Mapping the causal structure of price formation in Texas's transitioning electricity market
Shiva Madadkhani, Nils Sturma, Mathias Drton, Svetlana Ikonnikova
TLDR
Causal analysis reveals wind generation is now the dominant driver of Texas electricity prices, significantly surpassing natural gas.
Key contributions
- Wind generation is the dominant causal driver of Texas day-ahead electricity prices.
- Wind's price impact is 3x greater than natural gas, overturning the gas-driven market view.
- Wind reduces local prices but redistributes congestion costs across regions seasonally.
- Natural gas and electricity demand show region- and period-specific causal effects.
Why it matters
This paper fundamentally shifts understanding of price formation in transitioning electricity markets. Its causal insights are crucial for system planners and market participants to navigate renewable integration and evolving demand dynamics.
Original Abstract
Electricity markets are changing, driven by large-scale renewable integration and rising demand from electrification and digitalisation. This raises fundamental questions about how electricity prices form as the relationships among key price determinants evolve. Here we apply causal discovery to characterise these dynamics across major supply- and demand-side drivers of wholesale electricity prices in Texas, where rapid renewable growth intersects with surging demand. We show that wind generation has become the dominant causal driver of day-ahead electricity prices with effects more than 3 times larger than those of natural gas prices, overturning the view of the Texas market as gas-price-driven. Wind reduces prices locally but redistributes congestion costs across regions in seasonally varying patterns. Natural gas prices remain causally relevant, though their influence is modest and the dominant gas benchmark changes over time. Electricity demand also shows region- and period-specific causal effects. These findings highlight the need for causal models that capture time-varying relationships across both supply and demand to guide system planners and market participants navigating the ongoing transition.
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