an externality (inactive demand and no competition) and has already served its purpose with its obsolete business model of winning rate case to the regulator. Each incremental extension of the Old paradigm results in unnecessary accumulated costs paid by customers and "earned" by utilities.

EWPC comes from - a different place altogether - Demand Integration (which comes from Active Demand and Retail Competition) to power system planning, operation and control by 2GRs, resulting in large coordination savings for society as a whole, both in customers' multiyear investments and operation costs. Letting every customer for himself is a weakness in Gridwise that is filled by EWPC.

EWPC is not just about the need for new data or new systems (the strategic side of leadership), but first and foremost for new health and fresh determination (the personal side of leadership).

Reference: Peter Koestenbaum, “Leadership – The Inner Side of Greatness”


jueves, marzo 20, 2008

Missing From Gridwise

Missing from the GridWise approach is the need to restructure as soon as possible the power industry to eliminate the barriers imposed by "the lumbering old style utilities companies" and to manage the physical systemic risks of power system failure. The EWPC market architecture and design should be the End-State of the power industry for quite some time to enable the mentioned approach.

Missing From Gridwise

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 21st, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

The NewDaedalus article “Do you choose Incrementalism or Markets?” starts with “The Grid doesn’t get better because we keep on relying on central planning to make it better. Any efforts developed exclusively by the current stakeholders and run through the utilities commissions will predictable and incrementalist. There is one (at least) that is not. The GridWise Architectural Council is trying to create open interoperable protocols to enable vibrant markets to develop, ones that are not driven by or yoked to the lumbering old style utilities companies.”

The creation of open interoperable protocols is great progress to the future of the power industry. However, the first sentence of the above paragraph jumps into an unnecessary conclusion, because the power industry Grid need to be better understood. Once understood, the elements to replace as soon as possible the old style utilities companies will be enabled to eliminate most barriers to progress that will enable breakthroughs instead of incrementalism.

As explained in the EWPC article Free Market and Central Planning, Under R1E2, the utility Grid needs to be separated into the utility Grid and the utility Enterprise. The utility Grid should keep relying on central planning to make it better as depicted in the EWPC article The Smart Grid Transportation Utility.

At the same time, the utility Enterprise needs to be replaced by an open market technology neutral Second Generation Retailers - 2GRs under the breakthrough EWPC market architecture and design. The new EWPC stakeholders will enable innovations as suggested in the EWPC article Shrinking the Regulator’s Jobs, whose summary says:

“There is a need for a shared vision to restructure the power industry, shrinking regulators jobs to price controls of the remaining transportation electric utilities and letting end-customers make their own investments and purchasing decisions of electricity. The shared vision needs to go to the public opinion so that high level political decisions are enabled to restructure the electricity industry and shrinking regulators jobs.”

From the perspective of power system planning, operation and control it is going to a long transition to arrive to a truly competitive and commercial service that the NewDaedalus article states: “Live power pricing will drive storage development better than any number of central government programs; better storage will make responsiveness to price signals easier. From there, every means of alternate energy, no matter how unreliable, become another way to charge the storage. Sites will have multiple generation strategies depending upon their location, winds, sun coverage, thermal posture…”.

To bridge the long transition, that will shift the direction of power on the transportation system, what needs to be added to the GridWise approach is found in the EWPC article Customer Reliability and System Reliability. Similar to bank runs that fuel systemic risks, live power pricing will lead, when less expected, to power system systemic risks in the long run (system adequacy) and the short run (system security). The economics of electricity service will still depend on central station generation for a long while. That is why I claim that EWPC is the market architecture and design is the End-State of the power industry for quite some time.

Reference and context: A Power Grid Smartens Up, by Peter Fairley, MIT Technology Review.

miércoles, marzo 19, 2008

Abramos Brecha Progreso con DR-CAFTA

El Listín Diario lanzó una Alerta Económica el 18 de marzo del 2008, sugiriendo que el “gobierno y la oposición, deberían enfrascarse conjuntamente en la organización de un plan que prevalezca más allá del proceso electoral o de la vigencia de un gobierno.” El GMH ha llegado a la conclusión de que el sector privado del país y el de Centroamérica están en mucha mejor capacidad que los políticos para llenar ese cometido. Lo que hace falta es abrir una brecha (“breakthrough”).

Paulette L. Stenzel, Profesora de Leyes de Negocio Internacional de la Universidad del Estado de Michigan, en su artículo “Porqué el DR-CAFTA Enfrenta Oposición de los ciudadanos de Centroamérica y la República Dominicana,” concluye que “las provisiones del DR-CAFTA simplemente no proveen salarios llevaderos, prácticas de trabajo justas, ni la protección ambiental necesaria. En este momento de la historia, solo la acción voluntaria de las compañías que operan en los países del DR-CAFTA llevará a prácticas justas de trabajo, salarios llevaderos y prácticas ambientales sanas.”

Para que las compañías actúen de manera voluntaria, es necesario que las mismas abran una brecha, porque se convencen que el mundo está en una transición a la tercera revolución industrial. Una brecha, de acuerdo a Donna Karlin, “es muy diferente que hacer cambios pequeños… que pueden ser o no sostenibles; es el punto clave que cambia paradigmas permanentemente. Cambia la forma en que uno procesa los pensamientos, la forma en que enfrenta algo e interactúa, trata los asuntos, dirige a los otros, … es todo eso. Nunca volverá a ser el mismo o regresará porque la forma en que piensa vendrá de un lugar totalmente diferente.

El mejor ejemplo está en las compañías del sector eléctrico de DR-CAFTA, que tienen en la Electricidad Sin Control de Precios (EWPC, por sus siglas en inglés) una magnifica oportunidad para actuar de manera voluntaria. El paradigma de las empresas eléctricas descansa en empresas distribuidoras en que la demanda es una exterioridad (demanda inactiva y sin competencia). Estamos siguiendo un proceso lento y muy costoso para rescatar las distribuidoras que muy pronto desaparecerán.

La EWPC viene de un lugar totalmente diferente, la Integración de la Demanda (que a su vez viene de la Demanda Activa y la Competencia al Detalle) a la planificación, operación y control del sistema interconectado. Es en esa brecha del progreso en que están garantizados los grandes beneficios en este momento de la historia para todos para aprovechar al máximo el DR-CAFTA. Dado que la electricidad es una pieza clave de la competitividad sistémica, estaremos cada vez más en capacidad de incrementar nuestras exportaciones de bienes y servicios a los Estados Unidos.



martes, marzo 18, 2008

Ed. Listín Diario - Alerta Económica

Nuestro país, y en especial nuestras autoridades, harían bien en desembarazarse de las francachelas de la campaña política y comenzar a adoptar previsiones ante la situación económica mundial.

Las principales autoridades del Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI) y de la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico (OCDE) ayer lanzaron un alerta desde París al resto del planeta sobre la profundización de la crisis económica de Estados Unidos que se está extendiendo a todas las naciones. El mensaje fue simple: La crisis se incrementará, se extenderá y afectará a todos.

