Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources? / Andersen, Laura Mørch; Hansen, Lars Gårn; Jensen, Carsten Lynge; Wolak, Frank A.

Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2019.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Andersen, LM, Hansen, LG, Jensen, CL & Wolak, FA 2019 'Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?' Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. <https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2019_02>

APA

Andersen, L. M., Hansen, L. G., Jensen, C. L., & Wolak, F. A. (2019). Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources? Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. IFRO Working Paper Nr. 2019/02 https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2019_02

Vancouver

Andersen LM, Hansen LG, Jensen CL, Wolak FA. Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources? Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2019.

Author

Andersen, Laura Mørch ; Hansen, Lars Gårn ; Jensen, Carsten Lynge ; Wolak, Frank A. / Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2019. (IFRO Working Paper; Nr. 2019/02).

Bibtex

@techreport{49055813cede41b2884f1f50a58e04ae,
title = "Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?",
abstract = "We report results from a large field experiment that with a few hours prior notice provided Danish residential consumers with dynamic price and environmental signals aimed at causing them to shift their consumption either into or away from certain hours of the day. The same marginal price signal is found to cause substantially larger consumption shifts into target hours compared to consumption shifts away from target hours. Consumption is also reduced in thehours of the day before and after these into target hours and there is weaker evidence of increased consumption in the hours surrounding away target hours. The same into versus away results hold for the environmental signals, although the absolute size of the eects are smaller. Using detailed household-level demographic information for all customers invited to participate in theexperiment, both models are re-estimated accounting for this decision. For both the price and environmental treatments, the same qualitative results are obtained, but with uniformly smaller quantitative magnitudes. These selection-corrected estimates are used to perform a counterfactual experiment where all of the retailer{\textquoteright}s residential customers are assumed to face these dynamic price signals. We find substantial wholesale energy cost savings for the retailer from declaring into events designed to shift consumption from high demand periods to low demand periods within the day, which suggests that such a pricing strategy could significantly reduce the cost of increasing the share of greenhouse gas free wind and solar electricity production in an electricity supply industry. ",
author = "Andersen, {Laura M{\o}rch} and Hansen, {Lars G{\aa}rn} and Jensen, {Carsten Lynge} and Wolak, {Frank A.}",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
series = "IFRO Working Paper",
publisher = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",
number = "2019/02",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?

AU - Andersen, Laura Mørch

AU - Hansen, Lars Gårn

AU - Jensen, Carsten Lynge

AU - Wolak, Frank A.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - We report results from a large field experiment that with a few hours prior notice provided Danish residential consumers with dynamic price and environmental signals aimed at causing them to shift their consumption either into or away from certain hours of the day. The same marginal price signal is found to cause substantially larger consumption shifts into target hours compared to consumption shifts away from target hours. Consumption is also reduced in thehours of the day before and after these into target hours and there is weaker evidence of increased consumption in the hours surrounding away target hours. The same into versus away results hold for the environmental signals, although the absolute size of the eects are smaller. Using detailed household-level demographic information for all customers invited to participate in theexperiment, both models are re-estimated accounting for this decision. For both the price and environmental treatments, the same qualitative results are obtained, but with uniformly smaller quantitative magnitudes. These selection-corrected estimates are used to perform a counterfactual experiment where all of the retailer’s residential customers are assumed to face these dynamic price signals. We find substantial wholesale energy cost savings for the retailer from declaring into events designed to shift consumption from high demand periods to low demand periods within the day, which suggests that such a pricing strategy could significantly reduce the cost of increasing the share of greenhouse gas free wind and solar electricity production in an electricity supply industry.

AB - We report results from a large field experiment that with a few hours prior notice provided Danish residential consumers with dynamic price and environmental signals aimed at causing them to shift their consumption either into or away from certain hours of the day. The same marginal price signal is found to cause substantially larger consumption shifts into target hours compared to consumption shifts away from target hours. Consumption is also reduced in thehours of the day before and after these into target hours and there is weaker evidence of increased consumption in the hours surrounding away target hours. The same into versus away results hold for the environmental signals, although the absolute size of the eects are smaller. Using detailed household-level demographic information for all customers invited to participate in theexperiment, both models are re-estimated accounting for this decision. For both the price and environmental treatments, the same qualitative results are obtained, but with uniformly smaller quantitative magnitudes. These selection-corrected estimates are used to perform a counterfactual experiment where all of the retailer’s residential customers are assumed to face these dynamic price signals. We find substantial wholesale energy cost savings for the retailer from declaring into events designed to shift consumption from high demand periods to low demand periods within the day, which suggests that such a pricing strategy could significantly reduce the cost of increasing the share of greenhouse gas free wind and solar electricity production in an electricity supply industry.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - IFRO Working Paper

BT - Can Incentives to Increase Electricity Use Reduce the Cost of Integrating Renewable Resources?

PB - Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 213856431