Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina
Power sector reforms in Chile and Argentina are now roughly fourteen and four years old. In both countries, restructuring and deregulation have increased efficiency, led to active entry by new generators, improved the quality of supply, and reduced prices in real terms. The authors' review of experience in both systems confirms that policymakers must apply effective measures to introduce and preserve competition. In Chile, a major concern is the predominance of one generator in one of the two systems.
id |
dig-okr-1098611617 |
---|---|
record_format |
koha |
spelling |
dig-okr-10986116172024-08-08T18:09:32Z Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina Lalor, R. Peter García, Hernán ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION Power sector reforms in Chile and Argentina are now roughly fourteen and four years old. In both countries, restructuring and deregulation have increased efficiency, led to active entry by new generators, improved the quality of supply, and reduced prices in real terms. The authors' review of experience in both systems confirms that policymakers must apply effective measures to introduce and preserve competition. In Chile, a major concern is the predominance of one generator in one of the two systems. 2012-08-13T15:32:52Z 2012-08-13T15:32:52Z 1996-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1996/06/441478/reshaping-power-markets-lessons-chile-argentina https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11617 English Viewpoint: Public Policy for the Private Sector; Note No. 85 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC |
institution |
Banco Mundial |
collection |
DSpace |
country |
Estados Unidos |
countrycode |
US |
component |
Bibliográfico |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
dig-okr |
tag |
biblioteca |
region |
America del Norte |
libraryname |
Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
language |
English |
topic |
ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION Lalor, R. Peter García, Hernán Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
description |
Power sector reforms in Chile and
Argentina are now roughly fourteen and four years old. In
both countries, restructuring and deregulation have
increased efficiency, led to active entry by new generators,
improved the quality of supply, and reduced prices in real
terms. The authors' review of experience in both
systems confirms that policymakers must apply effective
measures to introduce and preserve competition. In Chile, a
major concern is the predominance of one generator in one of
the two systems. |
topic_facet |
ACCESS TO TRANSMISSION ACTUAL COST OF GENERATION ASYMMETRY OF INFORMATION BASIC REGULATIONS BENCHMARK BIDDING BULK POWER COMPETITIVE BIDDING COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH DEREGULATION DISTRIBUTION COMPANIES DISTRIBUTION SERVICES ELECTRICITY COSTS ELECTRICITY THEFT EMPLOYMENT ENERGY MARKETS ENERGY PAYMENTS ENERGY PURCHASES FREE ENTRY FUEL MARKET FUEL MARKET TRENDS GENERATORS GOVERNMENT REGULATION INDEPENDENT GENERATORS INDEPENDENT SUPPLY MARGINAL COST MARKET FORCES MARKET INFORMATION MARKET STRUCTURE MARKET TRENDS MARKET VALUE NATURAL MONOPOLY POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION BRANCH POWER INDUSTRY POWER SECTOR PRICE CAP MECHANISM PRICE FOR ENERGY PRICE REDUCTIONS PRICE SETTING PRODUCERS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES RETAIL RETAIL PRICES SPOT MARKET SPOT PRICES STOCKHOLDERS SUPPLIERS TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION CHARGES TRANSMISSION FACILITIES TRANSMISSION LINES TRANSMISSION TARIFFS VARIABLE COSTS VERTICAL INTEGRATION POWER GENERATION ENERGY SUPPLY DENATIONALIZATION CONSUMER PRICES PUBLIC ENTERPRISES DEREGULATION ENERGY PRICES MARKET COMPETITION |
author |
Lalor, R. Peter García, Hernán |
author_facet |
Lalor, R. Peter García, Hernán |
author_sort |
Lalor, R. Peter |
title |
Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
title_short |
Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
title_full |
Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
title_fullStr |
Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reshaping Power Markets-Lessons from Chile and Argentina |
title_sort |
reshaping power markets-lessons from chile and argentina |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
1996-06 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1996/06/441478/reshaping-power-markets-lessons-chile-argentina https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11617 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT lalorrpeter reshapingpowermarketslessonsfromchileandargentina AT garciahernan reshapingpowermarketslessonsfromchileandargentina |
_version_ |
1807159668598898688 |