Balancing the Norwegian regulated power market anno 2016 to 2022

The balancing market for power is designed to account for the difference between predicted supply/demand of electricity and the realised supply/demand. However, increased electrification of society changes the consumption patterns, and increased production from renewable sources leads to larger un-p...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEnergy strategy reviews Vol. 52; p. 101331
Main Authors Austnes, Pål Forr, Riemer-Sørensen, Signe, Bordvik, David Andreas, Andresen, Christian Andre
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.03.2024
Elsevier
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The balancing market for power is designed to account for the difference between predicted supply/demand of electricity and the realised supply/demand. However, increased electrification of society changes the consumption patterns, and increased production from renewable sources leads to larger un-predicted fluctuations in production, both effects potentially leading to increased balancing. We analyse public market data for the balancing market (manual Frequency Restoration Reserve) for Norway from 2016 to 2022 to investigate and document these effects. The data is newer than for similar analyses and the eight years of data is more than double the time span previously covered. The main findings are: (a) The balancing volumes are dominated by hours of zero regulation but for non-zero hours, the balancing volumes are increasing during the eight-year period. (b) The balancing prices are primarily correlated with day-ahead prices and secondary with balancing volumes. The latter correlation is found to be increasingly non-linear with time. (c) The balancing volumes and the price difference between balancing price and day-ahead price are strongly correlated with the previous hour. (d) The increasing share of wind power has not impacted the frequency of balancing, which has remained stable during the 8 years studied. However, the volumes and share of balancing power compared to overall production have increased, suggesting that the hours which are inherently difficult to predict remain the same. (e) Market data alone cannot predict balancing volumes. If attempting, the auto-correlation becomes the main source of information. •Statistical analysis of the Norwegian regulated power market between 2016 and 2022.•Showcasing trends, changes and predictability.•Influence of wind power expansion on regulation volumes and regulation market dynamics.
ISSN:2211-467X
2211-467X
DOI:10.1016/j.esr.2024.101331