This book describes the latest microeconomic concepts and operations
research (OR) techniques needed to comprehend the design and operation
of power markets, as well as the actions of their agents: producers,
consumers, operators, and regulators. This is critical when it comes to
addressing a constantly evolving power system environment that
incorporates an increasing number of no-marginal-cost renewable sources,
increasingly competitive storage facilities, increasingly responsive
demands, and widespread communication channels that allow distributed
decision-making. Such evolving environments call for a re-examination of
the microeconomic concepts and OR techniques required by graduate
students and practitioners in the electric energy field.
This accessible, tutorial-style book features numerous illustrative
examples to help readers grasp the economic concepts and OR procedures
used by power market professionals. The authors explian these concepts
and procedures and present a vision of a renewable-dominated
marketplace. Each chapter also includes exercises.