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Shijie,
Additional changes. Abstract: The power market developments in the US have created several unique challenges for energy industry economists. We discuss the major factors underlying the exceptionally high volatility of electricity prices. We feel that some of them may reflect the flaws in power pools design and incomplete transition to fully deregulated markets in generation and transmission. The title is fine. Vince Shijie Deng <deng@isye.gatech.edu< on 10/01/2000 07:47:53 PM To: vkamins@enron.com cc: Subject: Re: INFORMS Abstract (fwd) ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Sun, 1 Oct 2000 14:29:20 -0400 (EDT) From: Shijie Deng <deng@isye.gatech.edu< To: VKaminski@aol.com Cc: Shijie Deng <deng@isye.gatech.edu< Subject: Re: INFORMS Abstract Vince, Thanks for the abstract! For the purpose of the conference program listing, the conference organizers need a title and an abstract which is longer than 50 words. Based on the abstract that you sent me, I took the liberty to make up a title and the 50-word abstract (attached below). Please make changes as you feel necessary and send them back to me. I'll send them out to the organizers once I get your confirmation on this. Best, Shijie Title: Current Challenges in Modeling Power Price Volatility Author: Dr. Vince Kaminski, Head of Quantitative Research, Enron Capital & Trade Resources Abstract: The power market developments in the US have created several unique challenges for energy industry economists. We discuss the major factors underlying the exceptionally high volatility of electricity prices. We feel that some of them may be a necessary price to pay for increased market efficiency and expanded customer choice. Shi-Jie Deng Assistant Professor School of ISyE Georgia Institute of Technology Office Phone: (404) 894-6519 E-mail: deng@isye.gatech.edu Home page: http://www.isye.gatech.edu/~deng On Sun, 1 Oct 2000 VKaminski@aol.com wrote: < Shijie, < < I am sending you the abstract for my INFORMS presentation. < < Vince < ****************************************************************************** < < ***** < < < The last three years were characterized by exceptionally high volatility of < the power prices in the US markets. The market developments have created a < number of unique challenges for energy industry economists. One immediate < question we have to answer is how to measure volatility of energy prices. < Although we can all agree that the prices in the power markets are < characterized by high variability, the traditional measures used in financial < economics (annualized standard deviation of log price returns) may not fit < well electricity prices. The second challenge is to explain the sources of < high price volatility and to answer the question to what extent it can be < attributed to problems that can be addressed in the long run. Such problems < include flaws in market design that allow some market participants to abuse < market power, limited availability and/or unequal access to transmission, < temporary shortages of generation capacity. Some factors underlying high < volatility of electricity prices may be of permanent nature and may be a < necessary price to pay for increased market efficiency and expanded customer < choice. <
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