Steven Stoft Pdf — Power System Economics

Ethan, as market monitor, uses Stoft’s "Three Pivotal Supplier Test." He finds that during peak hours, Apex is "pivotal"—meaning demand cannot be met without them. He recommends a and a "must-offer" requirement. Apex sues. Ethan wins in federal court by citing Stoft’s logic: In a perfect market, no single seller controls price. In electricity, the grid creates natural bottlenecks. Regulation is not interference; it is the correction of a broken physics-based market.

Ethan is baffled. The market works perfectly every five minutes. Yet, the long-term story fails. He re-reads Stoft’s famous chapter on The narrative is tragic: Energy markets only pay for marginal energy (fuel). They do not pay for capacity —the fixed cost of being ready to run. In a pure energy market, when supply is plentiful, prices are low; generators make no money to cover their capital costs. But when supply is scarce, prices should spike to $10,000/MWh to pay for that scarcity. Politicians cap prices to avoid "spikes." Therefore, the money to build new plants simply vanishes from the market. power system economics steven stoft pdf

As Ethan hands his copy to a young engineer, he says: "Remember, in any other industry, price equals marginal cost. In power, price must also finance reliability, resolve congestion, and prevent collapse. Stoft’s book is the manual for building that impossible machine." Ethan, as market monitor, uses Stoft’s "Three Pivotal