Ante la denuncia de agravamiento de la situación en todo el mundo, nuestros principales dirigentes, en el gobierno y la oposición, deberían enfrascarse conjuntamente en la organización de un plan que prevalezca más allá del proceso electoral o de la vigencia de un gobierno.

Mientras parece que tomamos los asuntos con bastante desparpajo en estos meses electorales, las grandes economías del mundo han comenzado a adoptar medidas de previsión para recibir el impacto.

Desde que se inició la crisis de las hipotecas en Estados Unidos se han producido altibajos en los mercados mundiales, pero la crisis financiera de importantes bancos y la quiebra de uno de los más grandes en la pasada semana, produjeron un agravamiento y gran impacto en todo el mundo.

Hay que descartar que la economía dominicana estará inmune a esas sacudidas. Es necesario comenzar a adoptar medidas preventivas de ahorro real de recursos, reducción en el consumo y resguardar nuestros sistemas productivos, principalmente de alimentos.

De continuar las presiones en los mercados, las consecuencias más graves sobre nuestro país podrían estar presentándose en los momentos más duros de la presente campaña política.

Editorial original Alerta económica

lunes, marzo 17, 2008

Customer Reliability and System Reliability

Demand Integration is based on the fact that reliability has two sides: “On one side, system crashes are mitigated by a least cost mix of supply and demand risk management tools that may be applied in time and space. On the other, DR is the key to the segmentation of customers supply security (a kind of insurance).”

Customer Reliability and System Reliability

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 17th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Demand Response came to public awareness when several large and very costly system blackouts disrupted the U.S., Italy, and other industrialized countries. Those countries have a need for a synchronized power system market architecture and design that minimizes the likelihood of domino like cascading failures. The essential requirements of Ultraquality Transportation and Demand Integration to power system planning, operations and control are key ingredients for significantly reducing blackout disruptive powers, which are not addressed by present utility centered paradigms and IMEUC as shown in Power Markets Essential Requirements and Power Markets Essential Requirements - II, which is summarized by the paragraph:

Mission accomplished!!! [These] are comments received and responded under the article Power Markets Essential Requirements. Readers will find that the two assertions questioned, are certainly true: IMEUC has NO Ultraquality, and NO Demand Integration to power system planning, operation and control. Ultraquality is a system characteristic. The incentive system is spelled out clearly. While IMEUC is technology dependent, EWPC is technology neutral. A standard meter is needed for 2GR to develop their business model innovations. Nothing else is needed to reconfirm the winner in the market vs. market competition, this time based on the essential requirements: Retail Competition with Active Demand and Ultraquality Transportation.

Under EWPC the “Level of [customer] Reliability [is, not just should be,] simply a market factor purchased as needed just like Level of Power etc.” In my [seminal], and only article on EnergyPulse, An Alternative Business Case for Demand Response, I stated: “The business case of Demand Response (DR) is enhanced under free markets, innovation, and probabilistic (risk) mindsets. DR is poised to be the demand side risk management tool to complement the traditional "LOLP" supply side risk management tool. There are two sides on the DR coin. On one side, system crashes are mitigated by a least cost mix of supply and demand risk management tools that may be applied in time and space. On the other, DR is the key to the segmentation of customers supply security (a kind of insurance). Because of its fine grain nature, DR can help mitigate delays (intended or not) of lumpy investments in generation, transmission, and distribution.”

Transportation Ultraquality, a MUST that IMEUC lack, includes a process to perform system adequacy (developing long run systemic risk management) and system security (executing short run systemic risk management) by developing/executing “a least cost mix of supply and demand risk management tools that may be applied in time and space” to implement Demand Integration to power system planning, operation and control.

Reference and context: A Fresh Approach to Managing Peak Demand, by Gary Paul, VP, Outsourcing Business Development, Capgemini



Well Beyond Low Reserves Managing

NONE of today’s utilities should be allowed to take as inevitable a bare bones approach to increase efficiency, introducing a high leverage shake-up to the industry. Unlike traditional utilities, competitive Second Generation Retailers will have “end-to-end responsibility and be willing to have a stake in delivering results… ” to end-customers.

Well Beyond Low Reserves Managing

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 17th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Under EWPC, NONE of the “… utilities will … take a bare bones approach…” that Capgemini sees as inevitable. Those utilities, which like dogs are unable to learn new tricks, insist in keeping a “bares bone” obsolete non competitive business model of winning rate cases to the regulator. That is an unnecessary risk taken by governments and the power industry that is solved under competition by the EWPC market architecture and design paradigm shift, under a NO jurisdiction left behind.

EWPC Retail Competition, to be done by Second Generation Retailers - 2GRs, involve business model innovations, which go well beyond managing peak demand or low generation, that reduces reserves, anytime, anywhere, by introducing everywhere a high leverage shake-up. For example, a High Leverage Shake-Up in California (please hit the link here and elsewhere to get to the corresponding article) is needed to repair the immense damage done to the worldwide power industry with the The BIG California LIE. The shake-up, however, can be initiated in wherever jurisdiction that wants to take the leadership that California has been unable to show so far.

In the article “COMPETITION RULES! TALK AMONGST YOURSELVES... ,” Martin Rosenberg quotes” four articulate CEOs”:

WE FACE HUGE, COMPLEX GLOBAL ENERGY CHALLENGES. COMPETITION UNLEASHES ALL THE POSSIBILITIES TO HELP SOLVE THESE CHALLENGES FOR OUR CUSTOMERS.

Jim Burke, CEO, TXU Energy

CUSTOMER FIRES ENERGY COMPANY.

Lois Hedge-Peth, COO, Direct Energy

COMPETITION DRIVES INNOVATION AND LOWER PRICES IN BOTH WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ENERGY MARKETS. PERVASIVE COMPETITION WILL ALLOW OUR INDUSTRY TO EFFECTIVELY ADDRESS THE MAJOR ISSUES INCLUDING CLIMATE CHANGE, NEED FOR NEW GENERATION INVESTMENTS AND GRID INVESTMENTS.

Michael Kagan, President, Constellation NewEnergy

THE POWER INDUSTRY HAS BY THE THE LOWEST CAPACITY UTILITIZATION RATE AMONG CAPITAL-INTENSIVE BUSINESSES, AND ONLY COMPETITIVE RETAIL MARKETS CAN END MORE THAN A CENTURY OF INEFFICIENCY.

Mark Jacobs, CEO, Reliant Energy

Capgemini defines “the electrical energy market” as that market that includes “… generators, system operators, transmission and distribution service providers, retailers, energy service companies, consumers, regulators and legislators…”

In response to another Capgemini article (see The Smart Grid Transportation Utility), I concluded that “Dramatic and radical change is coming to the electric utility industry as the utility itself evolves to the smart transportation grid, under a complete rethinking of the electric industry. Front and back office generation and customer facing activities become free market activities under prudential regulations.”

