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Redesigning residual cost allocation in electricity tariffs: a proposal to balance efficiency, equity and cost recovery

C. Batlle, P. Mastropietro, P. Rodilla

Renewable Energy Vol. 155, pp. 257 - 266

Summary:
In most power systems, residual costs (including, but not limited to, residual network costs and renewable support costs), are allocated through volumetric charges. This design, whose inefficiency has been latent in the last decades, is being challenged by the deployment of distributed energy resources, through which high-consumption customers may dramatically reduce the share of residual costs they pay, leaving a deficit to be paid by other customers. In principle, the most efficient alternative appears to be to allocate residual costs through fixed charges, but if these charges are flat, tariff equity is endangered. This article analyses the problem according to ratemaking theory, reviews the different allocation methodologies considered to date, and proposes a solution, based on uneven fixed charges, that allows to achieve efficiency, equity and cost recovery in modern electricity tariffs.


Keywords: Residual costs; Tariff design; Fixed charge; Equity; Demand elasticity; Grid defection


JCR Impact Factor and WoS quartile: 8,001 - Q1 (2020); 8,700 - Q1 (2022)

DOI reference: DOI icon https://doi.org/10.1016/j.renene.2020.03.152

Published on paper: August 2020.

Published on-line: March 2020.



Citation:
C. Batlle, P. Mastropietro, P. Rodilla, Redesigning residual cost allocation in electricity tariffs: a proposal to balance efficiency, equity and cost recovery. Renewable Energy. Vol. 155, pp. 257 - 266, August 2020. [Online: March 2020]


    Research topics:
  • Network regulation and tariff design with large shares of DER

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