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Quantifying the Value that Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Provide As a Hedge Against Volatile Natural Gas PricesMark Bolinger, Ryan Wiser, Devra Bachrach, and William Golove, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory KeywordsAbstractAdvocates of energy efficiency and renewable energy have long argued that such technologies can mitigate fuel price risk within a resource portfolio. Such arguments – made with renewed vigor in the wake of unprecedented natural gas price volatility during the winter of 2000/2001 – have mostly been qualitative in nature, however, with few attempts to actually quantify the price stability benefit that these sources provide. In evaluating this benefit, it is important to recognize that alternative price hedging instruments are available – in particular, gas-based financial derivatives (futures and swaps) and physical, fixed-price gas contracts. Whether energy efficiency and renewable energy can provide price stability at lower cost than these alternative means is therefore a key question for resource acquisition planners. In this paper we evaluate the cost of hedging gas price risk through financial hedging instruments. To do this, we compare the price of a 10-year natural gas swap (i.e., what it costs to lock in prices over the next 10 years) to a 10-year natural gas price forecast (i.e., what the market is expecting spot natural gas prices to be over the next 10 years). We find that over the past two years natural gas users have had to pay a premium as high as $0.76/mmBtu (0.53¢/kWh at an aggressive 7,000 Btu/kWh heat rate) over expected spot prices to lock in natural gas prices for the next 10 years. This incremental cost to hedge gas price risk exposure is potentially large enough – particularly if incorporated by policymakers and regulators into decision-making practices – to tip the scales away from new investments in variable-price, natural gas-fired generation and in favor of fixed-price investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 02_435.pdf Panels of the 2002 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in BuildingsPanel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design and Implementation Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design and Implementation Panel 6. Market Transformation Panel 7. Information and Electronic Technologies: Promises and Pitfalls Panel 8. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Understanding Markets and Demand | CalendarCall for papers deadline - eceee 2012 Industry Summer Study 28 Feb – 02 Mar 2012World Sustainable Energy Days 2012 29 Feb – 02 Mar 2012Australia's first energy efficiency summer study 01 – 02 Mar 2012WSED - Energy Efficiency Watch: Nearly zero energy buildings 22 – 24 Mar 2012Workshop on energy & society 28 – 30 Mar 20128th South-East European Congress & Exhibition on Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 28 – 30 Mar 2012South-East European Conference & Exhibition "SAVE the Planet" - Waste Management & Recycling, Environment |