Risk and Reward of Transitioning from a National to a Zonal Electricity Market in Great Britain
Lukas Franken, Andrew Lyden, Daniel Friedrich

TL;DR
This study evaluates the potential benefits and challenges of transitioning to a zonal electricity market in Great Britain, highlighting significant consumer savings, producer revenue impacts, and overall welfare gains based on a novel modeling approach.
Contribution
It introduces a transparent, open-source model to quantify impacts of a six-zone market in GB, providing new insights into economic and operational effects during 2022-2024.
Findings
Consumers could save over {a39.4/MWh} annually.
Northern generators could face 30-40% revenue reductions.
Potential welfare gains of {a3380-a3770} million annually.
Abstract
More spatially granular electricity wholesale markets promise more efficient operation and better asset siting in highly renewable power systems. Great Britain is considering moving from its current single-price national wholesale market to a zonal design. Existing studies reach varying and difficult-to-reconcile conclusions about the desirability of a zonal market in GB, partly because they rely on models that vary in their transparency and assumptions about future power systems. Using a novel open-source electricity market model, calibrated to match observed network behaviour, this article quantifies consumer savings, unit-level producer surplus impacts, and broader socioeconomic benefits that would have arisen had a six-zone market operated in Great Britain during 2022-2024. In the absence of mitigating policies, it is estimated that during those three years GB consumers would save…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectric Power System Optimization · Global Energy Security and Policy · Renewable energy and sustainable power systems