The system operators and the transmission and distribution service providers become the integrated (T&D) transportation utility under a compact with a responsibility of transport, instead of a responsibility to serve, in exchange for a regulated price control tolls payment. The “ability to earn a return on their investments in” the transportation infrastructure under traditional regulation is without any doubt. As “[T]he current state of the electrical infrastructure in North America is not sustainable…,” the paradigm shift to EWPC will enable a sustainable smart grid transportation utility electrical infrastructure in America and the rest of the world.

Under EWPC, the investments necessary for Demand Integration (no just smart metering) will be coordinated by Second Generation Retailers. The broader set of benefits of aggregating retail demand to produce wholesale demand, refining grid planning, and improving grid monitoring and control, are part of the Demand Integration processes to power system planning, operation and control.

Instead of an artificial decoupling of the utility grid and the utility enterprise, like that under structural separation of the grid and the enterprise that lead to a Complex and Ugly System (see The Good, the Bad and the Ugly), real decoupling is produced by having distribution integrated with transmission in the transportation utility compact leading to the Good and Simple System.

As they take on today’s utilities enterprise activities on a competitive basis, 2GRs integrate the functions of retailers, load serving entities, and aggregators, increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the whole system. Unlike utilities, competitive 2GRs will have “end-to-end responsibility and be willing to have a stake in delivering results… ” to end-customers. So, paraphrasing the author, “… [2GRs will] look beyond the technology into the opportunities and incentives the technology unlocks. Indeed, [2Grs will] take a more comprehensive view of smart metering. More important than the technology itself is the role it plays in enabling system operators, 2GRs and customers to … improve market efficiency.” 2GRs “should seek out partners who will work collaboratively with them to ensure the success…” of their business models.

Reference and context: A Fresh Approach to Managing Peak Demand, by Gary Paul, VP, Outsourcing Business Development, Capgemini


The Good, the Bad and the Ugly II

This follows up the comments on the EWPC article The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. I certainly agree with Warren Causey that the idea of demand response as a condition of service seems to be emerging. EWPC is about ending the rampant value destruction to generate large value creation.

Don,

Be a good sport. As you will see below, this is "a fascinating time-period in which to live."

EWPC is no about the left or the right. It’s about ending the rampant value destruction originated in the Old System, the Bad System, and even more the Ugly System. The Good EWPC System is about developing the resources of the demand side for innovation to flourish and generate a lot of value creation in the benefit of ALL stakeholders.

I certainly agree with Warren Causey that the idea on mandatory demand response seems to be emerging. As part of the Sierra Energy Group, his idea is to be taken seriously as he is in close contact with the private sector of the industry. It used to be called earlier in California as “demand response as a condition of service.” I don’t see how that has anything to do with left win. I think it has ALL to do with Law of the Situation: the utilities don’t understand.

This is what Warren Causey also wrote in the post All the issues crux of the matter :

With regard to good ideas dying at the utility/commission staff interfaces, I don’t disagree at all. In fact, I consider that as proof of the argument in my original post, and as both the crux of the issue and the fly in the ointment of Dr. Silverio’s, and other bloggers’, restructuring proposals. My educational training actually is in history and that’s why I consider this a fascinating time-period in which to live.

Over the last couple of generations, the U.S. has become increasingly socialist (regardless of the party in power) and people increasingly expect the government regulate everything and solve every problem. The issue with that is that government bureaucracy (and state-controlled enterprises are extensions of that bureaucracy) is inherently the worst possible way to solve any problem. You can ask the Russians what a long, slow dive into an empty swimming pool feels like. Of course don’t pay to much attention to what they say because now they seem intent on climbing, dazed, back up onto the board and trying it again.

When you introduce government planning into any operation at any level of government (local planning commissions and their interventions into private property are a nightmare) and remove or distort economic incentives, you produce a horse designed by a committee—it looks a lot like a camel. Add politics (most state regulators are elected and national politicians’ raison d’etre is to get elected regardless of the consequences) and the possibility of allowing free markets to work out problems via trial-and-error disappears.

During so-called “deregulation,” not one regulator or one “staff,” which by Mr. Pullin’s description constitutes the bureaucracy, disappeared. Don’t blame the staffs, they’re just doing what bureaucrats do!


The following is taken from the WTO Website:

Virtually all decisions in the WTO are taken by consensus among all member countries and they are ratified by members' parliaments. . . At the heart of the system — known as the multilateral trading system — are the WTO’s agreements, negotiated and signed by a large majority of the world’s trading nations, and ratified in their parliaments. These agreements are the legal ground-rules for international commerce. Essentially, they are contracts, guaranteeing member countries important trade rights. They also bind governments to keep their trade policies within agreed limits to everybody’s benefit.




sábado, marzo 15, 2008

Fondos de Pensión, Subsidios y Ahorro de Energía

En su editorial "Preocupante" de este 15 de marzo del 2008, el Listín Diario afirma que "Ya muchos están comenzando a presentir que . . . el plan de pensiones como los servicios de salud, serán solamente un nuevo impuesto y al final todo ciudadano tendrá que pagar un servicio marginal que será el que realmente supla sus necesidades."

La Bitácora Digital del GMH cumple hoy 34 meses en su labor de divulgación y los temas de los fondos de pensión, el ahorro de energía y el de los subsidios, siguen siendo de mucha actualidad e importancia, especialmente cuando el petróleo está por las nubes y los Estados Unidos están en medio de lo que parece cada vez más una gran depresión y una crisis sistémica de su sistema financiero.

Los fondos de pensión dominicanos pueden colaborar grandemente con la solución de la crisis sistémica del sector eléctrico, para reforzarse mutuamente de forma positiva. Dado que la capitalización no genera los incentivos para que los consumidores inviertan en ahorro de energía, la profundización de la reforma debería facilitarla y en ese sentido los fondos de pensión podrían asegurar medios para incrementar grandemente su rentabilidad, al tiempo que le reducen los costos de electricidad a los propios trabajadores y permiten focalizar y reducir los subsidios a la población. Esa es la idea innovadora que evitaría que los planes de pensión se conviertan en un nuevo impuesto invirtiendo en el ahorro de energía y generando grandes beneficios en el sistema interconectado con la profundización de la reforma que no son obvios todavía.

Anteriormente, Gustavo Alba Sánchez en respuesta a la nota Una Crítica Eléctrica al Discurso Presidencial, propuso "en linea con tu aserto de que falta financiamiento para promover medidas tendentes al ahorro de energia, creo que si gran parte del financiamiento que ahora se destina a compras de automoviles se dedicara a equipos domesticos de mayores eficiencia energetica, y aun mas, a paneles solares y molinos de vientos que asociados a los ya existentes bancos de baterias e inversores en muchos hogares dominicanos, podrian constituirse en un conjunto generador de gran impacto en el ahorro de combustible fosil." Mi respuesta a su propuesta que aparece a seguidas debajo de esa nota, se sintetiza en la necesidad de la profundización de la reforma para alinear los incentivos y reducir grandemente el impacto negativo de la costosa política que ha generado el gran mercado sálvese quien pueda de soluciones individuales.

