The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impact this had on both the level and structuring of retail charges, and on incumbent players’ market power. Drawing on observations of regional tariffs for the month of January 2004, this paper supports previous conclusions based on simulated retail charges, looking at the response of real tariffs to distribution and transmission costs, customer density, and the length of low voltage underground circuit. We also investigate whether vertically integrated suppliers have a particular effect on charges ceteris paribus the effect of cost drivers and supplier-related factors
This thesis aims at explaining why the UK residential electricity (retail) market enjoys high gross ...
In German electricity submarkets for residential customers standard contracts offered by former mono...
This paper investigates the evolution of electricity prices for domestic customers in the UK followi...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The residential UK electricity market was opened for the first time in 1999, introducing choice of s...
As residential energy markets open to competition, consumers can choose from a range of tariffs offe...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Chrysovalantis Amountzias...
Vertical separation of generation from electricity retailing has often been required as a condition ...
In most liberalised electricity retail markets, incumbent firms still hold the majority of residenti...
A central feature of electricity market reforms involved restructuring monopoly utilities. In the Ge...
This paper examines whether increases to published wholesale prices justify the retail electricity p...
The literature on vertical integration in markets with regulated upstream prices suggests that the i...
Unbundling of vertically integrated utilities has become an integral element in the regulation of ne...
This thesis aims at explaining why the UK residential electricity (retail) market enjoys high gross ...
In German electricity submarkets for residential customers standard contracts offered by former mono...
This paper investigates the evolution of electricity prices for domestic customers in the UK followi...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The opening up of the UK residential electricity sector in 1999 prompted several studies of the impa...
The residential UK electricity market was opened for the first time in 1999, introducing choice of s...
As residential energy markets open to competition, consumers can choose from a range of tariffs offe...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Chrysovalantis Amountzias...
Vertical separation of generation from electricity retailing has often been required as a condition ...
In most liberalised electricity retail markets, incumbent firms still hold the majority of residenti...
A central feature of electricity market reforms involved restructuring monopoly utilities. In the Ge...
This paper examines whether increases to published wholesale prices justify the retail electricity p...
The literature on vertical integration in markets with regulated upstream prices suggests that the i...
Unbundling of vertically integrated utilities has become an integral element in the regulation of ne...
This thesis aims at explaining why the UK residential electricity (retail) market enjoys high gross ...
In German electricity submarkets for residential customers standard contracts offered by former mono...
This paper investigates the evolution of electricity prices for domestic customers in the UK followi...