Analysis of Restructuring the Mexican Electricity Sector to Operate in a Wholesale Energy Market
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Why Restructure?
2.2. Textbook Model and International Experience
- Separate segments vertical to the electricity industry, structurally (unbundling) or functionally (internal walls or rings, separating subsidiaries within the same organization).
- It creates a competitive segment of the electricity industry (generation, commercialization).
- It creates regulated segments (transmission, distribution, system operation).
- It avoids cross-subsidies among state companies.
- It allows for advanced regulation when the number of participants increases.
- Privatize the State’s assets in the electricity industry.
- It encourages improvement in the performance of the companies.
- It hinders the use of these companies in favor of costly political agendas.
- Increases the possibility of private investment, reducing the risk taken by the State in electricity projects, allowing the State to invest in other sectors.
- Restructure the generation sector horizontally.
- It creates many competitors to avoid market power and ensures that the wholesale energy market will deliver significant competitive results.
- Integrate the system operation, transmission, and distribution horizontally.
- It unifies system operation, centralizes unit dispatch, and maintains frequency, voltage, and stability parameters within their ranges.
- Create an ISO to manage the voluntary wholesale energy market.
- It expands competition, facilitates economic transactions among market participants, and minimizes the regulator’s intervention in the wholesale energy market.
- Enforce regulatory rules supporting open access to the power grid.
- It guarantees open and non-unduly discriminatory access to networks.
- Itemize retail tariffs for captive consumers.
- It differentiates the regulated tariff items from market items and allows the consumer to choose among suppliers.
- The supplier of small captive users must purchase energy in the wholesale energy market.
- Create an independent regulatory agency.
- With a good knowledge of costs, quality of service, and performance of transmission and distribution companies.
- Create transition mechanisms compatible with a well-designed market.
- Pre-existing pricing arrangements for captive users before they migrate to the retail market.
2.3. Regulation
3. Restructuring of the Mexican Electricity Sector
3.1. Background
3.2. Restructuring Process
- Generation.
- Transmission.
- Distribution.
- Basic Supply.
- Commercialization other than Basic Supply.
- Primary Fuels Supply.
- Vertical separation of the power sector activities.
- Horizontal restructuring in the generation sector.
- Horizontal integration of system operation, transmission, and distribution.
- The Centro Nacional de Control de Energía (CENACE) was created as an ISO to operate the voluntary wholesale energy markets.
- Regulatory Rules supporting network non-discriminatory access.
- Creation of an independent regulator.
- Itemization of retail tariffs for captive consumers in order to highlight the regulated tariffs and to allow the consumer to choose among suppliers without incumbent affection.
- The supplier of small captive users must acquire power in the wholesale energy market and long-term auctions.
- Transition mechanisms compatible with a well-designed market.
- Establish the required terms of strict legal separation or otherwise order the divestiture of assets to promote open access and efficient operation of the electricity sector (LIE art. 8 and 9).
- Establish, conduct and coordinate the country’s energy policy.
- Prepare and issue documents for the development of the electricity industry.
- Ensure the coordination of the CENACE, the National Natural Gas Control Center, the regulator CRE and other authorities relevant to the electricity industry.
- Evaluate in coordination with the CRE the performance of CENACE.
- Resolve social impact assessments of projects related to the electricity industry.
- Establish requirements and criteria for acquiring and granting Clean Energy Certificates.
- Prepare, coordinate and instruct infrastructure projects to comply with the country’s energy policy.
- Authorize the programs and instruct the expansion and modernization projects of the National Transmission Network and the General Distribution Networks, to the transporters, distributors or private companies.
- Verify compliance with the LIE, its regulations, rules and other applicable provisions.
- Investigate, denounce, and impose sanctions corresponding to its attributions (LIE art. 162).
- Determine the reliability and safety policy of the SEN (LIE art. 132).
- Request information and facilitate the transparency of the wholesale energy market (LIE arts. 158 and 159).
