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Killing Two Birds with One Stone: Can Real-Time Pricing Support Retail Competition and Demand Response?Galen Barbose, Ranjit Bharvirkar, Charles Goldman, and Nicole Hopper, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory KeywordsAbstractAs retail choice states reach the end of their transitional, rate-cap periods, state regulators must decide what type of default supply service to provide to customers that have not switched to To evaluate the potential role of RTP as a means to both ends – retail market development and demand response – we conducted a comprehensive review of experience with default RTP in the U.S. and examined the emergence of RTP as a product offering by competitive retail suppliers. Across the ten utilities with default RTP in place in 2005, between 5% and 35% of the applicable load remained on the rate. Based on interviews with competitive retailers, we find evidence to suggest that a comparable amount of load in these states has switched to hourly pricing arrangements with competitive retailers. Many customers on default or competitive hourly pricing are paying prices indexed to the real-time spot market, and thus have no advance knowledge of prices. Because the price responsiveness of customers under these conditions has yet to be formally analyzed, and relatively few efforts have been undertaken to help these customers become price responsive, the actual demand response impacts from hourly pricing in retail choice states remains largely an open question. However, we find that policymakers and other stakeholders in retail choice states have various strategies at their disposal to capture the potential demand response benefits from hourly pricing, while simultaneously supporting retail competition. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 111_151.pdf Panels of the 2006 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in BuildingsPanel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Panel 5. Utility Regulation and Competition: Incentives, Strategies, and Policies Panel 6. Market Transformation: Designing for Lasting Change Panel 7. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and Their Implications Panel 10. Roundtables and Interactive Sessions: Learning by Doing | CalendarGreen ICT for growth and sustainability? Linking science and policy 03 – 08 Jun 201238th IEEE Photovoltaic Specialist Conference 04 Jun 2012Call for papers MILEN 2012 08 Jun 2012Call for Abstracts - International workshop on energy efficiency for a more sustainable world 12 – 14 Jun 2012IEPEC - International Energy Program Evaluation Conference 15 Jun 2012Call for papers - IIASA Conference 2012. Worlds within reach: from science to policy 20 Jun 2012Energy futures and civil society in the EU - building a low carbon alliance |