Como dije en HOY ECONOMÍA - Detengamos el hurto, "El problema nodal es estructural. Uno de los elementos estructurales defectuosos es precisamente la distribuidora y su ineficiente modelo de negocios que no está diseñado para servir al público y que invita a los subsidios del gobierno." También explique en "HOY ECONOMÍA - El hurto no es el problema que "Aunque los detallistas ofrecerán un servicio individual, en zonas de hurto elevado se hará al transformador más cercano, facilitando el proceso." Por eso, como la profundización de la reforma desarrolla un servicio individual al cliente y permite a su vez focalizar los subsidios de forma clara y transparente, y sin que sea a través de los precios de electricidad.

En ese sentido, el GMH invita al diálogo y al debate, recordando varias notas colocada en esta Bitácora Digital y resumiendo abajo algunas ideas tomadas de las estadísticas de la Asociación Internacional de Organismos de Supervisión de Fondos de Pensiones (AIOS) que aparecen en su Boletín 17.

Síntesis: Solución Energética Sistémica

Cooperativas Eléctricas, Normas Prudenciales y Fondos de Pensión

8 Notas Sobre Fondos de Pensiones

La AIOS es una entidad civil sin fines de lucro, compuesta por los organismos de supervisión de los sistemas de pensiones de capitalización individual de los siguientes países: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, México, Panamá, Perú, República Dominicana y Uruguay.

Mientras el promedio de los miembros de la AIOS tienen 21.6% de sus fondos invertidos en moneda extranjera, el país al igual que El Salvador no tienen un centavo fuera. La inversión en empresas extranjeras que producen equipos de eficiencia energética que sean seleccionados por su alto potencial generaría una relación mutua de rentabilidad.

De julio 2006 a julio 2007, las utilidades en términos del patrimonio neto resultaron 7.1%, estando por debajo del promedio de los 10 países que fue de 17.1%. La rentabilidad bruta real del mismo período fue de tan solo 3.3%, lejos de Perú con 51.4%, Chile 20.8%, Argentina 18.5%, Mexico 11%, Uruguay 8.5%.





jueves, marzo 13, 2008

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

The California commissioners need to shift their mindsets “to show that retail competition is not only possible, but absolutely necessary to turn the electricity industry into a vibrant value added business for all stakeholders.” That is the EWPC story that emerged from a generative dialogue, enriching the debate between the story of incumbent utilities and the story of the coalition.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 13th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

The summary of the EWPC article The BIG California LIE says “The BIG LIE is that retail competition is impossible in electric markets. The implementation of a competitive retail market was the center of the debate in California. Instead of cooperating to implement it, the three big California utilities, that didn't care about the end-costumers, acted very irresponsibly. EWPC is the paradigm shift to show that retail competition is not only possible, but absolutely necessary to turn the electricity industry into a vibrant value added business for all stakeholders.”

As I said in the EWPC article High Leverage Shake-Up in California, to which this article is a follow up, I am changing the opinion of “Instead of cooperating to implement it, the three big California utilities, that didn't care about the end-costumers, acted very irresponsibly,” since the utilities were not alone, but were also prisoners of the system like FERC and the PUC.

The good news is that the PUC is trying to amend the BIG LIE, by working hard to show the whole world that retail competition is possible. But to show it, the powerful commissioners will need to change their mindsets with a paradigm shift to EWPC.

So, I agree everyone should get both sides of the story. But there are not only an advocate and an opponent, as it was to be. To make things simple, I will say that there are only three sides to the story, the Good, the Bad and the Ugly.

The EWPC’s System: the Good System emerged as a Simple System.

This is an emergent story. The aim is a high leverage systemic transformation to insert the power industry in the third industrial revolution. The leverage is to come from the development of business model innovations, including the smart grid, that mutually reinforce themselves.

The Simple System leaves the transportation grid – a natural monopoly – as the integrated transportation only utility, that takes the central stage from generation by fulfilling an ultraquality imperative. Ultraquality transportation is a characteristic of the system for high power quality and system reliability, and not a characteristic of the unreliable parts like the generating units.

The smart grid transportation utility will provide for the long-term stability needed for investments in the power system, eliminate cross-subsidies and avoid unintended consequences, by providing a fundamental systemic solution to the worldwide electric industry systemic crisis. Generation and retail become fully competitive activities in the open market. No customer gets discriminated.

My story: “EWPC is the paradigm shift to show that retail competition is not only possible, but absolutely necessary to turn the electricity industry into a vibrant value added business for all stakeholders.”

The incumbent’s System: the Bad System is an evolution of the Old System.

This story is lead by the three California utilities, which have a lot of power and have the California legislators - the status quo - in their side. The Bad System has large power customers who had already signed direct access contracts, but discriminates everybody else to remain as utility customers.

The incumbent utilities’ story: “… expanded direct access could undermine the long-term stability needed for investments in the power system, shift costs from one group of customers to another and produce unintended consequences such as the failed deregulation." I agree that it is to be expected with a symptomatic solution of the systemic crisis, resulting by remaining imprison by the generation centered stage utility system.

The Coalition System: the Ugly System is a very Complex System.

This story is led by a coalition of power companies and government agencies that now wants to revive the “direct access” part of the failed deregulation experiment. The CPUC is looking for a symptomatic solution within the boundaries of the present imprisoning system.

Competition was closed in California until 2017 when the long term contracts between the California Department of Water Resources expire. But the PUC decided to look at whether the contracts could be assigned to someone else, such as the utilities. Such symptomatic solution is bound to be a low leverage system intervention, that increases even more the complexity of the existing system.

The coalition story: “…direct access allows customers to choose rates and services that help them compete and manage risks while developing a broad power market that can provide more options and lower prices for customers.” This is not possible with structural separation as the Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center working paper showed. To make it possible a paradigm shift to EWPC is needed.



martes, marzo 11, 2008

Competitividad y Aranceles a Gases Invernadero

En muchas partes del mundo los sectores productivos se quejan de cómo los altos precios de electricidad afectan la competitividad. Resulta que en otros lugares en que se emplean fuentes para producir electricidad que exportan altas cantidades de gases invernadero, dándole ventajas comparativas a los sectores productivos de esos países.

Esas ventajas comparativas se pueden convertir ahora en ventajas desleales de comercio internacional si se negocian e implantan disciplinas en la OMC para imponer aranceles a la exportación de gases invernadero por parte de las empresas al medioambiente global. Las condiciones para esas disciplinas están más que dadas en la actualidad.

La unión de los países que dependen fuertemente de importaciones de petróleo, en vez de invertir en desarrollo de centrales a carbón, lo que deben hacer es constituir un grupo de presión en la OMC para facilitar el desarrollo de energías limpias sin tener que subsidiarlas. El mecanismo sería la negociación de esos aranceles, los cuales generarían grandes ingresos de exportación a las empresas que menos contaminen.

Esta idea en bruto necesariamente debe estar ligada a exportaciones cada vez menores a la atmósfera de los gases invernadero.

Al respecto, acabo de colocar una nota debajo del artículo Still Another Look at Global Warming, por Ferdinand E. Banks, que dice:

The WTO could be entrusted as the "single agency” with "the power to enact globally binding environmental legislation." Clearly the WTO disciplines should be developed with a corresponding "miracle" attitude in place.

