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Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF 22 November 2007

Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF. 22 November 2007. Background. Interim arrangements were put in place in 2005 Consistent connection boundary for demand and generation Introduction of GDUoS Long term arrangements were planned for implementation in 2007 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

22 November 2007

Page 2: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

2

Background

• Interim arrangements were put in place in 2005

– Consistent connection boundary for demand and generation

– Introduction of GDUoS

• Long term arrangements were planned for implementation in 2007

– Forward looking charging methodologies, priority EHV

– HV/LV generation

– Charges to IDNOs

– Charging products and structures

– Generators connected pre-April 2005

– Common format for charging methodology statements

Page 3: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Current position

• WPD– Implemented EHV methodology in April 2007– Continuing to progress outstanding issues

• G3 (SSE, SP, CN), UU & EDF– Consulted in 2007

• CE– Developing detailed project plan, discussions with Bath

University

• Most have made progress on load flow analysis

• We do not anticipate any new methodologies for implementation in April 2008

Page 4: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Planned implementation

• Previously said that new charging models should be implemented prior to start of DPCR5

• Progress to date has been slow and the work and time required has been underestimated

• Since April 2005, 81 mods submitted

– 58% not vetoed

– 19% withdrawn

– 23% vetoed

• Still no guarantees that revised methodologies will be in place by 2009

• Since 2005 understanding of charging principles has substantially increased

Page 5: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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HV/LV generator charging

• Existing generation charging model simplistic; EHV models cannot be readily extended

• At last ISG it was agreed that DCMF would progress

• DE is becoming increasingly important:

– DEWG has identified the importance of DUoS charges that take into account the benefits of generation

– Short haul demand related tariffs more cost-reflective?

• Needs to be progressed as a matter of priority

Page 6: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Boundary charging

• IDNOs constitute an important change to the DNOs’ business

• IDNOs will be competing with DNOs to provide part of the service of distributing electricity

• In doing so they will be dependent on monopoly services provided by the DNO

• Vital that DNOs ensure that charges for use of the upstream network are consistent with the requirements of competition law

• Remains a risk that current charging methodologies could distort competition

• We have repeatedly urged DNOs to review their approach to charging IDNOs without delay

Page 7: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Specific considerations

• What costs are assumed to be avoided? How are these calculated?

– What cost elements make up the fixed charge, in the boundary & end user tariff?

– What cost elements are represented by scaling, in the boundary & end user tariff?

• Justification for additional costs and how these are calculated

• Use of average assumptions

Page 8: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Principles

• Principle of equivalent charges for same loads is desirable but secondary to compliance with competition law requirements

• Charges based on the same model that is used to set charges for end-customers can be appropriate, subject to specific considerations above

• Differences in the tariff structure at the boundary compared to the structure applied by the DNO to its own end customers gives rise to the potential for inappropriate margins

– e.g. Capacity charges at the boundary for predominantly domestic sites could potentially restrict competition

• Risk that average assumptions may result in inappropriate charges in a number of situations

Page 9: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Options for taking forward SoC

Three options:

1. Continue with individual methodology development

– 42% mods to date vetoed or withdrawn

– Probable resource clash with DPCR5

2. Postpone development until after DPCR5

– Not appropriate for generation charges/benefits or for charges to IDNOs

3. Introduce a common methodology for all DNOs

Page 10: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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A common methodology for all DNOs

What are the benefits?

• Consistency in methodology across DNOs – benefits to suppliers and customers

• Most cost and time effective way to achieve a positive outcome within the original timescales

• Manage resources during busy price control period, for DNOs and for Ofgem, but would require commitment from all parties

Page 11: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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A common methodology for all DNOs

How would this be achieved?

• Draft common methodology for all DNOs, facilitated by Ofgem

• Likely to allow different versions of load flow analysis to determine time to reinforcement

• Taken forward through industry meetings in first half of 2008

• Implementation:

– high degree of buy-in at start, DNOs submit mods Sept 08; or

– implement as part of DPCR5 through licence mod and/or via DCUSA; need to consider governance process

• Look to approve methodologies in 2008/09

Page 12: Structure of Charges Year-end review for DCMF

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Any views?

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