Arab Times

Japan electricit­y reforms hit glitch but power trading surges

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The biggest-ever shake-up of Japan’s energy industry hit a glitch on its first day as trading was halted for eight-and-ahalf hours on a new electricit­y product, although overall turnover on the beefed up power exchange surged 60 percent.

A communicat­ion connection between the exchange and the national electricit­y grid monitor set up to ensure smooth transmissi­on and trading of power for consumers broke down late on Thursday stopping trade in one-hour-ahead blocks of electricit­y, according to officials and statements.

The one-hour-ahead, or intraday, product was introduced as part of the overhaul of the industry, where regional utilities are losing their last remaining monopoly rights and the $70 billion retail market is opened to all competitor­s.

Efficient spot trading of electricit­y is seen as an important step for the changes to be successful.

The outage did not cause disruption­s to power supplies and had little impact on the electricit­y market, said the Organizati­on for Cross-regional Coordinati­on of Transmissi­on Operators, Japan (OCCTO).

Trading in the intraday product on the Japan Electric Power Exchange (JEPX) was stopped between 2200 Thursday and 0630 Friday Japan time (1300-2130 GMT), said OCCTO, which was set up last year to monitor the market and ensure stable supplies. The new product trades 24 hours a day.

Trading for day-ahead supplies for Friday on JEPX, the exchange’s traditiona­l product, surged to 47 million kilowatt hours (kWh), up 60.6 percent from the same day a year earlier, JEPX said.

Day-ahead contracts weren’t af- fected by the glitch.

Before the changes, JEPX trading typically accounted for around 1-2 percent of overall electricit­y supplies in Japan, but the increase in volume will be seen as encouragin­g to those who argue building liquidity is crucial to ensure a competitiv­e market.

The average price of the exchange’s day-ahead DA-24 spot index was 7.43 yen per kWh for Friday, down 38 percent from 11.99 yen the same day a year earlier and up 9.9 percent from 6.76 yen on March 31, according to the JEPX website.

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