That is in line with what I suggested earlier, that instead of a tax or emissions trading, tariff schedules on exports of GHG should be in place. Since this is no a tax, the tariffs schedules would have a range that would be negative, meaning that company export below the threshold level would generate a credit for the company. This is just an idea for discussion to suppress GHG, by changing the tariffs schedules and reducing the corresponding thresholds as time goes on.

The case for WTO disciplines has already been studied earlier, I recall around the year 2000 in the energy and environment task forces of the WTO. In fact, there is an important unfair competition issue involved, making GHG suppression a trade issue amenable to binding agreements.

Just like Demand Integration, GHG Suppression, is just another externality that can be handled by 2GRs for the electricity industry. California is once again in the process of shaking-up the power industry, as can be seen in the EWPC article High Leverage Shake-Up in California. Since California has probably invested more than any other place in the world in the suppression of GHG gases, their companies could well become competitive by the process. The coalition of California businesses promoting “direct access” should look closely into this idea.

It is very clear that in the process, transportation should undergo GHG Suppression and thus shift to electricity. That is already happening with cities mass transportation initiatives.




High Leverage Shake-Up in California

California has a great opportunity to repair the damages of the BIG California LIE to the world. The CPUC can do it by introducing a high leverage shake-up of the power industry that results in a win-win proposition for every stakeholder, becoming the example of indiscriminate access of electricity for the third industrial revolution.

High Leverage Shake-Up in California

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 11th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has begun a process that could allow businesses and homeowners to bypass utilities and buy power on the open market. See Shake-up could be coming in electricity. The CPUC is considering a limited form of deregulation called “direct access.” This time there is hope that the intervention of the systemic electricity crisis does not result once again in a BIG California LIE.

On the EWPC article Shrinking the Regulator’s Jobs, I updated my views on the BIG California LIE and wrote that “I am now convinced that FERC, the CPUC and the three largest California utilities actions were integral part of the natural systemic response that led to the vicious circle of the mistaken efforts that has had a large impact on the delay of restructuring worldwide.” In that light, for details (please hit corresponding link of the EWPC article here and below) see Slicing the Last of the Regulated Monopolies.

However, direct access could be just another form of low leverage structural separation, which maintains in place incumbent utilities and produces well known unintended consequences. See Utilities vs. Neelie Kroes.

To become a high leverage shake-up, the process should allow all customers, without any discrimination, to buy and sell power (Watt-Vars and NegaWatts-NegaVars) in the open market. The term “bypass” is a trap; utilities should be restructured by having the CPUC consider the following:

Adopt a shared vision of the end-state of the electricity industry for quite some time, as provided by the Electricity Without Price Controls (EWPC) paradigm. See Creative Destruction of the Old Electric Paradigm.

Adopt the essential requirements of the electricity industry which are: Active Demand, Retail Competition and Ultraquality Transportation. See Power Markets Essential Requirements and Power Markets Essential Requirements - II.

Perform restructuring to provide a high leverage shake-up that minimizes unintended consequences by considering the management of systemic risks in the long run and the short run. See Another EWPC Discovery and Another EWPC Discovery II.

Redefine utilities as transportation only utilities that provide Ultraquality Transportation. See The Smart Grid Transportation Utility.

Retain price controls on the transportation utilities closed market. Shift from price controls to prudential regulations in the open market. For details see Shrinking the Regulator’s Jobs.

Introduce “direct access” under Second Generation Retailers - 2GRs with statewide Retail Competition. Later on those 2GRs should be able to operate in federal and worldwide markets as EWPC becomes the new paradigm, where the large value creation will result in a win-win proposition for every stakeholder. See The Sixth Disruptive Technology.


sábado, marzo 08, 2008

Another EWPC Discovery

This is the summary of the important discovery: instead of “retail competition for electric generation” as the Working Paper reads in page 3, what is needed in the third industrial revolution to reduce the risks in the power industry is Retail Competition and Active Demand (to get Demand Integration), under Ultraquality Transportation, which in turns are the three essential requirements of EWPC.

Another EWPC Discovery

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 8th, 2008. Updated on March 9th, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Thanks to Don Giegler for helping me inquire further into the essential elements that are generating uncertainty in the power industry, and that are fueling higher than necessary risks as a consequence of the restructuring experiments implemented. A new and important EWPC finding is the result.

The vertical integration paradigm mindset had a large negative impact on restructuring, which we can now be reversed by making a shift to the EWPC paradigm mindset. The abstract of the Working Paper CEIC-08-03, starts with “Restructuring of the electricity industry was expected to improve the operating efficiency of electric power generators, leading to lower production costs and retail prices.” That is a great statement for the gone days of the second industrial revolution, but not for the third industrial revolution that we are experimenting.

I have written earlier that power generation should no longer be at center stage in the industry anymore. The finding help stress, very clearly indeed, that under EWPC center stage shifts to the regulated transportation utility, which will concentrate on both system adequacy and system security to enable maximum social welfare in the open retail and wholesale markets.

Under EWPC, the transportation (transmission and distribution) utility will operate in a very stable regulatory environment, with a guaranteed rate of return in the traditional sense, letting the transportation expansion plans to be developed at least costs for the whole power system (not just for transportation). Wall Street should be very happy with those companies’ investments on the smart grid. Uncertainty gone for transportation investments!

Demand Integration should be in the long run the most important source of lower costs, and/or higher value, to customers, as transaction costs of retail operations decrease, helping increase the efficiency of the whole system. It is Demand Integration coupled with higher levels of coordination in operation that will help available base load central station generation operate at higher load factors, while leading to more stable market prices. That way, Wall Street will be pleased on those investments as they operate in a relatively more certain environment.

This is the summary of the important discovery: instead of “retail competition for electric generation” as the Working Paper reads in page 3, what is needed in the third industrial revolution to reduce the risks in the power industry is Retail Competition and Active Demand (to get Demand Integration), under Ultraquality Transportation, which in turns are the three essential requirements of EWPC.

Reference and context:

EWPC article Power Markets Essential Requirements,

EWPC “article” Power Markets Essential Requirements - II

Comments under the EnergyPulse article New Market Signals Are Urgently Needed to Change the Global Warming Threat, by Rafael Herzberg, Partner, Interact Ltd., Energy Consulting

miércoles, marzo 05, 2008

Power Markets Essential Requirements

Should we keep wasting time and money fixing unfeasible markets propositions? To perform the actual implementation of the EWPC paradigm shift, it is wise to start on the essential requirement of the markets system.

Power Markets Essential Requirements

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 5th, 2008.
Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Thanks Todd for your post.

We should forget the details, and focus just on the essence.

In addition to the ultraquality requirement (not considered at the outset of deregulation), there are 8 possible discreet combinations of the following three variables. Every feasible paradigm (of the 16 possibilities many are just not feasible) needs to select a YES or a NO as an answer to make a paradigm shift.

