CompartidoEl 24/11/22 por Comillas
Working Paper

The efficiency and distributional effects of alternative residential electricity rate designs

tipo de documento semantico ckh_publication

Ficheros

IIT-19-011A.pdf
Tamaño 1017951
Formato Adobe PDF
Autor
Burger, Scott
Knittel, Christopher
Pérez Arriaga, José Ignacio
Schneider, Ian
Scheidt, Frederik vom
Estado info:eu-repo/semantics/draft

Resumen

Idioma es-ES
Idioma en-GB
Resumen

Electricity tariffs typically charge residential users a volumetric rate that covers the bulk of energy, transmission, and distribution costs. The resulting prices, charged per unit of electricity
consumed, do not reflect marginal costs and vary little across time and space. The emergence of distributed energy resources - such as solar photovoltaics and energy storage - has sparked interest among regulators and utilities in reforming electricity tariffs to enable more efficient utilization of these resources. The economic pressure to redesign electricity rates is countered by concerns of how more efficient rate structures might impact different socioeconomic groups. We analyze the bill impacts of alternative rate plans using interval metering data for more than 100,000 customers in the Chicago, Illinois area. We combine these data with granular Census data to assess the incidence of bill changes across different socioeconomic groups. We find that low-income customers would face bill increases on average in a transition to more economically efficient electricity tariffs. However, we demonstrate that simple changes to fixed charges in twopart tariffs can mitigate these disparities while preserving all, or the vast majority, of the efficiency gains. These designs rely exclusively on observable information and could be replicated by utilities in many geographies across the U.S.

Tipo de archivo application/pdf
Idioma en-GB
Tipo de acceso info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
Fecha de modificacion 09/09/2022
Fecha de disponibilidad 18/02/2019
fecha de alta 18/02/2019

Compartida con: