Richard Harris - WestGen & WA Independent Power Association - Future proofing the WA electricity...

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WA Power and Gas Conference Wednesday, 16 March 2016 Richard Harris, Director, WestGen and Chairman WA Independent Power Association Future proofing the WA electricity market

Transcript of Richard Harris - WestGen & WA Independent Power Association - Future proofing the WA electricity...

WA Power and Gas Conference

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Richard Harris, Director, WestGen and Chairman WA Independent Power Association

Future proofing the WA electricity market

Introduction

• Markets and reform

• Networks

• Customer power and new business models

• Renewables and innovation

Benefits of a competitive electricity

market

• Markets better manage risk, capital efficiency and customer needs

• There is no good reason why governments should own generation

• Retail competition keeps pressure on prices and improves services

to customers

• Electricity networks may be better off in private sector

• Government ownership of assets and market entities conflicts with

policy role

• Open and competitive electricity markets are now the norm for

delivering power to consumers and they work

• Well designed, open markets provide the best means to future proof

electricity systems – no matter what new technologies come along

WA electricity market reform Mark2

• Capacity and energy market model preserved

• National market operator – AEMO

• System Management > AEMO

• Market governance/rule change reforms

• National Energy Regulator for networks

• Reserve Capacity Mechanism changes

• Constrained grid access

• Retail competition – FRC?

Still work to be done

• Government ownership vs policy maker

• Industry structure: dominance of Synergy

• Barriers to entry for new market players: retail

• Barriers to entry for new generation, especially

renewables

• Retiring old plant

• Ownership/future direction of networks

Network reform

• Constrained grid access and NER a good start

• Policy issues for transition – grandfathering access and rightsto capacity?

• Challenges of decentralised power models and newtechnologies

• Ownership/direction considerations – natural monopoly orbypass

• Risk and reward

• Owner should want to maximise use and offer new services tomeet the market needs

Customer power and new business models

• It’s a confusing world: customers are now generators

• And they will soon be storage owners

• Customers can switch on and off to suit their power needs

• What is the service offering to a customer?

• What is the new shape of the energy company vehicle – is the “gentailer”

model appropriate for the future?

• Or is it the “Uber” model?

Renewables and innovation

• Renewable Energy Target – not a lot of action, may need

extending beyond 2020

• Small scale/large scale

• Distributed/centralised

• Storage – smoothing intermittency and meeting peak

• DSM – empowering larger customers

• Price is a big driver, but also flexibility – especially with solar

• We’ve had technological innovation, we need financial

innovation

Observations

• Electricity reform in WA has come a long way since the 1990s

• Still a way to go, especially moving from government controlled to market

based solutions

• Market design should encourage investment and innovation – getting there

but need to understand how large projects are financed

• Predicting future technologies is like picking winners, not a good policy, the

key is getting the market design and industry structure right

• IPA has consistently supported competition and private sector investment in

energy assets as the best way of delivering electricity services to customers

Thank You

[email protected]

[email protected]