1) Wholesale Competition: YES or NO
2) Retail Competition: YES or NO
3) Active Demand: YES or NO. (Also not considered at the outset of deregulation.)

In the essence of EWPC all four variable are YES. The combination of Active Demand and Ultraquality Transportation (retained by the closed transportation market) leads to the requirement of Demand Integration to power system planning, operation and control, which is accomplished by 2GRs while performing Retail Competition and Wholesale Competition (in the open market).

Under vertical integration (fully regulated plans – Don’s paradigm) all three answers are NO. Ultraquality is a YES, but property of generation and transmission, as Inactive Demand is considered as an externality. The world changed making vertical integration unfeasible, and as a result we need to change policies, from Inactive Demand to Active Demand, as you explained on 1.15.08 in the excellent contribution that I named as An Undiscussed Elefant. Here again, to keep the ultraquality requirement leads to the need of Demand Integration by 2GRs.

At the outset, restructuring had inactive demand and separate transmission and distribution, with distribution most of the time under the incumbent utility. Lack of an ultraquality requirement and active demand in the original restructuring market architecture and design made it unfeasible. Trying to fix the BIG flaws of the original restructuring has resulted in an inordinate increase in complexity (as many unneeded rules tied to earlier contractual and regulatory arrangements remain buried while giving unnecessary commercial rights) by adding costly incremental extensions of Capacity Markets (a feature of vertical integration), NERC mandatory requirements, recently Demand Integration, etc. That is an extremely destructive and uncertain method to get there.

Since IMEUC has NO Retail Competition nor Ultraquality, and thus NO Demand Integration to power system planning, operation and control, it is just an incomplete and unfeasible proposition.

The above is just another confirmation that EWPC is the winning market architecture and design paradigm. Should we keep wasting time and money fixing unfeasible propositions?





An Undiscussed Elefant

Posted by Todd McKissick on 1.15.08, under the article Climate Change & Energy Security - What's Really at Stake in the 2008 Election. It is posted as part of an inquiry made by Todd to myself.

There seems to be an elephant in the room that no one is discussing. We all know that governmental policy is at best only influenced by corporate interests and at worst entirely driven by them. Why then, is the solution always to look to them to fix our problems? I firmly believe that the only way to solve this problem is to put all our available investment into new and alternative technologies. These are the only thing that fully offsets fossil problems. Sure, conservation (in it's many forms) is needed but that will happen in proportion to price and awareness. Unfortunately, it only delays the big crunch (regardless of whether you're worried about GW or economy or security). Sure, investment is needed in extending our current supplies whether that's crude, NG or even nuclear but again it's only a delay. From a long term point of view, the only genuine solution is fully renewable technologies. Why not speed up that development?

There are those that say these technologies have too many problems. Examples include scale, dependability, cost and even aesthetics. The reality is that these are all more easily solvable than the much touted 'delays' being offered as our best first goal.

My research has found literally hundreds of backyard inventors that have created very viable systems to solve each of our needs. One guy is modifying hummer vehicles as a publicity stunt to show they can have less emissions, get over 85 mpg and have more performance than stock. His cost is around $30,000, but estimates it to be under $3,000 when built-in at the factory. What kind of mileage could he get in a conservative car? Why isn't the wonderful government all over this guy throwing money at him? Detroit is just now beginning talks though, so who knows.

Another guy in Africa modifies motorcycle engines for $100 to double their mileage and halve their emissions. He's been fighting the patent process for a couple years that I know of.

Another small company is making home microCHP boilers and putting the waste heat to domestic use for a 40% overall savings. They got involved with a large corporation and are playing some strange game with their marketing now. With their product hitting the market 3 years ago, one has to wonder why it's no longer available.

There are hundreds of independant stories like this. There are also dozens of publicized stories of research based 'breakthroughs' in the PV or bio markets as well. Most have primary goals of being a cheaper solution to the consumer overall. When these become mainstream choices available to the consumer, they will make conservation a moot point (for that home). They will make the economic issue moot as well because the money will be spent at the lowest consumer level and be directly offset by fuel savings. They will also completely eliminate a portion of fossil fuel use to the extent that they generate. Lastly, their adoption will be more distributed, faster and easier than any other option, save only a distracting CFL switchover. That adoption will also become worldwide which doubles the reduction in trade deficit felt by less crude imports.

The problem is that these solutions are not getting their fair shake in the market. Investment by vulture capitalists is not appealing to them. Government grants have too many strings and too long of a timeline. Publicly funded research (universitys, etc.) has mostly continued research dollars as their primary goal. That leaves only two options, non-profit research grants and personal loans. Since non-profits have so many loopholes to jump through and have to maintain their non-profit status, they basically follow government guidelines on which technologies to assist.

We need to change policy to allow anyone to invest, loan or gift money fairly to our nations' creative individuals to get some of these to market. The outcome will be tremendous benefits to our energy woes, our economic woes and possibly even bolster the housing market. In the end, we need these new solutions anyway, why not focus on them and their current roadblocks now?


martes, marzo 04, 2008

Utilities vs. Neelie Kroes

Following the recent 280.5 million Euro fine ordered by Neelie Kroes, European Commissioner for Competition, to the Microsoft Corporation for failing to comply with the European Commission’s antitrust ruling, E.ON “became the first major continental power company to propose a break-up of major parts of its network,” apparently “handing a victory to the European Commission in its efforts to break the stranglehold the Continents dominant players have on the market,” as reported by The Independent (UK).

According to Business Week, the European authorities are being pushed by the British for utilities “to give up control of profitable distribution networks used to transport energy across the Continent. . . The goal is to level the playing field and make it easier for new entrants to take on incumbents such as GDF and Germany's E.ON. Analysts figure structural separation will help bring down end-user prices by letting new firms compete with former state-owned monopolies.”

Such structural separation of utilities is a low leverage intervention that doesn’t level the playing field as it was demonstrated in Spain, where incumbents made a lot of distortions. In addition, in such separation, the business critical issue of customer satisfaction is left unaddressed by first generation retailers. I suggest that the European approach needs to change to empower the customer. The separation required is to shed the T&D grid to come up with an integrated T&D transportation grid, as envisioned in the EWPC market architecture and design paradigm shift.

A recent working paper, “Electricity Prices and Costs Under Regulation and Restructuring,” published by the Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center, offers negative results of the low leverage structural separation in the U.S.A. According the authors, Seth Blumsack, Lester Lave and Jay Apt, “Restructuring was expected to improve the operating efficiency of electric power generators, leading to lower production costs and retail prices.” The paper “concludes that there have been some efficiency gains” for generators, but not necessarily for consumers.

Customers should be empowered to make timely decisions that regulator and utilities cannot do for them in a cost effective manner. They need to get involved as soon as possible to enable demand integration to power system planning, operation and control (See the EWPC article Demand Integration is NOT the Province of Politics.) The growth of the power industry should be centered in the increase of the communications assets intensity to reduce the energy assets intensity.