4. Electricity Reform: Progress and Results
4.1. Investment in the Electricity Sector
4.2. Regulatory Capture
4.3. International Agreements
5. Discussion
5.1. Reform from 2013 to 2018
5.2. Reform Reversion from 2018 to 2021
5.2.1. Distorted Unbundling
5.2.2. Regulatory Capture
5.2.3. Failure in Granting Non-Unduly Discriminatory Access to the Grid
5.3. Lack of Investment in Transmission
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ASF | Auditoria Superior de la Federación (Federal Superior Audit Office) |
CCM | Marginal Congestion Component |
CENACE | Centro Nacional de Control de Energía (Energy Control National Center) |
CFE | Comisión Federal de Electricidad (Electricity Federal Company) |
CRE | Comisión Reguladora de Energía (Regulatory Energy Commission) |
FSUE | Fondo de Servicio Universal Eléctrico (Universal Electricity Service Fund) |
FTRs | Financial Transmission Rights |
IPP | Independent Power Producer |
ICL | Intermediación de Contratos Legados (Legacy Contracts) |
ISO | Independent System Operator |
LCFE | Ley de la Comisión Federal de Electricidad (Electricity Federal Company Law) |
LIE | Ley de la Industria Eléctrica (Electric Industry Law) |
LORCME | Ley de los Órganos Reguladores Coordinados en Materia Energética (Law of the Coordinated Regulatory Bodies) |
LSPEE | Ley del Servicio Público de Energía Eléctrica (Public Electricity Service Law) |
MRO | Operating Reserve Margin |
PIDIREGAS | Proyectos de Inversión en Infraestructura Productiva con Registro Diferido en el Gasto Público (Productive Infrastructure Investment Projects with Deferred Registration in Public Expenditure) |
PRODESEN | Programa de Desarrollo del Sistema Eléctrico Nacional (Official Power System Planning Program) |
SEN | Sistema Eléctrico Nacional (National Electric System) |
SENER | Secretaría de Energía (Ministry of Energy) |
SHCP | Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público (Ministry of Finance and Public Credit) |
SIN | Sistema Interconectado Nacional (National Interconnected System) |
USMCA | United States Mexico and Canada Agreement |
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Verifiable Capacity (MW) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Market Participants | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
CFE | 37,279.07 | 38,597.53 | 39,368.33 | 38,913.34 | 38,798.70 |
IPP | 12,464.35 | 12,554.65 | 12,555.65 | 13,470.39 | 15,263.97 |
ICL | 7853.00 | 10,462.73 | 10,444.19 | 11,616.16 | 11,861.43 |
Generators | 298.40 | 1200.61 | 2326.56 | 5553.86 | 8833.88 |
Total | 57,894.82 | 62,815.51 | 64,694.72 | 69,553.75 | 74,757.98 |
Demanded Capacity (MW) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Market Participant | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
CFE basic service supplier | 33,858.57 | 35,015 | 36,865 | 36,733 | 31,987 |
ICL supplier | 4963.14 | 5768.29 | 5780.05 | 5740.96 | 5940.99 |
Qualified supplier | 0.00 | 121.27 | 186.98 | 546.37 | 1336.38 |
Generators | 64.21 | 86.98 | 182.60 | 215.56 | 206.17 |
Total | 38,884.92 | 40,991.97 | 43,014.71 | 43,235.69 | 39,470.38 |
Year | Energy Received (GWh) | Energy Delivered (GWh) | Lost Energy (GWh) | Lost Energy (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | 253,805.8 | 249,787.4 | 4018.4 | 1.58 |
2014 | 260,398.3 | 256,262.4 | 4135.9 | 1.59 |
2015 | 265,350.2 | 261,075.7 | 4274.5 | 1.61 |
2016 | 273,020.1 | 268,550.2 | 4469.9 | 1.64 |
2017 | 301,150.5 | 293,423.8 | 7726.7 | 2.57 |
2018 | 311,126.5 | 303,352.7 | 7773.8 | 2.50 |
2019 | 317,909.0 | 309,299.9 | 8609.1 | 2.71 |
Subsidiaries | Average Age of Plants (years) | Produced Energy (GWh) | Average Cost (USD/MWh) | Economic Loss (Million USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Totals | 231,939.20 | 73.77 * | 3239.63 | |
CFE Generation I | 36.1 | 24,587.20 | 94.85 | 510.61 |
CFE Generation II | 33.5 | 26,324.55 | 108.02 | 903.18 |
CFE Generation III | 33.7 | 29,071.01 | 95.38 | 836.78 |
CFE Generation IV | 39.8 | 27,102.83 | 64.81 | 267.16 |
CFE Generation VI | 41.8 | 32,640.18 | 107.50 | 722.44 |
IPP | ||||
CFE Generation V | 12.1 | 92,213.42 | 43.21 |
