The Latest Market Data Show that the Potential Savings of New Electric Transmission was Higher Last Year than at Any Point in the Last Decade

February

10

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In 2022, additional transmission could have reduced electric system costs by more than in any year from 2012 through 2021. Generally high electricity prices coupled with extreme weather events and other factors helped drive the high value for transmission. Transmission congestion-relief values were high in many regions in 2022, with a number of interregional links reaching $200 to $300 million per 1000 MW of transmission capacity (or $23 to $34 per MWh), see Figure 1 below. Additionally, wholesale pricing patterns during winter storm Elliott at the end of 2022 illustrate the role of transmission in helping manage periods of grid stress. In our new fact sheet, we analyze the latest data and describe what energy pricing patterns tell us about the state of the U.S. power market and the possible value of additional transmission infrastructure.

Figure 1. High transmission value is observed in many regions in 2022. The annual cumulative value of a hypothetical 1000 MW transmission link is shown. These values are marginal (applying to the next unit of transmission) and based only on hourly energy price arbitrage. Note that we were unable to analyze transmission value where pricing data was limited or not available, for example in the non-ISO Southeast region.

Update with market data in 2022

In the fact sheet, we build on our past research, focusing on locational price arbitrage as one signal of the value of transmission expansion. The difference in wholesale electricity prices between two locations largely represents the cost of congestion or, conversely, a key potential value of new transmission. While the congestion-based value of transmission analyzed here represents one of the largest sources of transmission value, transmission provides other benefits that we do not measure (including, for example, reliability, resiliency, and emission-reduction benefits). Underlying the congestion-based transmission benefits that are the focus of this factsheet is the simple concept that transmission enables a lower cost set of generators to meet load than would otherwise be available.

Key Findings for 2022

In the fact sheet we provide additional detail and additional explanatory figures that describe four key points:

High transmission value (or equivalently, potential cost savings) existed in most regions in 2022 (Figure 1).
Transmission value was higher last year than at any point in the last decade (Figure 2).
As in past years, transmission value was concentrated in a small portion of total hours (roughly 50% of value derived from 5% to 10% of hours). The high value of a small set of hours with extreme weather, or unexpected conditions, suggests that planning approaches that do not adequately model or consider these conditions likely understate the economic value of new transmission infrastructure. (Figure 2)
Wholesale pricing patterns during winter storm Elliott illustrate the role of transmission in helping manage periods of grid stress. Figure 3 shows how transmission moved west to east with the storm. The value during this short period provided up to 20% of annual value for some links (see more details in the fact sheet).

Figure 2. Transmission value was higher in 2022 than in past years in the study period (left) and was concentrated in a small fraction of total hours (right)Mean (left) value and portion of value in selected periods (right) is calculated across the set of 64 links shown in Figure 1. Note that the set of links in the early years is smaller due to data constraints.

Figure 3. Transmission value moved east with cold surface temperatures December 22nd – 24th. The value shown above is calculated as a total for each day (central time). Darker blue colors indicate colder surface temperatures.

Key Limitations

The fact sheet describes important caveats and key limitations to the analysis, including the implications of the ‘marginal’ value calculations and additional context.

See more in our fact sheet at: https://emp.lbl.gov/publications/latest-market-data-show-potential.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. The authors are solely responsible for any omissions or errors contained herein.

Source: Emp.lbl.gov

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