Search
`
November 7, 2024

Mexican Regulator Says Market Reform Results ‘Clear’

By Tom Kleckner

MEXICO CITY — Participants in Mexico’s reformed electricity market point to its growing pains and lack of transparency when saying “it needs legs.”

CRE Commissioner Marcelino Madrigal | © RTO Insider

Marcelino Madrigal, one of seven commissioners on the country’s Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE), takes a more glass-half-full approach to the 2014 reforms.

“It has been four years of implementing the electricity energy reforms, but the actual results are there,” Madrigal said during a recent Gulf Coast Power Association breakfast meeting. “The results are clear in terms of success. Basically now, people really have access to this market. We have new companies in the system bringing a cleaner energy supply. … This has provided an opportunity for everyone to invest, from really large companies to small ones, to even the households with solar panels.”

And indeed, there are bright spots in the market. CRE has issued 533 generation permits through September, much of it for rooftop solar. It has also registered 22 power marketers and issued 49 permits for retail market-qualified suppliers and four for basic suppliers. (Basic services are defined as pre-regulatory reform contracts and new contracts less than 1 MW, while qualified services are defined as demand 1 MW or greater, acquired directly or through the wholesale market’s qualified suppliers.)

The Ministry of Energy (SENER) says that clean energy sources were responsible for 21.1% of Mexico’s power in 2017, though large hydro dams accounted for about 85% of that figure. Given that, it would seem the electricity sector is on track to meet its clean energy goals, set by the 2013-14 constitutional energy reforms, of generating 35% of its power from renewables by 2024.

Madrigal said 20.7 GW of clean energy is currently in operation, with another 28.5 GW planned. In comparison, CRE has granted permits for 22.2 GW of new fossil generation.

“We are living in two worlds,” Madrigal told his audience, which included the Mexico chapter of the Women’s Energy Network. “We are seeing a worldwide decrease in the cost of wind and solar. This is the new world, where new generation comes with very competitive prices. It comes quickly and very fast.

“What is the old world? It’s the one we’re used to. Old technologies, coal, fossil fuels, things like that. The rapid development of renewables creates … new opportunities with lower prices and cleaner fuels that the consumer is already accessing.”

Madrigal said the key to the new world is consumer access, which leads to greater comfort as the industry changes.

“The rules to access this new world are already there,” he said, pointing to capacity and clean energy certificate auctions at the wholesale level and the growth of distributed generation.

“You can access those opportunities,” Madrigal said. “We’re seeing those lower prices in the markets worldwide, not only Mexico. The instruments are there, and people are using those instruments. Factories, small enterprises are using rooftop solar. Big companies are accessing the auctions. About 30% of demand comes from private consumers. This is a good signal. The consumers are realizing there is this new world of opportunities.”

Understanding the Opportunities

Madrigal referred repeatedly to the importance of the retail market, where less than 1% of consumers have selected power from a registered qualified supplier. The state-owned utility, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), has long been the country’s sole provider and is the second most powerful company in the country, second only to the state-owned oil company, Pemex.

“If you give consumers the opportunity to acquire their own energy, they will do it,” he said. “It’s just a process of understanding the opportunities in the market and a mindset change. You have to now understand you have options in acquiring energy, as you do in any other [market].”

Madrigal doesn’t compare Mexico’s retail market to California’s or PJM’s. He compares it to Chile, Colombia and Peru, which have had retail markets up and running for as long as 30 years. In Chile, qualified suppliers provide fully two-thirds of the retail power, while in Peru and Colombia they account for 46% and 32%, respectively.

“We still have a way to go. We’re at 1%, but it’s only been a year,” Madrigal said. “I expect this market will go gradually, but maybe I’m too ambitious.”

He very well may be. One market participant said consumer choice may be touted as the end game, but there has been “absolutely zero effort” to promote or facilitate the market.

Other challenges abound. Madrigal said a key will be a successful first financial transmission rights auction, which is scheduled for January after months of delay. The auction’s contracts will only cover three years, leading market participants to ask how they finance a 15-year purchase agreement with only three years of pricing security.

Not surprisingly, the lack of clarity over FTR costs means not a single bilateral renewables contract has been signed between a generator and a consumer.

“I believe the FTR market is crucial for the qualified supplier market. You need an instrument to manage congestion risk … that is the key part that this market needs,” he said.

Madrigal also lists better financing instruments for smaller-scale investments in renewable energy and a greater understanding of the retail market by the qualified segment as hurdles to overcome.

“For the most part, the main pieces of the regulatory framework have been completed,” said Madrigal, who was appointed to CRE in 2014. Each commissioner serves a seven-year term, with one rolling off every year.

The Path Forward

Market participants complain about a lack of transparency, especially with retail rates. CRE established a methodology to determine rates earlier this year, but SENER quickly rescinded the new rates and approved a confusing “deferred” application when prices skyrocketed and consumers protested. (See “Market Architect Calls for Increased Transparency,” Overheard at the GCPA Mexico Electric Power Market Conference.)

“Tariffs today are not the same as they were,” he said. “The user needs to be more comfortable with the scheme. Once they understand it, of course, maybe they’ll feel more comfortable in accessing the other options in the market. More renewables are coming online in 2019 and 2020. The market will gradually start to pick up a little bit more. You need fresh energy to be competitive, and that energy is coming online.”

