February  2006  Market  Clearing  in  the  Energy  Industry  4-14  ©  Copyright  2006,  CCRO.  All  rights  reserved.  4.  ISO/RTOS  ISO/RTOs  represent  a  growing  share  of  power  market  activity,  via  expansion  of  existing  markets  and  startup  of  new  RTOs,  but  have  adopted,  in  many  ways,  very  different  products  and  administrative  policies  and  procedures.  Some  convergence  is  beginning  to  occur  with  respect  to  credit  polices,  however,  product  design  and  market  operations  continue  to  be  unique  across  ISO/RTOs.  ISO/RTO  issues,  such  as  settlement  cycles  and  bankruptcy,  and  where  certainty  is  presently  lacking  in  the  ability  to  set-off  physical  and  financial  products,  are  obvious  challenges  to  clearing  solutions.  There  is  a  need  for  design  of  products  that  are  economically  clearable  and  the  creation  of  clearly  defined  products  that  can  be  made  clearable  at  their  initial  introduction.  4.1.  Vendor  Solutions/Offerings  Vendors  offering  clearing  solutions  need  to  be  clear  and  accurate  about  the  value  proposition  being  offered.  The  design  of  the  clearing  solution  should  encourage  market  confidence,  be  cost  effective,  be  creditworthy  and  provide  a  mechanism  for  physical  delivery.  The  solution  should  provide  the  necessary  analytical  tools  to  a  potential  user  to  assess  the  solutions’  economic  value,  balanced  against  both  real  and  perceived  costs  There  is  a  need  to  clearly  and  accurately  describe  the  financial  backstops  of  the  clearing  mechanism,  and  to  describe,  in  detail,  the  processes  (legally,  financially  and  operationally)  surrounding  what  happens  “if  the  wheels  fall  off.”  Products  that  are  defined  and  structured  by  regulatory  bodies,  such  as  state  regulators,  may  not  find  a  market  to  be  cleared,  as  these  products  are  narrowly  structured  as  to  offer  little  liquidity  other  than  through  a  prescribed  auction  or  like  process.  The  logistical  and  legal  challenges  of  coordinating  physical  delivery  in  the  settlement  process  can  be  substantial.  At  this  point  in  time,  with  the  exception  of  natural  gas  in  some  markets2,  clearing  services  for  physically  settled  products  are  limited  in  North  America,  and  this,  in  turn,  limits  uptake  of  market  clearing.  Figure  2-3  provides  the  locations  in  North  America  where  gas  and  power  products  have  been  physically  cleared.  2  Both  NGX  and  the  NYMEX  presently  have  liquid  clearing  models  for  physical  natural  gas,  with  NGX  physically  clearing  over  15  natural  gas  contracts  across  North  America,  while  NYMEX  provides  for  an  exchange  for  physical  (EFP)  of  its  floor  traded  Henry  Hub  natural  gas  futures  contract.  
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