2026-014 Electricity Pricing Reform Assessment

A Contract Award Notice
by OFGEM

Source
Contracts Finder
Type
Contract (Services)
Duration
1.5 month
Value
£60K
Sector
BUSINESS
Published
11 Feb 2026
Delivery
09 Feb 2026 to 31 Mar 2026
Deadline
01 Jan 2026 00:00

Related Terms

Location

Geochart for 1 buyers and 1 suppliers

1 buyer

1 supplier

Description

The Cost Allocation and Recovery Review (CARR) is exploring how alternative pricing arrangements could affect consumer outcomes and wider system costs. A key evidence gap is quantifying the relationship between changes in electricity demand (both overall volumes and within-year load shapes) and total system costs across generation and networks. Pricing reform could plausibly shift demand levels through electrification and behavioural response and could also change when electricity is consumed (e.g., peak reduction or load shifting driven by time-varying price signals, including changes associated with electric vehicle (EV) charging and heat pump operation). These changes may have material impacts on investment needs, operational costs and network reinforcement, which are not captured by simple dispatch-only or spreadsheet approaches.

Award Detail

1 Delta Energy & Environment (Edinburgh)
  • Value: £60,000

CPV Codes

  • 79400000 - Business and management consultancy and related services
  • 79410000 - Business and management consultancy services
  • 79411100 - Business development consultancy services
  • 09300000 - Electricity, heating, solar and nuclear energy
  • 71314000 - Energy and related services
  • 71314200 - Energy-management services
  • 71314300 - Energy-efficiency consultancy services

Indicators

  • Contract is suitable for SMEs.

Other Information

Ofgem therefore requires the support of a supplier to provide a system-model which can be used to inform CARR's assessment of these impacts using consistent, internally coherent modelling output. Ofgem will use the support of the supplier and its model to quantify how plausible changes in domestic electricity demand volumes and load shapes, potentially driven by pricing reform, affect total GB electricity system costs across generation and networks. The intention is to capture whole-system impacts (including capacity and network-related effects) beyond short-run dispatch changes alone. NOTE: To register your interest in this notice and obtain any additional information please visit the myTenders Web Site at the link provided https://www.mytenders.co.uk/search/show/search_view.aspx?ID=FEB170974

Reference

  • MT236609
  • CF b1d0fbfa-c296-49df-b399-9280955b016e

Domains