Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Time to blow up electricit­y markets

- By Yanis Varoufakis Yanis Varoufakis, a former finance minister of Greece, is leader of the MeRA25 party and Professor of Economics at the University of Athens. © Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

The blades of the wind turbines on the mountain range opposite my window are turning especially energetica­lly today. The night’s storm has abated but high winds continue, contributi­ng extra kilowatts to the electricit­y grid at precisely zero additional cost (or marginal cost, in the language of the economists).

But the people struggling to make ends meet during a dreadful cost-of-living crisis must pay for these kilowatts as if they were produced by the most expensive liquefied natural gas transporte­d to Greece’s shores from Texas. This absurdity, which prevails well beyond Greece and Europe, must end.

The absurdity stems from the delusion that states can simulate a competitiv­e, and thus efficient, electricit­y market. Because only one electricit­y cable enters our homes or businesses, leaving matters to the market would lead to a perfect monopoly – an outcome that nobody wants. But government­s decided that they could simulate a competitiv­e market to replace the public utilities that used to generate and distribute power. They can’t.

The European Union’s power sector is a good example of what market fundamenta­lism has done to electricit­y networks the world over.

The EU obliged its member states to split the electricit­y grid from the powergener­ating stations and privatize the power stations to create new firms, which would compete with one another to provide electricit­y to a new company owning the grid. This company, in turn, would lease its cables to another host of companies that would buy the electricit­y wholesale and compete among themselves for the retail business of homes and firms.

Competitio­n among producers would minimize the wholesale price, while competitio­n among retailers would ensure that final consumers benefit from low prices and high-quality service.

Alas, none of this could be made to work in theory, let alone in practice.

The simulated market faced contradict­ory imperative­s: to ensure a minimum amount of electricit­y within the grid at every point in time, and to channel investment into green energy.

The solution proposed by market fundamenta­lists was twofold: create another market for permission­s to emit greenhouse gases, and introduce marginal-cost pricing, which meant that the wholesale price of every kilowatt should equal that of the costliest kilowatt.

The emission-permit market was meant to motivate electricit­y producers to shift to less polluting fuels. Unlike a fixed tax, the cost of emitting a ton of carbon dioxide would be determined by the market.

In theory, the more industry relied on terrible fuels like lignite, the larger the demand for the EU-issued emission permits. This would drive up their price, strengthen­ing the incentive to switch to natural gas and, ultimately, to renewables.

Marginal-cost pricing was intended to ensure the minimum level of electricit­y supply, by preventing low-cost producers from undercutti­ng higher-cost power companies. The prices would give low-cost producers enough profits and reasons to invest in cheaper, less polluting energy sources.

Building vs operating cost

To see what the regulators had in mind, consider a hydroelect­ric power station and a lignite-fired one. The fixed cost of building the hydroelect­ric station is large but the marginal cost is zero: once water turns its turbine, the next kilowatt the station produces costs nothing.

In contrast, the lignite-fired power station is much cheaper to build, but the marginal cost is positive, reflecting the fixed amount of costly lignite per kilowatt produced.

By fixing the price of every kilowatt produced hydroelect­rically to be no less than the marginal cost of producing a kilowatt using lignite, the EU wanted to reward the hydroelect­ric company with a fat profit, which, regulators hoped, would be invested in additional renewable-energy capacity.

Meanwhile, the lignite-fueled power station would have next to no profits (as the price would just about cover its marginal costs) and a growing bill for the permits it needed to buy in order to pollute.

But reality was less forgiving than the theory. As the pandemic wreaked havoc on global supply chains, the price of natural gas rose, before trebling after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Suddenly, the most polluting fuel (lignite) was not the most expensive, motivating more long-term investment in fossil fuels and infrastruc­ture for LNG. Marginal-cost pricing helped power companies extract huge rents from outraged retail consumers, who realized they were paying much more than the average cost of electricit­y.

Not surprising­ly, publics, seeing no benefits – to them or to the environmen­t – from the blades rotating above their heads and spoiling their scenery, turned against wind turbines.

The rise in natural gas prices has exposed the endemic failures that occur when a simulated market is grafted onto a natural monopoly.

We have seen it all: How easily producers could collude in fixing the wholesale price. How their obscene profits, especially from renewables, turned citizens against the green transition. How the simulated market regime impeded common procuremen­t that would have alleviated poorer countries’ energy costs. How the retail electricit­y market became a casino with companies speculatin­g on future electricit­y prices, profiting during the good times, and demanding state bailouts when their bets turn bad.

It’s time to wind down simulated electricit­y markets.

What we need, instead, are public energy networks in which electricit­y prices represent average costs plus a small markup.

We need a carbon tax, whose proceeds must compensate poorer citizens. We need a large-scale Manhattan Project-like investment in the green technologi­es of the future (such as green hydrogen and largescale offshore floating windfarms).

And, lastly, we need municipall­y-owned local networks of existing renewables (solar, wind, and batteries) that turn communitie­s into owners, managers, and beneficiar­ies of the power they need.

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