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A Robust Statistical Analysis of the Role of Hydropower on the System Electricity Price and Price Volatility

Olukunle O. Owolabi, Kathryn Lawson, Sanhita Sengupta, Yingsi Huang, Lan Wang, Chaopeng Shen, Mila Getmansky Sherman and Deborah A. Sunter

Papers from arXiv.org

Abstract: Hydroelectric power (hydropower) is unique in that it can function as both a conventional source of electricity and as backup storage (pumped hydroelectric storage) for providing energy in times of high demand on the grid. This study examines the impact of hydropower on system electricity price and price volatility in the region served by the New England Independent System Operator (ISONE) from 2014 - 2020. We perform a robust holistic analysis of the mean and quantile effects, as well as the marginal contributing effects of hydropower in the presence of solar and wind resources. First, the price data is adjusted for deterministic temporal trends, correcting for seasonal, weekend, and diurnal effects that may obscure actual representative trends in the data. Using multiple linear regression and quantile regression, we observe that hydropower contributes to a reduction in the system electricity price and price volatility. While hydropower has a weak impact on decreasing price and volatility at the mean, it has greater impact at extreme quantiles (> 70th percentile). At these higher percentiles, we find that hydropower provides a stabilizing effect on price volatility in the presence of volatile resources such as wind. We conclude with a discussion of the observed relationship between hydropower and system electricity price and volatility.

Date: 2022-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene and nep-reg
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