- Technological advancement in the area of data collection and processing will impact the importance of TSOs as HFD (High Frequency Data) owners
In the modern economy, data acquired with high frequency, showing economic activity, play an increasingly important role. With technological advancement in metering, it is becoming increasingly possible to collect and analyse data from the real economy, including data from energy suppliers. PSE acts as the Energy Market Information Operator and oversees the establishment and development of the Central Energy Market Information System.
- Technological transformations in the area of energy storage and generation change the structure of generation and the nature of the transmission grid and the role of the TSO
Poland is undergoing rapid development of prosumer energy based on photovoltaics, which began to play a noticeable role in the national energy mix in 2020 and whose importance is steadily increasing. Generation companies are gearing up for off-shore wind power projects. The first commercial-scale energy storage facilities, such as the BESS storage facility in Pomerania, are already in operation. As a result of the dissemination of new technologies, it will become necessary to adapt to the new model and spatial allocation of generation of both the distribution networks managed by distribution companies and the transmission grids managed by PSE.
The photovoltaic sector is growing primarily based on small, domestic prosumer systems and small commercial systems. Changes to prosumer billing rules in 2022 have slowed the process slightly, but the group of active prosumers continues to expand. Serving this group of consumers and generators and managing the energy they generate within the existing distribution network and transmission grid infrastructure is an increasingly serious challenge.
A barrier to the development of renewable energy industry is still the problem of energy storage during periods of excessive generation; making it possible to use energy at times when generation from RES sources is not possible, during windless times, at night, etc.). The lack of efficient storage technologies has, until recently, made it impossible to solve this problem. In recent years, the commercial use of energy storage has become increasingly common. Technology development is supported by falling component costs, the growth of commercial energy storage facilities for power systems, and the rapid development of information and metering technologies that enable distributed source management. At the same time, other energy storage technologies, such as power-to-gas and hydrogen electrolysis technologies, are developing around the world. Hydrogen is increasingly being treated as a future energy storage and transfer technology.
- Government policy to build nuclear power in Poland
In 2022, negotiations with potential investors for the construction of a nuclear power plant in Poland were underway and important decisions were made about the direction of the country's nuclear power industry. The first, pre-project agreements with contractors were concluded at the end of the year. The planned handover dates for Poland's first nuclear power units (the first half of the next decade) are also key to the coal-exit process and the challenges posed by aging coal-fired power units, still the core of the NPS.
- The development of the European market and the increase in international trade influence the long-term process of price convergence in Europe
The development of the European market, supported by successive regulations, results in an increase in the scale of cross-border exchange. The development of a common market based on price zones affects the process of development of the national transmission grid and forces its adaptation to the new scale and directions of cross-border flows. In the medium-term perspective, it may also be a source of additional costs for transmission operators, due to the need for more frequent use of remedial actions taken outside the market.
- Discussion on the reform of the power market design
The energy crisis triggered by a decline in the supply of energy resources and a surge in their prices, exacerbated by the Russian-Ukrainian conflict in 2022, has sparked a European discussion on correcting the market design. As a result of ongoing discussions as early as in 2023, the EC has submitted for discussion draft amendments aimed at accelerating the market penetration by RES and at the same time accelerating the phase-out of natural gas as a transition fuel, as well as reducing the sensitivity of energy prices for end users, especially individual consumers, to the volatility of fossil fuel prices. The changes are intended to complement the European Green Deal and the REPowerEU programme.
- European climate policy increasingly driving up the cost of generation from emitting sources
The situation of the national power system, and especially the condition of generators using conventional generation sources, is also – increasingly – affected by EU climate policy and the growing pressure, both regulatory and ETS pricing, on an accelerated coal-exit. The primary tool of this policy is the so-called ETS – emission allowances, the prices of which are determined by the market. ETS price increase has been observed for several years. In 2022, the price of the unit, after temporary fluctuations in the third quarter, remained near record levels of EUR 80–90. It resulted in a significant increase in the price of energy generated in emission sources, multiplying a price increase effect caused by the situation in the energy resources market. Eventually, ETS prices on European markets rose significantly. For some European countries, including Poland in particular, coal-exit will be a major technological challenge due to the high share of coal technologies in domestic generation and the time it takes to introduce new technologies.
- Restoring the balance of energy resources markets
Market prices for coal, oil and natural gas, after spectacular increases in the first half of the year, further accelerated by the outbreak of the Russian-Ukrainian war, stabilised in March and declined in the second half. By the end of the year, prices for all energy resources were at prewar levels, although still higher than multi-year averages. In the first quarter of 2023, we saw further price declines near pre-2021 levels triggered by fears of a global recession and oversupply.