Tam Hunt is right: “Energy efficiency is far cheaper than any power technology and there is vast potential to increase efficiency in the US. . .” and elsewhere. But a cost efficient implementation cannot be done by regulatory mandates; it requires a high leverage restructuring of the power sector introducing Second Generation Retailer - 2GR to develop The Sixth Disruptive Technology “To do a better job of managing our dwindling energy resources…”

To enable such leverage it is necessary Shrinking the Regulator’s Jobs. Today´s reality can be understood by a general agreement that "There are massive problems to be solved in the electric industry, costing massive amounts of money, and with very little time to do it," that is giving rise to the Global Citizens' Call to Arms to perform the shrinking.

I hope that Neelie Kroes and her staff gets interested in learning about EWPC as soon as possible.



lunes, marzo 03, 2008

Apagones Asechan a Chile

Como resultado de la Ley Corta (ver Porque la Ley Corta de Chile es una Ley Corta), los chilenos vuelven de nuevo a preocuparse los apagones que los asechan, como se puede ver más en la siguiente noticia.

03/03/2008

MARCELO TOKMAN

Gobierno Confía en que No Habrá Cortes de Luz en Marzo



Diario Estrategia On-Line

El ministro de Energía reconoció que pese a las medidas acordadas para no llegar a esa situación, factores como la salida de otra central del Sistema podrían provocarlo. En todo caso, precisó que “no nos hemos puesto en el escenario”.

Diversas autoridades han tocado el tema del posible racionamiento en este mes marzo, ¿se llegará a esa situación?

—Hemos tomado todas las medidas a nuestro alcance para evitar que haya racionamiento, pero no olvidemos que tuvimos una seguidilla de factores que han significado un escenario muy complejo desde el punto de vista energético.

—¿Cuáles son estos factores?

—El marco general está dado cuando comenzó la incertidumbre de los envíos de gas de Argentina, que produjo un congelamiento de las inversiones que, aunque fue resuelto con la Ley Corta 2 de 2005, los proyectos demoran en materializarse, por lo que todavía estamos con estrechez. Además, los envíos de gas han empeorado año tras año.

—¿Qué otras situaciones han afectado?

—La generación hidro sigue siendo muy importante dentro del sistema, sobre todo en el SIC, lo que nos deja muy vulnerables a las condiciones hidrológicas, en un 2007 que fue el tercer año más seco en los últimos 50 años. También tuvimos las temperaturas más bajas en muchos años, y hasta hubo un terremoto. Muchas cosas que anticiparon un 2007 muy complejo y que 2008 también lo será, por eso tomamos múltiples medidas.

—¿Se han detectado más dificultades?

—A comienzos de año nos dimos cuenta de tres factores adicionales que agravaron la situación. La salida de Nehuenco, que inicialmente estaría fuera un mes y medio, pero probablemente estará fuera hasta fines de junio, y son 370 MW que tienen un impacto; En segundo lugar, y lo único que se veía tal vez como positivo, era que la poca precipitación coincidió con temperaturas muy bajas y las estimaciones indicaban una buena acumulación de nieve, lo que anticipaba una importante cuota de generación hidroeléctrica para 2008, pero como lamentablemente subieron mucho las temperaturas a mediados de diciembre, el deshielo se anticipó. Finalmente, el fenómeno de La Niña está en pleno, recién en la última revisión se ve una reversión en las temperaturas del Océano Pacífico, aunque estaremos en una situación más cercana a lo normal los últimos meses del invierno, lo que implica pronósticos no muy auspiciosos en términos de precipitaciones para este año.

Las Medidas

—¿Cómo se reaccionó a estas complicaciones?

—Además de las medidas tomadas, fue necesario algunas adicionales, que anunciamos a comienzos de mes. Las principales eran tres: Los mecanismos del decreto de racionamiento, que son de orden más preventivo, como reducción del voltaje, y que de alguna forma se intervienen las decisiones del CDEC para que sea más conservador en el uso de las aguas; la prolongación del horario de verano, y la flexibilización en el uso de aguas del Maule y el Laja, de forma tal que solamente se utilizan si ya se despachó todo el resto del parque de generación. También están las conversaciones con las generadoras para ver si comenzarán a usar el 90 Bis, que es la posibilidad que ellos incentiven la disminución del consumo.

—¿Cómo ha sido el diálogo con las generadoras?

—Les señalamos el contexto de estrechez para solicitar dos acciones concretas. Una es que conversen con los clientes de mayor tamaño la posibilidad de un acuerdo en el cual disminuyan el consumo, y por otro lado, saber si efectivamente van a hacer uso de esta nueva posibilidad.

—¿Qué respuestas han dado?

—Se nos dijo que hay interés en algunas de estas empresas para empezar a utilizar este mecanismo prontamente.

De concretarse, ¿qué incentivo tendrán los clientes para disminuir su consumo?

—Un primer incentivo, independiente de este mecanismo, es el encarecimiento del petróleo, que ha estado sobre los US$100 el barril, más el encarecimiento de la electricidad producto de la ausencia de capacidad de generación hidro efectiva, es lamentablemente un beneficio evidente, que explica que la tasa de crecimiento de la demanda esté más baja de lo proyectado.

—¿Y las empresas?

—Una generadora tiene un contrato donde debe vender a precio nudo, y (en caso de no poder generar) el costo de cumplir con ese compromiso es muy grande. Es una brecha muy significativa respecto al costo marginal, que en el SIC ha alcanzado US$300 por MW, entonces el beneficio que tiene un generador que reduce lo que tiene que vender y libera ese MW para venderlo en el mercado spot o no se ve en la obligación de tener que comprar en el mercado spot, es enorme.

Impacto Económico

Entonces, ¿se da por descartado el racionamiento?

—Nosotros no podemos descartar racionamiento, pero creemos que dados los escenarios previstos para este mes, no debiera haber. Sin perjuicio de ello, si en algún momento se produce una falla en una central de tamaño significativo, como pasó con Nehuenco, puede ser una situación más compleja.

Las medidas anunciadas, ¿podrían afectar la producción de empresas?

—Ocurre todo lo contrario. En ausencia de estas medidas, sí habría un costo mayor para la actividad económica, porque el costo de que haya racionamiento y problemas de suministro es enorme.

—¿Cuánto podría impactar en la economía un racionamiento?

—No nos hemos puesto en el escenario, porque estamos preocupados de tomar las medidas para evitar que ocurra. Si bien no lo podemos evitar, lo que hacemos es tratar de evitarlo; por otro lado, la experiencia de dimensionar efectos económicos y macroeconómicos está en otra parte, estamos concentrados específicamente en el sector energético.

Negociaciones

—¿Cómo se ha desarrollado la negociación con Argentina, de la que surgió el swap de Central Puerto y Colbún?

—Estamos llevando hace tiempo conversaciones, intercambios muy frecuentes, en el contexto de lo que nos solicitaron las Presidentas, para ver si existe posibilidad de lograr algún tipo de acuerdo que dé un poco más de certeza respecto de qué ocurrirá con los envíos de gas durante este año. En ese contexto, revisamos el tema de los swap y se llegó al acuerdo de autorizar esta operación, pero la verdad es que estamos todavía en medio de esas conversaciones.