Successful participants in Mexico’s three long-term auctions. | CRE

Indeed. Zuma Energia in August dedicated its $600 million Reynosa 1 project, the country’s largest wind farm at 424 MW of capacity, in the state of Tamaulipas. A result of the second long-term auction in 2016, it’s located on community lands known as ejidos. (See Land Rights a Challenge to Mexico Tx Developers.)

The largest solar plant in the Americas, Enel Green Power’s 232-MW, $160 million Tlaxcala project, is scheduled to open next year.

All indications are the market reforms will continue. July’s election of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador abruptly brought his left-wing party into power. While Lopez Obrador has talked of taking a wait-and-see approach to the petroleum sector’s reforms, most industry insiders expect him to leave the electricity market alone.

Madrigal said the transition meetings — Lopez Obrador’s administration won’t be sworn in until Dec. 1 — at SENER are going well. He said CRE is represented “in case they want to know something about how the regulations work.”

Staying on message, Madrigal said, “The work continues as normal. We have our regulatory program, and we are implementing it. We’ve been developing a framework where everyone can access this market. There have been clear, good results.

“The implementation of reform is something that takes time, but the benefits for everyone will come with a little bit more time,” he said. “I think the results so far indicate to us that this is the path forward.”

SERC Taps ReliabilityFirst Exec as CEO

 

SERC Reliability Corp. on Monday announced Jason Blake, vice president and general counsel of ReliabilityFirst, as its new CEO, effective Nov. 15.

He will replace Gary J. Taylor, who has served in the position since 2016.

“Our search encompassed a variety of industry segments including public power, investor owned utilities, and the electric reliability sector,” Tom Linquist, managing partner of Lyceum Leadership Consulting, SERC’s search firm, said in a statement.

“I have the utmost confidence that Jason will provide the superior level of leadership, management and vision required to take SERC to the next level in our mission of promoting effective and efficient administration of the bulk power system within our jurisdiction,” SERC Chair Greg Ford said, citing Blake’s “extensive experience.”

Blake, who joined Cleveland-based ReliabilityFirst in 2010, led the organization’s legal and regulatory affairs, enforcement and external communications departments. He also was corporate secretary and a member of the CEO’s executive team.

Before ReliabilityFirst, Blake gained business and regulatory experience in private practice in Pittsburgh and Cleveland. He is a graduate of The Ohio State University and the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.

ReliabilityFirst is the NERC-delegated regional entity (RE) for the Great Lakes and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. Charlotte, N.C.-based SERC, is the RE for all or portions of 16 Central and Southeastern states.

“This is a great move, not just for SERC, but for the entire [Electric Reliability Organization] enterprise,” ReliabilityFirst CEO Tim Gallagher said in a statement. “Our pride in seeing him named CEO is matched only by our sadness in seeing such a great friend and valued colleague leave the RF family.”

RF has begun a search for Blake’s replacement. Megan Gambrel, managing legal and regulatory counsel, was appointed interim general counsel.

Taylor is departing SERC after a little more than two years as CEO. He joined SERC in 2015 and served as chief operating officer after retiring from Entergy, where he served as group president of Entergy’s utility operations and CEO of its nuclear unit.

Blake and SERC officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

— Rich Heidorn Jr.

NY Details Carbon Charge on Wholesale Suppliers

By Michael Kuser

RENSSELAER, N.Y. — NYISO on Monday proposed a framework for applying and billing carbon charges to New York energy suppliers under the state’s proposed scheme to price greenhouse gas emissions in the ISO’s wholesale electricity market.

NYISO staffer Nathaniel Gilbraith told New York’s Integrating Public Policy Task Force (IPPTF) emissions from Clean Energy Standard-eligible wholesale suppliers would not be subject to the carbon charge nor would upstream or fugitive CO2 emissions and other greenhouse gas emissions such as methane and nitrous oxide.

Historical NYISO Fossil CO2 Emissions by Generator Type | Brattle Group

Exempt resources would include those participating in the Special Case Resource, Emergency Demand Response, Demand-Side Ancillary Services and Day-Ahead Demand Response programs, he said.

Why Exempt?

“Our rationale for this is because they’re primarily load reduction,” Gilbraith said. “Resources in these programs infrequently produce energy using emitting resources. About 90% of all program megawatts are pure load reduction with no local generation.”

In addition, collecting data from these resources would create potentially sizable new reporting requirements for the resources with few resultant carbon charges returned to loads, he said.

“I don’t want us to lose sight of the optics of creating exemptions from the program we ultimately introduce and the public’s receptivity ultimately to a major new initiative,” said Howard Fromer, director of market policy for PSEG Power New York.

“Sometimes these resources may be seen as emergency resources, but in the neighborhoods in which they exist they’re not always so well received,” Fromer said. “It’s a politically easier sell to say we are not exempting anyone. If you are putting out carbon in this sector, and you’re in the wholesale market … we’re capturing all of this.”

Applicable emissions would include those associated with startups, no-load levels and generation that receives wholesale market compensation. The ISO will work with resources to establish a reference emissions allocation method.

Emissions associated with heat and steam sales fall outside the scope of a wholesale electric sector carbon charge, Gilbraith said. Cogeneration resources will report emissions associated with the provision of wholesale energy and ancillary services, excluding those associated with heat and steam sales.

