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An exploratory analysis of California residential customer response to critical peak pricing of electricity
Authors:Karen Herter  Patrick McAuliffe  Arthur Rosenfeld
Affiliation:1. Energy and Resources Group, University of California at Berkeley, 310 Barrows Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA;2. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, MS3111, One Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA;3. California Energy Commission, MS-35, Sacramento, CA 95814, USA
Abstract:This paper summarizes the results from an exploratory analysis of residential customer response to a critical peak pricing (CPP) experiment in California, in which 15 times per year participating customers received high price signals dispatched by a local electricity distribution company. The high prices were about three times the on-peak price for the otherwise applicable time-of-use rate. Using hourly load data collected during the 15-month experiment, we find statistically significant load reduction for participants both with and without automated end-use control technologies. During 5-h critical peak periods, participants without control technology used up to 13% less energy than they did during normal peak periods. Participants equipped with programmable communicating thermostats used 25% and 41% less for 5 and 2 h critical events, respectively. Thus, this paper offers convincing evidence that the residential sector can provide substantial contributions to retail demand response, which is considered a potential tool for mitigating market power, stabilizing wholesale market prices, managing system reliability, and maintaining system resource adequacy.
Keywords:Residential electricity   Electricity pricing   Critical peak pricing   Demand response   Load response
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