The advent of smart metering is set to revolutionize many aspects of the relationship between water utilities and their customers, and this includes the possibility of using time-varying water prices as a demand management strategy. These dynamic tariffs could promote water use efficiency by reflecting the variations of water demand, availability, and delivery costs over time. This paper relates the potential benefits of dynamic water tariffs, at the utility and basin scale, to their design across a range of timescales. On one end of the spectrum, subdaily peak pricing shifts use away from peak hours to lower a utility's operational and capital expenses. On the other end, scarcity pricing factors in the variations of the marginal opportunity cost of water at weekly or longer timescales in the river basin from which water is withdrawn. Dynamic pricing schemes that act across timescales can be devised to yield both types of benefits. The analysis estimates these benefits separately for Greater London (United Kingdom) and its 15 million inhabitants. Scarcity pricing implemented on a weekly timescale equates the marginal cost of residential water with estimates of the marginal economic values of environmental-recreational flows derived from tourism, property values, etc. Scarcity pricing during droughts could result in a 22-63% average reduction in environmental flow shortage while residential price increases would be capped at 150% of base levels. Yet, its ability to protect environmental flows could decrease in extreme shortage situations. The net present value of savings from peak pricing is conservatively evaluated at approximately £10 million for each initial percentage point in daily peak-hour price increase.

Assessment of smart-meter-enabled dynamic pricing at utility and river basin scale / Rougé, Charles; Harou, Julien J.; Pulido-Velazquez, Manuel; Matrosov, Evgenii S.; Garrone, PAOLA MARIA OLGA; Marzano, Riccardo; Lopez-Nicolas, Antonio; Castelletti, Andrea; Rizzoli, Andrea-Emilio. - In: JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0733-9496. - ELETTRONICO. - 144:5(2018). [10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0000888]

Assessment of smart-meter-enabled dynamic pricing at utility and river basin scale

Paola Garrone;Riccardo Marzano;
2018

Abstract

The advent of smart metering is set to revolutionize many aspects of the relationship between water utilities and their customers, and this includes the possibility of using time-varying water prices as a demand management strategy. These dynamic tariffs could promote water use efficiency by reflecting the variations of water demand, availability, and delivery costs over time. This paper relates the potential benefits of dynamic water tariffs, at the utility and basin scale, to their design across a range of timescales. On one end of the spectrum, subdaily peak pricing shifts use away from peak hours to lower a utility's operational and capital expenses. On the other end, scarcity pricing factors in the variations of the marginal opportunity cost of water at weekly or longer timescales in the river basin from which water is withdrawn. Dynamic pricing schemes that act across timescales can be devised to yield both types of benefits. The analysis estimates these benefits separately for Greater London (United Kingdom) and its 15 million inhabitants. Scarcity pricing implemented on a weekly timescale equates the marginal cost of residential water with estimates of the marginal economic values of environmental-recreational flows derived from tourism, property values, etc. Scarcity pricing during droughts could result in a 22-63% average reduction in environmental flow shortage while residential price increases would be capped at 150% of base levels. Yet, its ability to protect environmental flows could decrease in extreme shortage situations. The net present value of savings from peak pricing is conservatively evaluated at approximately £10 million for each initial percentage point in daily peak-hour price increase.
2018
dynamic pricing; smart meter; Demand management strategies; Dynamic pricing; Environmental flow; Net present value; Opportunity costs; Percentage points; Potential benefits; Water use efficiency
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Assessment of smart-meter-enabled dynamic pricing at utility and river basin scale / Rougé, Charles; Harou, Julien J.; Pulido-Velazquez, Manuel; Matrosov, Evgenii S.; Garrone, PAOLA MARIA OLGA; Marzano, Riccardo; Lopez-Nicolas, Antonio; Castelletti, Andrea; Rizzoli, Andrea-Emilio. - In: JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0733-9496. - ELETTRONICO. - 144:5(2018). [10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0000888]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Rougé_Assessment-of-Smart_2018.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati (All rights reserved)
Dimensione 867.03 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
867.03 kB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1120422
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 22
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 19
social impact