Verifying Data

NYISO will develop internal processes to verify supplier emissions as reasonable and accurate.

Cogeneration, behind-the-meter net generation (BTM:NG) resources and distributed energy resources in particular, will be required to submit data allowing the ISO to verify the emissions associated with wholesale energy and ancillary service sales, Gilbraith said.

RGGI and Eastern Interconnect (EI) CO2 Emission Reductions (2017–2031) | Brattle Group

Inaccurate, insufficient or untimely data submissions will be subject to penalties administered consistent with the existing penalty review process, he said.

NYISO’s Tariff defines BTM:NG as a “facility eligible to serve both its host load, which is a behind-the-meter load, and then sell excess capability as a wholesale sale into the NYISO markets,” Gilbraith said. “When the resource serves host load … it’s not a wholesale market transaction and therefore it falls outside the scope of a wholesale electric sector carbon charge.”

BTM:NG resources will report emissions associated with the provision of wholesale electric energy and ancillary services — that is, “net generation” — and not emissions associated with serving their host load, Gilbraith said.

Billing and Invoicing

The previous week, the ISO proposed to base the carbon impact on LBMP (LBMPc) on real-time system dispatch to determine carbon charges and credits, as opposed to forecasting the impact. The change would be consistent with the LBMPc used to allocate residuals to loads, and the ISO would also create a new billing code for carbon charge settlements. (See NYISO Proposes Border Pricing Plan for Carbon.)

NYISO would submit emissions data pursuant to explicit timelines aligned with current practice, and for the daily bill and the first monthly invoice, supplier emissions will be automatically populated with an initial emissions estimate based on the carbon component of the reference level, Gilbraith said.

Suppliers’ reference levels will be determined by the ISO’s market mitigation analysis department, which has “means of tracking whether or not bids are competitive at a 10,000-foot level, so they include provisions including heat rate for the supplier,” Gilbraith said. “So we’ll enhance that product to include a carbon component for each bid, and note that will be the basis for the initial carbon charge.”

Suppliers will be required to submit emissions true-ups within 60 days of the initial invoice, which is usually sent five day after the end of the month, he said. There will be a mandatory penalty for failure to submit emissions true-ups on time. Suppliers will be able to further true-up emissions data after the four-month invoice but not after the final bill closeout.

Stakeholder Concerns

The ISO asked market participants to submit written comments on the proposal, but several stakeholders balked at the request without more feedback coming the other way, as in an updated proposal from NYISO.

Michael DeSocio, the ISO’s senior manager for market design, summarized stakeholders’ desire for clarity on the schedule and on exactly what the grid operator is proposing ahead of the planned announcement of a final proposal on Dec. 17.

“If we’re going to go through this process, we’ll probably need more than another meeting or two, and we’ll look to create additional meetings and lay out what that schedule looks like,” DeSocio said.

IPPTF Chair Nicole Bouchez, NYISO’s principal economist, said the task force would release a revised schedule as soon as possible.

The task force next meets at NYISO headquarters Oct. 29 to discuss allocation of carbon charge residuals and the transparency of carbon impacts. That meeting will also hear a Calpine presentation, delayed from this week, on how a carbon charge might affect hedges on transmission congestion contracts.

MISO to Evaluate Alternatives to Michigan SSR

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO is currently accepting proposals for a transmission or generation solution to offset reliability issues caused by the planned suspension of a DTE Energy coal-fired plant near Detroit, Mich.

The RTO hopes stakeholder-submitted proposals will prevent the need to create a future system support resource (SSR) agreement for Unit 9 of the 520-MW Trenton Channel Power Plant, in operation since 1968. DTE closed Units 7 and 8 at the plant early last year.

Trenton Channel Power Plant | DTE Energy

The company plans to shutter the remaining plant in June 2023, but in modeling for 2022, MISO found the shutdown could provoke multiple thermal overload and voltage violation issues that cannot be resolved by generation redispatch or new operating guides.

DTE has said the plant will resume operations in mid-2025, but MISO no longer models a return date in suspension studies, contending suspended generation rarely returns. (See FERC OKs New MISO Retirement Process.)

MISO has so far received seven suggested solutions involving transmission upgrades, including submissions from DTE Energy and ITC, although only one solution has been formally submitted to the RTO’s Transmission Expansion Plan (MTEP) for study and modeling. Solutions must be put before the MTEP process before consideration, and the RTO said solutions will be studied in the MTEP 19 cycle.

MISO will also accept new generation solutions to address issues caused by the retirement, but during an Oct. 22 special conference call, staff said new generation proposals must be submitted through the interconnection queue for consideration and study. The generation queue doesn’t currently contain a project that can mitigate issues from a Trenton suspension. MISO staff said a generation solution may require a Trenton SSR designation to keep the plant online until the new generation comes online.

SERC Taps ReliabilityFirst Exec as CEO

SERC Reliability Corp. on Monday announced Jason Blake, vice president and general counsel of ReliabilityFirst, as its new CEO, effective Nov. 15.

He will replace Gary J. Taylor, who hasd served in the position since 2016.

“Our search encompassed a variety of industry segments including public power, investor owned utilities, and the electric reliability sector,” Tom Linquist, managing partner of Lyceum Leadership Consulting, SERC’s search firm, said in a statement.

