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IAP 2011 Activities by Sponsor

Energy Club

POWER SYSTEMS ECONOMICS IN THEORY/-IES AND IN REAL LIFE
Dr. Jean-Pierre Hansen
No enrollment limit, no advance sign up
Participants welcome at individual sessions (series)
Prereq: Introductory economics helpful. Interest in electricity.

The translation between economic theories and real-world practice is not always straightforward in the energy industry. This lecture series will explore how a few select economic theories can (or cannot) be applied to real-world situations. Jean-Pierre Hansen (full speaker bio below) will draw examples from his long career in both industry and academia to help students navigate the sometimes confusing and counterintuitive world of energy economics. This lecture series is designed to complement other energy economics classes at MIT.

A background in introductory economic theory will be helpful for students but is not required. (Each lecture will start with a review of the basics.)

Speaker Bio: Jean-Pierre Hansen managed Electrabel, one of the leading European electricity companies, for 20 years. He has also been Chairman to a number of energy companies that operate at an international level (30 countries). He is currently a Member of the Executive Committee of GDF SUEZ, the world’s second-largest gas and electricity Group. He is a Professor of Economics at the Catholic University of Leuven and the Ecole Polytechnique (Paris). Jean-Pierre holds a degree in Economics and graduate degrees in Electrical Engineering.

Co-sponsored by Electricity Student Research Group.
Web: http://esrg.mit.edu/events/iap-2011/
Contact: Tim Heidel, E19-439A, (617) 715-4551, heidel@mit.edu

Did you say “Market”?… (How) Does it (really) work for electricity
Dr. Jean-Pierre Hansen
The move to a market system is not all that simple! Amongst other things, if we wish to replace a regulated electricity system with an electricity market system, we must consider the three elements that determine an exchange, i.e. a market: the product, the time and the place. How does it work for electricity, given the so-called forgotten hypotheses of microeconomics…?

Co-sponsored by Electricity Student Research Group.
Mon Jan 24, 02:30-04:00pm, E52-175

Ricardo’s nuclear power plants: why should a manager know the Theory of Rent?
Dr. Jean-Pierre Hansen
The general theory of rents explains several major problems in electricity economics. For instance, differential rents (or infra-marginal rents), which manifest in the operation of optimal generating facilities, are often called windfall profits. However, it is shown that such rents are necessary in order to (re)build optimal generating facilities and therefore cannot be taxed. The issue of “Missing Money.”

Co-sponsored by Electricity Student Research Group.
Tue Jan 25, 02:30-04:00pm, E52-175

Market Power: how can it be measured – proved?
Dr. Jean-Pierre Hansen
95% of economic and legal literature regarding the reform of the electricity sector concerns “Market Power”. This is both surprising and logical all at once: its definition, its calculation and its analysis foil all of the traditional indicators: Lerner, HHI, and “Pivotals”. So? How can the CEO of a company define his policy?

Co-sponsored by Electricity Student Research Group.
Wed Jan 26, 02:30-04:00pm, E52-175

From C. Adams to Averch-Johnson… and many others: the myth of perfect regulation.
Dr. Jean-Pierre Hansen
Origins, theories, paradoxes and practices of regulation: the true story and “everything you have ever wanted to know about regulation, but never dared to ask”.

Co-sponsored by Electricity Student Research Group.
Thu Jan 27, 02:30-04:00pm, E52-175

Technical Workshop on Grid Integration of Wind Energy
Katherine Dykes, Kathy Araujo
Fri Jan 21, 09am-05:00pm, 26-100, https://sites.google.com/site/

Enrollment limited: advance sign up required (see contact below)
Signup by: 15-Jan-2011
Limited to 400 participants.
Single session event
Prereq: none
Fee: for no charge to student, fee to external participants

The Current Status and Future of Wind and the Grid

Friday January 21, 2009
9am - 5 pm, MIT Bldg. 26-100
Registration Required - Sign-Up Today!

Wind energy contributes to an ever-growing percentage of electricity generation worldwide. The increased overall percentage of electricity generation that comes from this intermittent resource has led to a lot of discussion over the last decade on the furture development of the grid and the impacts and implications of large scale wind energy development. This workshop will bring several experts in the area of wind-grid integration to MIT for a full day workshop that will explore issues from short-term grid code specificaitons to long-term capacity expansion planning and policy.
Web: https://sites.google.com/site/mitwindweek2011/wind-integration-workshop
Contact: Katherine Dykes, E62-367-2, (617) 650-7888, dykesk@mit.edu


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Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Last update: 7 Sept. 2011