When we pay our electricity bill, we are paying for more than just the operation of wind turbines or nuclear power stations. What with rental for the electricity meter, costs for using the power grids, value-added tax and a tax on electricity, coupled with a surcharge for the preferred sourcing of green power, the final price we pay is effectively double the generation cost.
Having said that, is it conceivable that there is such a thing as free electricity in the ever more dynamic power market?
The answer is yes - there is actually electricity that the
power grid operators have to pay for, to get rid of it. The European Energy
Exchange (EEZ) in
Due to an absence of feedback control mechanisms, coal-fired and nuclear power stations experienced periods of surplus supply at times of low demand that coincided with favourable weather conditions for the production of wind power.
However, since the power grid is unable to store electricity, this surplus power still had to be used to assure stable operation of the system. The outcome was that power grid operators contributed up to 13 Eurocents per kilowatt-hour to encourage major industrial companies to use the surplus electricity.
Negative electricity prices are an indicator of a market functioning properly
The real winners in this scenario were the operators of pumped-storage power
stations, a fair number of which are based in
Despite the fact that it is left to German electricity
customers to pick up the costs for this, free electricity is not in any way an
alarming event. "Negative electricity prices are the logical consequence
of market behaviour," states Kurt Rohrig from IWES, the Fraunhofer
Institute of Wind Energy and Energy System Technology, based in
Due to the fact that, since the early part of this year,
wind and solar power are being traded more frequently at
To eliminate negative prices, the power grid would have to be extended beyond the national borders of European countries. In other words, new long-distance power lines would make it much easier to balance out a regional surplus in one place with a simultaneous shortage of power in another European country.
More than 42 000 kilometres of new long-distance power lines needed by 2020
This expansion into a close-knit European network of power grids is already
starting to take shape, at least on paper. Kurt Rohrig states that, according
to the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity
(ENTSOE), over 42 000 kilometres of new power lines will be needed by 2020.
This enhanced long-distance power transmission grid, coupled with more intelligent control of power generators and consumers, holds the key to a more liberal market for electricity in which the fairest possible prices can be delivered, including during periods of strong wind.
energy-daily.com