“I have the utmost confidence that Jason will provide the superior level of leadership, management and vision required to take SERC to the next level in our mission of promoting effective and efficient administration of the bulk power system within our jurisdiction,” Chair Greg Ford said, citing Blake’s “extensive experience.”

Blake, who joined Cleveland-based ReliabilityFirst in 2010, led the organization’s legal and regulatory affairs, enforcement, and external communications departments. He also was corporate secretary and a member of the CEO’s executive team.

Before ReliabilityFirst, Blake gained business and regulatory experience in private practice in Pittsburgh and Cleveland. He is a graduate of The Ohio State University and the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.

ReliabilityFirst is the NERC-delegated regional entity (RE) for the Great Lakes and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United .States. Charlotte, N.C.-based SERC, is the RE for all or portions of 16 Central and Southeastern states.

“This is a great move, not just for SERC, but for the entire [Electric Reliability Organization] enterprise,” ReliabilityFirst CEO Tim Gallagher said in a statement. “Our pride in seeing him named CEO is matched only by our sadness in seeing such a great friend and valued colleague leave the RF family.”

RF has begun a search for Blake’s replacement. Megan Gambrel, managing legal and regulatory counsel, was appointed interim general counsel.

Taylor is departing SERC after a little more than two years as CEO. He joined SERC in 2015 and served as chief operating officer after retiring from Entergy, where he served as group president of Entergy’s utility operations, and CEO of its nuclear unit.

Blake and SERC officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

— Rich Heidorn Jr.

Climate Change Top of Mind at Vermont Conference

By Michael Kuser

BURLINGTON, Vt. — Climate change mingled with politics at last week’s Renewable Energy Vermont Conference and Expo, where state regulators and officials expressed frustration with federal and RTO policies.

Renewable Energy Vermont held its 2018 Conference and Expo in Burlington on Oct. 18-19. | © RTO Insider

While U.S. Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) predicted a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives after the mid-term elections, some participants said planetary survival should come before party interests. Others focused on how to deliver cleaner electricity to consumers in New England.

Campbell Andersen Olivia | © RTO Insider

“It’s time to pick up the pace,” said Olivia Campbell Andersen, executive director of Renewable Energy Vermont. “Every week brings fresh evidence of the urgency of climate change. Close to home, here in Vermont, not a month goes by where our electric utilities aren’t issuing warnings about the impending extreme weather and power outages.”

Gordon van Welie | © RTO Insider

With hydropower in Quebec, wind energy in northern New England and offshore wind all relatively far from load centers, transmission infrastructure must be built to move the electricity from producers to consumers, ISO-NE CEO Gordon van Welie said.

“If you love renewable energy, you have to love transmission,” van Welie said.

“The pipeline system built in the 1970s can’t meet the needs of today’s increased use of natural gas,” he said. “For a while I thought the answer was simply to put in more gas infrastructure — an engineer’s approach — but now we look to create a market solution. We propose to change the rules to maintain an energy buffer stock.”

The RTO’s thinking on the subject can be found in a recent report, “Winter Energy Security Improvements: Market-Based Approaches,” prepared for the Oct. 10 meeting of its Markets Committee.

“We want to use market-based incentives not only to supply the energy, but to reduce demand when needed and maintain a buffer stock of energy throughout the winter,” van Welie said. “We have no details yet; we’re in the process of designing this, and I’m bringing this to your attention so that if you’re interested, you can engage in the appropriate forum, which is the [New England Power Pool] stakeholder committees.”

The main idea is to move from the day-ahead market to a rolling, seven-day-ahead market, he said.

“We want to value energy that’s available today, that can be used today, but also seven days from now,” van Welie said. “And we want to purchase these commitments well ahead of the winter season so that we can stimulate investment in the right fuel arrangements, and ultimately the technologies that can actually deliver this type of service.”

Mission Disconnect

Margaret Cheney | © RTO Insider

Vermont Public Utility Commissioner Margaret Cheney said ISO-NE is “inevitably a partner because our missions overlap somewhat,” but there’s been “a disconnect in getting the RTO to recognize our in-state distributed generation in their long-range planning forecasts.”

Abigail Anthony | © RTO Insider

Rhode Island Public Utilities Commissioner Abigail Anthony said the RTO wants states in the region “to understand that their priority is reliability. I want ISO New England to understand that climate change is our state’s priority and to take that seriously.”

Lorraine Akiba | © RTO Insider

Lorraine Akiba, former Hawaii Public Utilities Commissioner, recounted sitting through the ISO-NE presentation and seeing “the lack of any planning for including more distributed energy resources into the ISO capacity portfolio, while others — California ISO in particular is a good example … they’re already into the market with energy storage and distributed generation from the utilities in that footprint, so it’s doable. You just have to conceptualize it. I think PJM has already started that as well.”

It’s also important to address Rhode Island’s concern about reliability versus climate change, Akiba said.

“Resiliency is the ultimate reliability, and because of climate change, resiliency is the key,” Akiba said. “We’ve heard repeatedly … resilience is what we need to do in the face of climate change. We’re going to try to stop the effect of climate change in the next 12 years, but we’ve been reminded that in the course of doing that, we also have to have adaptation strategies to deal with the extreme weather and the consequences of what we have failed to do up to now.”