—¿Cuándo habría un acuerdo?

—Es de esperar que durante el mes de marzo ya podamos tener novedades.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

SI SE DECIDE INCORPORARLA

Recién en 12 ó 15 Años Podria Haber Energía Nuclear

Luego del informe de la Comisión Zanelli, encargado por la Presidenta Michelle Bachelet para ver las posibilidades de desarrollar energía nuclear en Chile, las investigaciones se han mantenido. “Estamos con distintos estudios. Durante el mes de marzo y abril licitaremos un número de estos, enfocados en los temas de seguridad e institucionalidad, y al mismo tiempo hay otros estudios permanentes, que no sólo afectan la energía nuclear, sino que otras decisiones: Uno para modelar la demanda futura y proyectarla para los próximos 30 años, por ejemplo”, explica el ministro Tokman, consciente de que para tomar una decisión de esta magnitud “hace falta responder muchas preguntas”.Por ello, la autoridad solicitó un presupuesto al Congreso para los nuevos estudios que se requieran, como también conformar un “grupo asesor con gente de la CNE, además de tres integrantes de la Comisión Zanelli (Jorge Zanelli, Diego Infante y Alejandro Jofré)”, precisa. También se ha recibido la colaboración de la Organización Internacional de Energía Atómica. Aunque esto no significa que se trate de una iniciativa que se pueda concretar de aquí a un par de años.“Si esto se quiere hacer seriamente, en la etapa que está Chile, recién entre 12 y 15 años más podríamos contar con esta alternativa. Hemos metido recursos, tiempo y colaboración internacional para analizar seriamente la alternativa”, concluye el ministro de Energía.



Estado Fallido = Qué Paisaje = Somos un Garabato

En su columna Los Buenos Días del Director, en el periódico El Día, el Dr. Rafael Molina Morillo trae hoy ¿Fallido, paisaje o garabato? que podemos abajo. Su conclusión es que "... depende únicamente de nosotros los dominicanos, que debemos ser más exigentes con las autoridades que elegimos y con nosotros mismos, para que las cosas sean como Dios manda. Solo así dejaremos de ser fallidos, paisajes o garabatos."

Primero se dijo que este era un Estado fallido, pero esa teoría parece haber sido descartada, principalmente cuando se compara la República Dominicana con el vecino Haití. Pero eso es como “coger piedras para los más chiquitos” y así no tiene gracia la cosa.

Lo cierto es que, si no somos ya un Estado fallido, andamos cerca de serlo, a juzgar por la falta de institucionalidad que se nota en varias áreas de la administración pública y de los derechos humanos. Muchas cosas andan torcidas o simplemente no funcionan. Eso no necesita demostración…¿o sí?

Hay una forma más poética de decirlo, y de tanto repetirla, está gastada la frase: “Esto no es un país, sino un paisaje”. Equivale, en el fondo, a lo mismo.

Sin embargo, en conversaciones informales con colegas periodistas he escuchado varias veces, como quien no quiere la cosa, un nuevo término para referirse al estado de desorden, impunidad, corrupción, mentiras y politiquería que impera en esta, nuestra tierra.

Esa forma de describir a nuestra nación es que somos “un garabato”, o sea un trazo indefinido y desordenado que se estampa sin pretensión alguna en un pedazo cualquiera de papel.

No es que sea pesimista ni que menosprecie lo dominicano. Al contrario, lo que me gustaría es que las cosas fuesen de otra manera. Y eso depende únicamente de nosotros los dominicanos, que debemos ser más exigentes con las autoridades que elegimos y con nosotros mismos, para que las cosas sean como Dios manda. Solo así dejaremos de ser fallidos, paisajes o garabatos.

(r.molina@codetel.net.do)


sábado, marzo 01, 2008

Enabling AMI’s Growth

A realistic growth of AMI requires that system’s imprisoned utilities and regulators let go, by changing our most basic ways of thinking. “If these do not change, any new ‘input’ will end up producing the same fundamentally unproductive types of actions.” The result will be much needed industry consolidation and opportunity for innovative AMI competitive providers to emerge to fuel AMI growth without today’s limitations.

Enabling AMI’s Growth

By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.
Systemic Consultant: Electricity

First posted in the GMH Blog, on March 1st, 2008.

Copyright © 2008 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

Mark Hall, Research Analyst, Chartwell Inc., has written the very timely article Advanced Metering Growth to Expand Significantly, but Industry Penetration Still Low. In the article, I'd found very instructive that “the number of installed ‘smart’ meters – those that are both advanced and serve as a gateway to customers’ homes – are almost nonexistent.”

Mark adds that “Based on the 18.5 million residential AMR endpoints represented by the 111 utilities Chartwell surveyed, it is estimated that two out of every 15 residential AMR meter is two-way and capable of delivering customer data on an hourly basis.” Such “gauge [of] a realistic industry ratio of true advanced metering installations” as he names it, signals that utilities and regulators are imprisoned in a system that doesn’t enable them to do the job required.

The potential for Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) growth is indeed very large. There is, however, a typical systemic problem that gets in the way. In the “Dance of Change,” Peter Senge et al write: “Our core premise … is that the sources of these problems cannot be remedied by more expert advice, better consultants, or more competent managers. The sources lie in our most basic ways of thinking. If these do not change, any new ‘input’ will end up producing the same fundamentally unproductive types of actions.”

To enable growth, it is essential to place attention on the limiting processes to make them visible and on the fundamental shift in thinking to develop the necessary leverage. The limiting processes inherent in today’s systems are found in the interaction of the regulator and the utility, which come from the great power of the larger culture, structures, and norms that exert great resistance against the best efforts of effective growth. EWPC is a market architecture and paradigm shift that changes the roles of the regulator and the utilities with a high leverage intervention to enable larger AMI and smart grid growth.

The intervention separates the utility grid from the utility enterprise. First, the utility grid retains the utility characteristics as a new transportation utility compact with a responsibility to transport under tolls price controls. The EWPC article The Smart Grid Transportation Utility (hit link here and further down to get more details) shows how to remove the limitations, imposed by the utility enterprise, which has priority over the utility grid; and that the regulators remain with a well known job. See also the EWPC article Shrinking the Regulator’s Jobs.

Second, the state utility enterprise, however, is shifted to the open market, where they become competitive retailers (see Second Generation Retailer - 2GR) in the federal market. So the state limitations on the federal retail markets are removed, while regulation shifts from price controls to prudential regulations. This way, regulators are not longer involved in risky AMI bets for which they are unprepared, passing such market innovation risks to the market with 2GRs. See the EWPC article The Sixth Disruptive Technology.

The result will be much needed industry consolidation (Chartwell reports 111 utilities surveyed) and much needed opportunity for innovative AMI competitive providers (other than Sensus and Itron, which seem to have the larger market share) to emerge under EWPC to fuel AMI growth without the above limitations. In addition, free of such limitations, a mutually reinforcing activity is expected to develop between the smart grid and AMI.