WANG Yi, YANG Zhifang, {{custom_author.name_en}}. Economic Properties and Limitations Analysis of Locational Marginal Pricing Mechanism[J]. 2026, 46(7): 2762-2778.
WANG Yi, YANG Zhifang, {{custom_author.name_en}}. Economic Properties and Limitations Analysis of Locational Marginal Pricing Mechanism[J]. 2026, 46(7): 2762-2778.DOI: 10.13334/j.0258-8013.pcsee.242432.
The locational marginal pricing (LMP) scheme is a commonly used pricing scheme in domestic and international electricity spot markets. Existing research has discussed certain economic properties of LMP under specific market-clearing models. However
current studies lack a thorough analysis of the conditions under which LMP ensures properties including interpretability
competitive equilibrium
cost recovery
and revenue adequacy. The limitations of LMP require systematic demonstration. When LMP fails to guarantee properties in actual market clearing problems
it may lead to significant lost opportunity costs or cost recovery shortfalls
which is detrimental to the stability of market operations. Therefore
this paper comprehensively analyzes the economic properties and limitations of LMP. Firstly
it summarizes the economic properties an ideal pricing scheme should satisfy
delineating the property requirements. Then
based on a market clearing problem that considers multiple types of market participants
including thermal and hydroelectric units
this paper derives the price formulation
systematically organizes the conditions under which LMP guarantees these properties and proves them. It clarifies the mechanism by which LMP can satisfy economic properties under specific market-clearing models or the reasons for potential property impairments. Finally
this paper constructs simple and illustrative cases that demonstrate the impairments of the economic properties of LMP under actual market clearing conditions
such as the optimality limitation of the dispatch solutions
the non-convexity of thermal units
the upstream and downstream coupling of hydroelectric units
and restrictions on planned electricity
thereby substantiating the limitations of the LMP scheme in practical applications.