Abstract

The question of whether the liberalization of the gas industry has led to less concentrated markets has attracted much interest among the scientific community. Classical mathematical regression tools, statistical tests, and optimization equilibrium problems, more precisely non-linear complementarity problems, were used to model European gas markets and their effect on prices. In this research, the parametric and nonparametric game theory methods are employed to study the effect of the market concentration on gas prices. The parametric method takes into account the classical Cournot equilibrium test, with assumptions on cost and demand functions. However, the non-parametric method does not make any prior assumptions, a factor that allows greater freedom in modeling. The results of the parametric method demonstrate that the gas suppliers’ behavior in Austria and The Netherlands gas markets follows the Nash–Cournot equilibrium, where companies act rationally to maximize their payoffs. The non-parametric approach validates the fact that suppliers in both markets follow the same behavior even though one market is more liquid than the other. Interestingly, our findings also suggest that some of the gas suppliers maximize their ‘utility function’ not by only relying on profit, but also on some type of non-profit objective, and possibly collusive behavior.

Highlights

  • This paper aims to fill this gap by testing the concentration and behavior of gas suppliers in two different regional European gas markets, Austria and the Netherlands

  • The focus lies on Austria and the Netherlands, as each exemplifies a diverse evolutionary phase in the European wholesale gas markets liberalization on the one hand, and each is exposed to a different indigenous gas production and gas supply portfolio on the other hand

  • This paper presents a novel approach to testing if the liberalization of the gas industry has led to less concentrated European gas markets and studies the behavior of gas suppliers

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Summary

Introduction

The European Union’s (EU) gas market has rapidly evolved over the years. Several gas directives issued by the European Commission demonstrate the evolution of the liberalization process in Europe since 1998. Major developments in these regulatory reforms include providing customers and suppliers with third party access to infrastructure, a clear-cut separation in energy companies through ownership unbundling, and regulatory supervision of the member states. Trading in the wholesale markets is facilitated, and users can optimize their portfolios (shippers may swap gas between locations, a factor that allows them to access gas volumes from locations to which they have no direct physical connection, avoiding the need to book and pay for or use unnecessary capacity.)

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