Looking Beyond Marginal Pricing of Electricity Reimagining Market Design for a Near-Zero Marginal Cost Electricity System
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Författare
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Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
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Sammanfattning
The Nordic power market is organized around an energy-only design in which
marginal pricing of electricity and the merit order coordinate dispatch and, in
principle, remunerate investment. As the generation mix shifts toward near-zero
marginal cost sources, primarily variable renewables, hydropower and nuclear, the
price signal that this design relies on becomes structurally weaker, while capitalintensive
technologies depend on revenue predictability scarcity rents alone do not
provide. This thesis examines how the transition toward near-zero marginal cost
generation of electricity affects price formation, investment incentives and system
adequacy in the Nordic context. It evaluates structurally distinct market design
alternatives against the stated challenges. The study adopts a qualitative, abductive
research design combining an integrative literature review with two rounds of
semi-structured expert interviews. Four market designs are constructed and positioned
along a spectrum of intervention: the energy-only status quo, a Mosaic model
that layers complementary mechanisms onto the existing architecture, a Broadband
model that anchors revenue in contracted capacity rather than delivered electricity,
and a Command model based on centralized state planning. Each design is assessed
against a five-criterion framework covering price formation efficiency, investment
adequacy, system adequacy and flexibility incentives, regulatory and political feasibility,
and stakeholder acceptance. The analysis finds that the Nordic clearing
price currently remains functional largely due to hydropower’s water value mechanism
and European market coupling rather than marginal pricing, and that scarcity
rents tend towards becoming insufficient in order to incentivize long-term investment.
No design dominates across all criteria, but the Mosaic model emerges as the
most empirically supported and institutionally feasible direction. The Broadband
and Command models address the underlying coordination problem, but at costs
the Nordic and EU context cannot currently absorb. The central contribution of
the thesis is to reframe the design question, rather than choosing between distinct
market architectures. The more productive framing is which combination of complementary
mechanisms best addresses the specific structural challenges the Nordic
system faces at each stage of the transition.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
electricity market design, marginal pricing of electricity, near-zero marginal cost, energy-only, Nordic power market, hydropower, price formation, investment incentives, system adequacy
