Europaudvalget 2022-23 (2. samling)
EUU Alm.del Bilag 228
Offentligt
Denmark’s response to consultation on electricity market reform
State of play
The EU’s integrated and liberalised electricity market
model has been carefully
developed over two decades with the aim to ensure that electricity is produced and
delivered to consumers at least cost. It does so by promoting prices that reflect
underlying costs and therefore utilises resources most efficiently to the benefit of
consumers. Marginal pricing provides investment incentives to producers, energy
efficiency incentives for consumers, as well as incentives for flexibility that is
essential to integrate renewable energy and reduce price spikes. When combined,
these incentives overall put downward pressure on prices in the long run.
At the same time, 2022 gave rise to a period of enduring high electricity prices
across the continent. This has largely been caused by a gas shortage combined
with an unusually low availability of generation capacity
–
that is, a supply crisis.
This supply crisis created distributive challenges in the short to medium term that
have been addressed. There could be a need to assess possible regulatory
measures that increase the possibilities for consumers to be shielded from
sustained periods of high energy prices, while safeguarding security of supply and
leaving long-term investment signals intact.
The supply shortage and resulting high electricity prices created a drive to act fast
and to make interventions in the electricity market model. Market model changes
can however have significant and wide-ranging consequences, some of which can
be unintended and harmful to a market that has generally worked well terms of
providing low prices and a cost-effective energy transition.
Changes need to be
grounded in careful analysis and impact assessments.
Regulatory
interventions at the pace seen last year should therefore not become the new
normal, nor should the short-term interventions create the basis for upcoming long-
term changes to the market model. In short, we should be careful not to introduce
permanent changes to the long-term electricity market model based on short to
medium term considerations.
Complementing short-term physical electricity markets with liquid forward markets
Stable and low electricity prices at all times should not be
an objective in itself
for
the short-term physical electricity markets. The physical reality of a decarbonised
electricity system is one of intermittent power production. This necessitates a
correspondingly flexible demand and supply. Varying prices on an hourly, daily and
monthly basis signal to market actors when they should consume less, produce
more and, looking ahead, whether to invest in new capacity. Without prices that
reflect the physical reality of a zero-emission power system, the consequence may
ultimately be a compromised security of supply and a lack of investment into new
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