Political Will

Phil Scott | © RTO Insider

Vermont Gov. Phil Scott said, “Three of our electrical utilities are now 100% renewable, and our largest utility is 60% renewable and 90% carbon-free. We now expect to get at least 75% of our electric supply from renewable energy sources by 2032, and we’re putting in place a standard that … is the most ambitious in the U.S.”

Peter Welch | © RTO Insider

Welch said that despite President Trump’s denial, in “every state and every region, people know just by what they’re seeing that climate change is real, and our failure to act is suicidal. … A confident country doesn’t deny the existence of a problem; a confident country assesses it, analyzes it and solve it. That’s what you do, and it’s in that effort that you then create wealth.”

He contended that a few people doing fine in the carbon-based economy, such as the Koch brothers, are going to fight any effort to transition to a clean energy economy, no matter the consequences to others, but that the upside is jobs created in facing the challenge.

Tim Ashe | © RTO Insider

Vermont Senate President pro tempore Tim Ashe said, “We suspect something different is happening … but still in Vermont, despite our ethic … there’s still a sense that this is really a problem mostly acutely experienced by others, not by us.”

David Zuckerman | © RTO Insider

Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, who owns a farm just south of Burlington, said rain that used to fall steadily now comes in torrential downpours, if at all.

“This year it stopped raining in May, and we drained one pond, and then another, and there was no more water to put on the crops. So now this fall, we have 30,000 fewer pounds of food,” Zuckerman said.

Marc Pacheco | © RTO Insider

He contrasted his situation this year with that of a friend who farms in Shaftsbury, 80 miles south, who said it wouldn’t stop raining, and that they had too much water.

Marc Pacheco, president pro tempore of the Massachusetts Senate, said that while his state has made itself a leader in clean energy and energy efficiency, climate change is becoming more urgent every day.

He recalled talking recently to a friend in Portugal, where Hurricane Leslie had hit last month.

Jared Duval | © RTO Insider

“It’s the first time in 174 years we’ve seen hurricane activity in that part of the Atlantic, heading into the Iberian Peninsula,” Pacheco said. “It’s crazy that we as political leaders … why we have not put into law the concrete statutes that need to be there and need to be met in order to protect not just our climate, but human public health.”

Mackay Miller | © RTO Insider

Jared Duval of advocacy group Energy Action Network said, “From the evidence that we have reviewed, it appears that the states that have made the most progress are the ones that have renewable policies with teeth.”

Dan Sosland | © RTO Insider

Mackay Miller, formerly with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and now National Grid’s director of U.S. strategy, said “One thing we are now realizing is that the prospects for a strong federal policy are dim … but at the state level, we can move markets if we move together.”

Dan Sosland of Acadia Center said, “We have the will; we need the political will.”

No Borders

Marie-Claude Francoeur | © RTO Insider

Marie-Claude Francoeur, Quebec’s delegate to New England, reminded the audience that “climate change knows no borders.”

Quebec didn’t join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative “because 99% of our electricity comes from renewable energy, hydropower, so RGGI would not achieve our goals,” Francoeur said.

Transportation accounts for about 45% of carbon emissions in Quebec, which began taxing carbon at the distribution level in 2006 with a levy on fossil fuels. Now, with California, it participates in the Western Climate Initiative economy-wide carbon pricing scheme, “investing 100% of the proceeds into greenhouse gas pollution reduction,” she said.

MISO Stakeholders Rally to Save Interconnection Group

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO’s Planning Advisory Committee will vote through Friday on whether to convert the longstanding Interconnection Process Task Force (IPTF) into a working group in an effort to save it from retirement.

The RTO last month proposed to end the task force and fold its discussions and duties into the Planning Subcommittee, a proposal that proved controversial for some stakeholders. (See “End of IPTF?” MISO Queues up Interconnection Options.)

MISO planners are still pulling for retirement, but many stakeholders continue to support converting the task force into a working group, as evidenced by discussion during an Oct. 17 PAC conference call where the Transmission-Dependent Utilities sector introduced a motion to vote on a makeover. The IPTF itself had already voted to convert itself into a working group. PAC voting results are considered advisory, not binding, for RTO staff.

“I think more folks agree that talk isn’t winding down around interconnection issues. If anything, it’s ramping up,” said Clean Grid Alliance’s Rhonda Peters, pointing out that MISO still has a great deal of interconnection work ahead of it based on the size of its 90-GW interconnection queue.

Peters asked the RTO to convert the task force into a more permanent working group so interconnection issues can continue to receive detailed discussions. She argued that the Planning Subcommittee doesn’t have the time to fully explore interconnection topics during its meetings.

“There is no doubt that years ago, the IPTF should have transitioned into a working group,” Independent Power Producers sector representative Mark Volpe said, noting that MISO’s storage participation model under Order 841 will raise policy issues involving the queue with which stakeholders will need to grapple. “There’s a lot of work left to be done,” he said.

“Squelching stakeholder voices on interconnection rule and policy matters is a bad idea based on the breadth of concern about the subject,” Apex Clean Energy’s Richard Seide said.

MISO planners at the meeting said they still recommend folding the IPTF into the Planning Subcommittee, although this time they styled the idea as a “consolidation” of the two by the end of 2018.

Vikram Godbole | © RTO Insider

Resource Utilization Director Vikram Godbole said the RTO is now recommending a consolidated Transmission and Interconnection Planning Subcommittee (TIPSC), with a new charter and meetings held on an as-needed basis. The subcommittee would report to the PAC and “provide subject matter expertise to the MISO planning staff on technical matters related to the transmission and interconnection planning processes.”