Concept | Amount (USD Million) | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
Total | 3078.54 | 100.0 |
Generation | 1636.57 | 53.2 |
Transmission and distribution | 1389.25 | 45.1 |
Basic supply | 52.73 | 1.7 |
Subsidies granted by SHCP to domestic and agricultural users | ||
Estimated total subsidies | 5998.89 | 100 |
Subsidies granted by SHCP | 3961.85 | 66 |
Subsidies charged to CFE liabilities | 2037.04 | 34 |
Index | ||
---|---|---|
Holder status | ||
1. Term of office | 7 years (Art. 7, LORCME) | 0.80 |
2. Who names him? | The head of the Executive proposes, and the Senate approves (Art. 7, LORCME) | 0.75 |
3. Grounds for dismissal | For policy and non-policy reasons (Art. 9, LORCME) | 0.67 |
4. Can the Presiding Commissioner hold other positions within the government during his or her tenure? | No (Art. 8, LORCME) | 1.00 |
5. Is it possible to renew the position? | Yes, one-time (Art.7, LORCME) | 0.50 |
6. Is independence required for the assignment of the position? | Yes (Art.8, LORCME) | 1.00 |
Commission status | ||
7. Term of office | 7 years (Art. 6, LORCME) | 0.8 |
8. Who names him? | Proposed by the Executive and approved by the Senate (Art.6 LORCME). | 0.75 |
9. Grounds for dismissal | For policy and non-policy reasons (Art. 9, LORCME) | 0.67 |
10. Can commissioners hold other positions during their term of office? | No (Art. 8, LORCME) | 1 |
11. Is it possible to renew the position? | Yes, one-time (Art.6, LORCME) | 0.5 |
12. Is independence required for the assignment of the position? | Yes (Art.8, LORCME) | 1 |
Relationship with government and parliament | ||
13. Is it formally independent from the government? | Yes (Art. 3 LORCME) | 1 |
14. What are the obligations to the government? | None | 1 |
15. What are the obligations to parliament? | Submission of an annual report for informational purposes (Art. 23 LORCME) | 0.67 |
16. Who, other than the court, can overrule its decisions? | Nobody | 1 |
Organizational and financial autonomy | ||
17. What is the origin of the budget? | Regulated activities and Congress (Art. 3 LORCME) | 0.5 |
18. How is the budget managed? | The budget is administered by the agency itself, subject to approval by the SHCP. (Art. 30, LORCME) | 1 |
19. Who decides the internal organization of the agency? | Agency (Art. 22, LORCME) | 1 |
20. Who is in charge of the agency’s personnel policy? | The committe (Art. 23, LORCME) | 1 |
Areas of competence to regulate | ||
21. Tariffs | Agency and government | 0.25 |
22. Permits | Only the agency | 1.00 |
23. Permit modification | Only the agency | 1.00 |
24. Network access | CRE and CENACE | 0.75 |
25. Power quality | The CRE | 1.00 |
26. Authority to regulate through economic sanctions | Yes | 1.00 |
Independence Index | 0.83 |
Year | Electricity | Oil | Liquified Petrolum Gas | Natural Gas | Hydrocarbons |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | 158 | 1370 | 5269 | 48 | 170 |
2017 | 126 | 470 | 235 | 81 | 164 |
2018 | 131 | 551 | 398 | 93 | 214 |
2019 | 94 | 521 | 280 | 48 | 169 |
2020 | 22 | 287 | 213 | 42 | 99 |
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Percino-Picazo, J.C.; Llamas-Terres, A.R.; Viramontes-Brown, F.A. Analysis of Restructuring the Mexican Electricity Sector to Operate in a Wholesale Energy Market. Energies 2021, 14, 3331. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113331
Percino-Picazo JC, Llamas-Terres AR, Viramontes-Brown FA. Analysis of Restructuring the Mexican Electricity Sector to Operate in a Wholesale Energy Market. Energies. 2021; 14(11):3331. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113331
Chicago/Turabian StylePercino-Picazo, Juan C., Armando R. Llamas-Terres, and Federico A. Viramontes-Brown. 2021. "Analysis of Restructuring the Mexican Electricity Sector to Operate in a Wholesale Energy Market" Energies 14, no. 11: 3331. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113331
APA StylePercino-Picazo, J. C., Llamas-Terres, A. R., & Viramontes-Brown, F. A. (2021). Analysis of Restructuring the Mexican Electricity Sector to Operate in a Wholesale Energy Market. Energies, 14(11), 3331. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113331