Regulation of Natural Gas Distribution Using Policy Benchmarks

Local distribution companies (LDCs) play the role of purchasing and delivering natural gas to their consumers, and state regulators oversee the pricing of natural gas to consumers. The common method of regulation, based on the cost of service, provides arguably little incentive for the LDC to optima...

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Veröffentlicht in:Operations research 2008-09, Vol.56 (5), p.1131-1145
Hauptverfasser: Muthuraman, Kumar, Aouam, Tarik, Rardin, Ronald
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Local distribution companies (LDCs) play the role of purchasing and delivering natural gas to their consumers, and state regulators oversee the pricing of natural gas to consumers. The common method of regulation, based on the cost of service, provides arguably little incentive for the LDC to optimally manage their procurement activities. In the light of recent deregulation and other changes, benchmarking-based regulatory schemes are being increasingly perceived as the right direction to pursue. Various states are experimenting with simple benchmark mechanisms that have inherent deficiencies and are often criticized. In this paper, we propose and characterize a new kind of benchmark that we call a policy benchmark as a mechanism for regulation. Using variance as the measure of risk, we formulate the regulator's and the LDC's problems as multiple-objective optimizations. We provide rigorous characterizations of the dominance frontiers for a two-stage model. We also provide multistage formulations that take into account various natural gas market microstructures. We compute solutions under parameters estimated from relevant real-world data and illustrate that the structures of the dominance frontiers remain unaltered from the characterizations provided by a stylized two-stage model.
ISSN:0030-364X
1526-5463
DOI:10.1287/opre.1070.0507