Godbole pushed back on the stakeholder suggestion that the RTO is trying to exclude some stakeholder voices with its proposal.

“That’s not the intent at all,” he said, adding that it’s always MISO’s goal to have well-rounded proposals influenced by a wide range of stakeholders.

Madison Gas and Electric’s Megan Wisersky said she “couldn’t think of a group more ill-suited” to take on interconnection issues than the PAC. She said a power imbalance exists within the group.

“For one, the PAC is sector-focused and not stakeholder-focused. We need the ideas of the stakeholders” to inform interconnection issues, Wisersky said.

In response to stakeholder questions about how MISO and the PAC would resolve an impasse on the IPTF’s fate, Senior Director of Expansion Planning Jeff Webb said the results of a PAC vote and the RTO’s preferred approach will both be put before the Steering Committee for further discussion.

But some stakeholders support retirement of the decade-old IPTF. Great River Energy’s Mike Steckelberg said he and other utilities, including Entergy, Northern Indiana Public Service Co., Duke Energy and Vectren, agree with MISO’s proposal to dissolve the IPTF effective January 2019.

“The IPTF has delved into discussions which are the responsibility of the transmission planners,” Steckelberg said. “Transmission planners have the engineering expertise, judgment and responsibility to determine what reliability studies are needed to interconnect new generation, and this is best done in the [Planning Subcommittee] forum.”

MISO PAC Puts MTEP 18 to Vote, Removes 3 Projects

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO’s Planning Advisory Committee will vote through Oct. 26 on whether to move most of the RTO’s $3.3 billion 2018 Transmission Expansion Plan forward, while holding off on considering approval for three projects because of stakeholder concerns.

The PAC agreed to consider 439 of 442 projects in its email ballot, reserving three for additional stakeholder comment next week. The committee’s vote will take place via email until 4 p.m. EDT on Oct. 26. The committee was originally slated to take a position on MTEP 18 during its Oct. 17 conference call, but it delayed the vote to address stakeholder concerns with projects.

miso mtep Transmission Expansion Plan
MTEP 18 breakdown | MISO

The portfolio, which was updated late last week with more projects, now contains 81 baseline reliability projects, 16 generator interconnection projects, two transmission deliverability service projects and two targeted market efficiency projects with PJM. (See MISO, PJM Endorsing 2 TMEPs for Year-end Approval.)

Most projects fall under MISO’s “other” designation: those chosen by transmission owners and reviewed by the RTO that are not eligible for cost allocation and represent replacement of aging infrastructure, construction because of local reliability needs or modifications made for environmental purposes. The portfolio will be considered for approval at MISO’s year-end Board of Directors meeting in December. An earlier version contained 434 transmission projects valued at $3 billion. (See MISO Recommending $3B MTEP 18 Draft Plan.)

Three Projects

The three problematic projects that won’t make the PAC vote include an $11 million rebuild of the Wabaco-Rochester 161-kV line in southern Minnesota, which was identified in this year’s market congestion planning study. MISO claims that the project will yield a 6.8:1 benefit-cost ratio, but stakeholders are skeptical of that estimate.

miso mtep Transmission Expansion Plan
Most expensive MTEP 18 projects | MISO

The Wabaco-Rochester line already experiences congestion, with increased traffic expected from wind generation coming online. Some stakeholders have said the project should be delayed in favor of a future larger project.

Others suggested that the amount of future wind generation driving the project’s benefits might not ultimately be able to connect.

“We do not support the results on this project,” Xcel Energy’s Drew Siebenaler said. “A lot of our reasoning is coming from study results that are CEII [critical energy/electric infrastructure information], so I can’t disclose them in public comments.”

MISO staff said the RTO continues to believe Wabaco-Rochester is a beneficial project and that it studied higher voltage alternatives before drawing that conclusion.

Dairyland Power Cooperative’s Terry Torgerson said the cooperative’s lawyer would be reaching out to MISO with its concerns over the project. “We’ve had discussions with MISO many, many times, and we feel we’re getting nowhere,” Torgerson said.

Entergy’s Yarrow Etheredge asked for more discussion and a possible email vote to find out if stakeholders support the project. MISO ultimately opened a longer stakeholder comment period on it.

Straits Project

Kavita Maini, economist for Midwest Industrial Customers, said the MTEP18 report seems incomplete because MISO is still considering alternatives to American Transmission Co.’s Straits of Mackinaw project.

MISO executives in September said they were still weighing alternatives to ATC’s proposal to replace a 138-kV circuit connecting Michigan’s Upper and Lower peninsulas after two submarine cables were damaged in April, most likely by a passing vessel. ATC said one of the cables was rendered permanently inoperable. (See ATC Restores Tx Link Between Michigan Peninsulas.)

“You’re right, that’s a project whose final recommendation is still in progress with MISO,” said Jeff Webb, the RTO’s senior director of expansion planning.

Webb said the RTO will continue to work with the parties involved on the project and will deliver an update at the Nov. 13 meeting of the System Planning Committee of the Board of Directors. For now, the project has encountered “complicated siting issues at the straits,” though MISO still expects to recommend a replacement of the underwater cables, he said.

