When Renewables Break Classical Models: A Heavy-Tailed Framework for Electricity Price Dynamics
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The rapid rise of renewable generation has fundamentally altered electricity price dynamics, producing volatility and extreme events that classical stochastic models fail to capture. We develop and calibrate a semimartingale model that reproduces these new statistical realities of modern power markets. Using German EPEX SPOT data from 2015–2025, we document heavy-tailed, asymmetric Pareto-distributed price movements, frequent negative prices, and extreme volatility driven by renewable variability. Our model combines deterministic seasonality, mean-reverting diffusion, and compound Poisson jumps with asymmetric Pareto-distributed sizes, naturally accommodating negative prices without transformations. The calibrated process exhibits infinite variance for negative price excursions, reflecting the structural asymmetry between scarcity and oversupply events. Monte Carlo validation shows the model accurately reproduces key stylized facts—including bimodal negative price patterns, volatility clustering, and heavy-tailed extremes - where classical lognormal or Gaussian-based models fail. We derive futures pricing formulas consistent with the heavy-tailed structure and show analytically how volatility acts as a first-order cost driver in electricity markets through convexity effects, risk premiums, and system costs. The framework establishes a rigorous foundation for risk management and derivative valuation in electricity markets shaped by renewable volatility.