ERCOT kept market prices for power too high for more than a day
after widespread outages ended late on Feb. 17, Potomac
Economics, the independent market monitor for the Public Utility
Commission of Texas, which oversees ERCOT, said in a filing.
"In order to comply with the Commission Order, the pricing
intervention that raised prices to VOLL (value of lost load)
should have ended immediately at that time (late on Feb. 17),"
Potomac Economics said.
"However, ERCOT continued to hold prices at VOLL by inflating
the Real-Time On-Line Reliability Deployment Price Adder for an
additional 32 hours through the morning of February 19," it
said, adding the decision resulted in $16 billion in additional
costs to ERCOT's markets.
The findings of Potomac Economics were reported first on
Thursday by Bloomberg and the Texas Tribune.
Separately, rating agency Moody's Investors Service downgraded
ERCOT by one notch from A1 to Aa3 and revised the grid
operator's credit outlook to "negative" on Thursday.
On Wednesday, ERCOT's board ousted chief executive Bill Magness,
as the fallout continued from a blackout that left residents
without heat, power or water for days.
The mid-February storm temporarily knocked out up to half the
state's generating plants, triggering outages that killed dozens
and pushed power prices to 10 times the normal rate.
Many of ERCOT's directors have resigned in the last week and the
head of the state's Public Utility Commission, which supervised
ERCOT, resigned on Monday.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; editing by Barbara
Lewis)
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