James Bushnell, University of California Energy Institute
The factors most often cited as the causes of the California
crisis are the scarcity of generation capacity, a flawed market design,
and the venality of electricity producers. However, many of these attributes
were present in other electricity markets, none of which have suffered
through anything like the California crisis. The only factor not seen
in other markets in the world is the lack of contracts or other forms
of long-term supply arrangements. Policy efforts are therefore best directed
at developing a regulatory and retail environment where contracts are
freely entered into at prices reflective of underlying market conditions.
Keywords: electricity deregulation, energy markets, competition policy
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