Electricity Forward Agreement
Electricity Forward Agreement (calendar) (short: EFA system) is a calendar used to specify load profiles when trading on the electricity market. It was officially only valid until October 2014, but is still abundantly used among commodity traders.[1][2]
Features of the EFA calendar
One distinguishes between weekdays WD and weekend WE since the electricity consumption is clearly lower on Saturdays and Sundays. A EFA day starts on 11pm local time and runs through to 11pm the next (astronomical) day. An EFA-week WK consists of five WD and two WE-days. A EFA month is defined differently to common months: March, June, September and December have five weeks, all other months are considered to have exactly four weeks. The two EFA seasons are winter (WK 40 – WK 13) and summer (WK 14 – WK 39), each having exactly 26 weeks. Due to the existence of leap years, some EFA-Decembers have six weeks (e.g. 2004 and 2009), a strong difference from the commonly used Gregorian calendar system where February is the leap month.[3]
The EFA day is composed of six blocks of 4 hours each. For each block baseload products exist (i.e. WD 1/2/3/4/5/6 and WE 1/2/3/4/5/6). Peak load products only exit for WD3, WD4 and WD5 (also on bank holidays), and consequently off-peak products are only available for the remaining EFA blocks of each week. Blocks 1 and 2 are usually termed overnight blocks, the other blocks are day blocks.[4]
References
- Schofield, Neil C. (2013). Commodity derivatives markets and applications. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley. p. 203. ISBN 978-1-119-99508-1.
- Avis, Patrick. "One EFA'ing confusing system". Energyanalyst. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- "The EFA Calendar" (PDF). theice.com. Intercontinenal Exchange. Retrieved 17 December 2015.
- Avis, Patrick (11 Aug 2011). "All about the EFA Day". energyanalyst.co.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2015.