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Why did British electricity prices fall after 1998?

Author(s)
Evans, Joanne; Green, Richard C.
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research.
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Abstract
In an attempt to reduce high electricity prices in England and Wales the government has reduced concentration among generators and introduced New Electricity Trading Arrangements (NETA). Econometric analysis on monthly data from April 1996 to September 2002 implies support for two conflicting hypotheses. On a static view, increases in competition and the capacity margin were chiefly responsible for the fall in prices. If generators had been tacitly colluding before NETA, however, the impending change in market rules might have changed their behaviour a few months before the abolition of the Pool. That view implies that NETA reduced prices.
Date issued
2003
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/45000
Publisher
MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
Other identifiers
2003-007
Series/Report no.
MIT-CEEPR (Series) ; 03-007WP.

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