For years, traders have utilized market forces to drive grid stability. Many large consumers participate in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas’ (ERCOT) Demand Response Program (DRS) and earn financial incentives by voluntarily reducing their power consumption during grid stress events.
Participants in this program can engage directly in ERCOT markets by offering their resources or indirectly by curbing energy consumption in response to wholesale prices. This helps uphold system reliability, fosters competition, averts price surges, and incentivizes improved responsiveness on the demand side of the market based on wholesale price signals.
Traders have long played a pivotal role in coordinating and optimizing these demand response efforts on behalf of their clients, ensuring both grid reliability and financial rewards for participants. However, the recent news that ERCOT paid Riot Bitcoin Miners $31.7 million to shut down during an August heatwave using similar tactics sent ripples through the industry. The events caused Riot to release a press release clarifying the events.
According to Riot Platforms, their Bitcoin mining and data hosting facility earned $7 million in revenue by participating in ERCOT's ancillary services program. This program functions via a competitive bidding system, where certain customers in the ERCOT market bid for the grid operator to remunerate them, somewhat resembling an insurance premium. This fee provides ERCOT with the ability to oversee the customer's electricity usage to ensure the stability of the grid. Furthermore, Riot's premium represents less than one percent of the program's overall funding, which approached nearly $1 billion within the specified August time period.
As we headed into the summer of 2023, ERCOT predicted a historic base peak load of 83 GW due to system growth. There were concerns around generation capacity not being able to keep up, as well as historic amounts of renewable intermittent energy at play, which affects grid reliability and causes volatile electricity prices.
In June, ERCOT also launched a new ancillary service called Contingency Reserve Service (ECRS), which is designed to support grid reliability and manage grid uncertainty and variability. Essentially, ERCOT purchases ancillary services in the day-ahead market to balance the next day's supply and demand of electricity on the grid and mitigate real-time operational issues.
ERCOT hit extreme conditions multiple times over the 2023 summer. The ECRS, combined with ERCOT’s demand response programs, allowed ERCOT to get through the summer without any load shedding (i.e., distributing demand for electrical power across multiple power sources as a way of alleviating strain on a primary energy source).
All of these factors combined to facilitate financial opportunities for Riot and other large consumers such as steel mills, electrical battery companies, oil and gas companies, and power generators during stress grid events in August.
Visibility into market dynamics is critical to facilitating those opportunities, and having the right data is an essential ingredient for those looking to utilize market dynamics to drive grid stability.
Let’s take a look at what happened in ERCOT this past August using Yes Energy® tools, which provide the most accurate and reliable energy data available.
In the chart below, we see net load surpass 60 GW throughout the month of August. During these events, the ERCOT market paid hundreds to thousands of dollars per MW of ancillary service products for market reliability.
Day ahead prices for ECRS and RRS (yellow and red $/MW) ancillary products and Net Load for ERCOT (green bar chart).
During times of high grid stress such as these, customers participating in these ancillary service markets and other demand response programs are able to accumulate financial rewards by reducing their demand, offering much-needed stability to the electrical grid.
In the chart below, we use Live Power® real-time monitored data to track a large crypto mining facility during the same timeframe. The red line shows the facility consuming 600-800 MW at full load, then reducing their consumption during corresponding times of high net load demand on the system, as seen in the dark green background bar chart.
Large crypto mining facility Live Power monitored load (red) alongside Net Load for ERCOT (green bar chart).
Demand response programs and ancillary services programs allow data center owners and crypto mining operations to reduce their electricity consumption during peak demand and increase their consumption during off-peak times, allowing energy to be utilized that would otherwise be wasted. Identifying high net load is key for Bitcoin miners and other operators looking to facilitate financial opportunities as they help balance the grid in this way.
And it all starts with the right data.
Good data is an essential ingredient in driving grid stability. At Yes Energy, our products allow our customers to follow what’s happening on the grid with state-of-the-art, real-time, coast-to-coast transmission and power generation data.
Many industries participate in demand response programs and ancillary services markets, including steel mills, electrical battery companies, oil and gas companies, and power generation companies. Now Bitcoin miners can also participate in these initiatives and harness market dynamics to bolster the stability of the electrical grid.
At Yes Energy, we pride ourselves on the best power market data available – our data is constantly monitored and updated from public, partner, and proprietary sources, then cleaned and standardized for ease of use. We gather 750,000+ data collections and 110,000,000+ rows of new data per day, then deliver it as an integrated, complete data set so you can make informed decisions to bolster your bottom line.
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