Workshop "Investment Decision in Power Markets: Problems and
Methods" (external website )
Location: WPI Seminar Room C 714
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Mon, 12. Sep (Opening: 10:00) - Tue, 13. Sep 11
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Topics:
12 Sept: 10:00- 12:00 , 14:00 - 17:00 13 Sept: 10:00 - 13:00
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Organisation(s)
WPI |
Organiser(s)
Fred Benth (U. Oslo)
Speaker: Rene Aid (Electricite de France) |
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Remark: For registration please contact Fred Benth (fredb@math.uio.no) For hotel booking please contact Doris Obermaier (doris.obermaier@univie.ac.at)
Click here for further information | |
The intention of these lectures is to provide an overview of the
problems raised by investment dynamics as well as the mathematical
methods used to study them. As an application field, these lectures will
focus on investment decisions in electricity production. The course will
be divided in four sessions of two hours each.
In the first session, I will describe the nature of the problem of
electricity production investment in the current context of deregulated
markets, global warming and fossil energy resource scarcity. This first
session will also be devoted to decision rules (Net Present Value and
Real Option methodology) as well as a description of practical
investment decision processes used by corporates.
The second lecture will provide the main mathematical tools needed to
tackle investment decisions, presently optimal stopping time problems
and free boundary problems. I will say also a few words on numerical
methods, in particular Howard's algorithm or policy algorithm.
An important part of economic literature on investment decision deals
with the ambiguous effects of both uncertainties and time-to-build. The
third lecture will bring first an overview of the economic discussion on
those parameters. Then, I will focus on specific mathematical models
offering explicit solutions of an investment decision model taking
account uncertainty and time-to-build. Some numerical simulations will
be provided to illustrate the behaviour of the investment process.
Finally, the aspect of strategic behaviour will be treated in the last
lecture. This will allow us to reconsider the discussion on decision
rules introduced in the first lecture.
Normally, after these eight hours lecture, attendees will have the basic
material (references and mathematical tools) to begin their own
research.