Stakeholders have submitted alternatives to the straits project that include battery storage, relocating generators from Michigan’s Lower Peninsula to the Upper Peninsula, tunneling the cables in bedrock below the lake, connecting to Ontario’s grid and constructing a new gas-fired plant near Mackinac.

“We still have hopes of having this resolved before the December recommendation to the Board of Directors, but there is a possibility that it could linger beyond that,” Webb said.

“It doesn’t seem right to vote on this today when the projects aren’t fully vetted,” Maini said.

WPPI Energy’s Steve Leovy said ITC Midwest’s $11 million line and transformer project at the Walters 161/69-kV substation in southern Minnesota was also under evaluation against alternatives, with MISO choosing one such alternative instead of the originally proposed project.

Webb agreed that MISO should update the MTEP report to reflect the change, and the original project was removed from PAC voting consideration.

SPP MOPC Briefs: Oct. 16-17, 2018

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — SPP’s Market and Operations Policy Committee last week unanimously approved staff recommendations to revise the SPP-MISO Coordinated System Plan by eliminating the RTOs’ joint transmission model and the $5 million minimum cost threshold on interregional projects, while adding adjusted production cost and avoided-cost benefit metrics.

The RTOs have told their stakeholders they will use only their individual regional planning models to evaluate interregional projects. Members on both sides of the seam have complained that a “triple hurdle” has contributed to the lack of interregional projects. (See MISO, SPP Loosen Interregional Project Requirements.)

“We have concerns … about getting rid of the joint model, because it is clear up front that the joint model will determine the way costs are allocated,” The Wind Alliance’s Steve Gaw said. “We lose that stability in the new process, and it remains to be seen if efficiency gains in the new process will outweigh this risk.”

MOPC Endorses Battery Storage as Market Participant

The committee endorsed several market design changes for SPP’s compliance filing with FERC Order 841.

RR323 defines batteries as electric storage resources (ESRs), capable of being dispatched and participating in price formation. Excluded as ESRs are those resources that are either contractually barred or physically incapable of injecting energy back onto the grid because of their design or configuration.

The Tariff change also creates a new registration type, “market storage resource,” to be used only by ESRs. The resources are not required to use the MSR model but must specify ancillary services offered — e.g., energy, regulation up, regulation down, spinning reserves and/or supplemental reserves — and provide at least a tenth of a megawatt to be eligible for any market product.

“The resource can be committed as a charging resource or as a non-charging resource. It’s no different than a regular resource,” SPP’s Yasser Bahbaz said. He pointed out that pumped hydro, a non-charging resource, already qualifies as an ESR.

Renewable interests were hoping to see more on capacity accreditation but were satisfied to learn that the Supply Adequacy Working Group is considering a four-hour accreditation for ESRs. Existing governing language allows ESRs to qualify for capacity credits if the resource meets the planning criteria’s testing requirements.

The measure passed with 10 abstentions.

“Our impression is this has gone little bit beyond what we need to do to comply with the FERC order,” American Electric Power’s Richard Ross said, explaining his company’s abstention. “[SPP] already [has] a storage resource, and it seems to have found a way to operate under the current guidelines.”

The MOPC also approved tweaks to the Market Working Group’s RR266, which modeled joint-owned units as single resources and the committee had approved in July. “Ownership” was changed to “interest,” recognizing that the former term doesn’t capture stakeholder intent that power purchase agreements and other non-ownership interests be included.

Stakeholders approved the change with one abstention.

MOPC Approves 2 Revised Futures in 2020 Study

The committee agreed with the Economic Studies Working Group’s recommendation to study only two futures in its 2020 Integrated Transmission Planning assessment: a reference case and an emerging technologies scenario.

It also agreed with the ESWG that there is no need to study a third future that assumes a carbon adder or carbon-emissions reduction and accelerated emerging technologies. The third future would have increased the 2020 ITP’s study costs, adding about 6,600 consulting hours.

ESWG Chair Alan Myers, with ITC Holdings, said many of the third future’s assumptions will be included in SPP’s first 20-year assessment, which will begin in 2022. “That might be a good vehicle for studying these types of things,” he said.

Staff will use the 2019 ITP’s two futures as a starting point, adding fossil fuel retirements, ESRs and an increase in utility-scale solar and wind additions to the original assumptions. Both futures will assume coal plants retire at 56 years old, a decrease of four years over previous assumptions.

“We think the shift from 60 to 56 [years] … is definitely a movement in the right direction,” said Keith Collins, executive director of SPP’s Market Monitoring Unit, which has joined the ESWG’s discussions. “But [based on] what we’re seeing in other markets, it’s not [reducing] it enough.”

Collins favored including the third future, saying SPP’s market indicates that uneconomic resources are likely operating, as evidenced by the self-commitment of generation and negative prices.

“The economics Keith talks about are driven by the inability of a coal plant to recover its fixed costs,” Board of Directors Chairman Larry Altenbaumer said. “To a large extent, that fixed cost is subject to the regulatory environment that exists. I’m not at all convinced Future 3 is the right way to [address] that.”

SPP Updates Members on Western RC Effort

Peak Reliability’s decision to cease operations may slow SPP’s pursuit of the Mountain West Transmission Group, but it is also giving the RTO some business with the group.

Operations Vice President Bruce Rew told stakeholders the 16 entities who have signed up for SPP’s reliability coordinator services include all original Mountain West members: Black Hills Energy (Black Hills Power, Black Hills Colorado Electric Utility Co. and Cheyenne Light Fuel & Power); Colorado Springs Utilities; Platte River Power Authority; Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association; the Western Area Power Administration (Rocky Mountain Region and Desert Southwest Region); and Xcel Energy’s Public Service Company of Colorado.

Xcel’s surprise April announcement that it was leaving the Mountain West shelved SPP’s integration of the group. (See Xcel Leaving Mountain West; SPP Integration at Risk.)

That news was followed up by Peak’s decision in June to wind down its RC operations by the end of 2019. (See Peak Reliability to Wind Down Operations.)

The other entities who have signed up with SPP are: Arizona Electric Power Cooperative; the city of Farmington, N.M.; El Paso Electric; Intermountain Rural Electric Association, in Colorado; Tucson Electric Power; Arlington Valley, in Arizona; and Griffith Energy, also in Arizona.

SPP will continue strengthen its toehold in the West with its RC services, expanding its footprint to 16 states with the addition of Arizona and Utah.

SPP’s Western RC will serve approximately 20% of the non-CAISO load in the Western U.S., accounting for 100 TWh of net energy for load, Rew said. A Western Reliability Executive Committee and a Western Reliability Working Group will provide governance. Three task forces have already been formed: Congestion Management and Seams, RC Readiness and West Modeling.

Rew said the groups are currently populating the transmission models, with the hopes of exchanging real-time data with transmission owners, balancing authorities and neighboring RCs by May 1, 2019. The Western RC is scheduled to begin shadow operations with Peak by Oct. 1, with the cutover set for Dec. 1, 2019.

Rew also briefed the MOPC on the major operations events with MISO in January and September, calling the latter a “success story” because of the improved coordination between the RTOs.

Unseasonably warm conditions in mid-September led to higher loads than forecast in SPP’s southern region and in MISO South. When several units tripped, MISO was forced to call a maximum generation alert and a Level 2 Energy Emergency Alert on Sept. 15. SPP sent 300 MW of emergency assistance for three hours to help resolve the situation. (See MISO: Sept. Emergency Response Improved by Jan. Event.)

“With our operational preparations, we were able to make it through,” Rew said.

HITT Group Continues its Education Sessions

The Holistic Integrated Tariff Team has moved into a second phase of education, listening to and discussing presentations by various stakeholders as it eyes an April 2019 deadline for delivering a report on the optimal alignment of SPP’s planning processes, cost-allocation methodologies, and market products and services.

The team, which reports to the board, was only formed in April. (See SPP’s Tariff Team Begins Carving up the Elephant.)

“I won’t disagree that it’s an ambitious schedule,” said SPP General Counsel Paul Suskie, who serves as the HITT’s staff secretary.

The HITT expects to begin its third phase in December, when it will begin drafting its recommendations to the board and Members Committee.

The team meets next Oct. 23 and has scheduled meetings through April 2019.

The meetings continue to be limited to team members, with those stakeholders not delivering presentations “encouraged” to call in to listen.

Suskie acknowledged the lack of face-to-face interaction and stakeholders’ complaints about technological problems during conference calls. “We tried to line the meetings up with board meetings as best we could, but we haven’t been able to do that,” he said.

Competitive Transmission Group Kept on Standby

The committee agreed to keep the Competitive Transmission Process Task Force on “hot standby” rather than disband it, should a future Order 1000 issue deserve its attention.

Several committee members agreed with the group’s recommendation that it disband, saying its work has been completed. But task force Chair Bill Grant, of Southwestern Public Service, argued the group’s expertise should be leveraged by keeping it on standby, rather than disbanding it.

“We had a pretty balanced group of people who had transmission experience and know how projects are put together. We also had financial people who could look at and analyze bidding forms,” he said. “If MOPC wants to disband and bring it back up if needed, I would caution you that we have the right people at the table.”

Formed in 2015, the CTPTF picked up where a previous task force left off to revise SPP’s Tariff to comply with FERC’s 2011 order introducing competition to transmission development. The group has worked to improve the competitive process following the first two solicitations, neither of which resulted in an approved project.

Admin Cost Recovery Looks at Demand, Energy Charges

Evergy’s John Olsen, chair of the Schedule 1A Task Force, told the MOPC his group will propose revisions to SPP’s administrative fee recovery mechanism at the committee’s January meeting. Olsen said that timeline would give members a year to work with their regulators before final revisions are filed with FERC in 2020.

Olsen said the group favors a mix of demand and energy charges, with market costs recovered through energy charges and planning costs recovered through demand charges. Contested issues include scheduling and dispatch costs and what “determinants” should be included in cost allocation calculations, he said.

“The debate has been whether generators or loads pay for all cost,” Olsen said.

He shared a picture of Grant and Tenaska’s John Varnell, wearing seemingly identical plaid shirts and body language during a task force meeting.

“That’s what five hours of talking about denominator billing determinants will do to a person,” Olsen said, drawing laughs.

The task force has been asked to simplify the rate structure and include energy transactions into the design. The RTO’s administrative fee of 42.9 cents/MWh is budgeted to recover $164 million in the current budget year. The administrative fee is collected on contracts between transmission providers and customers. Point-to-point contracts are billed against reserved transmission capacity, and network service is billed against the prior year’s average monthly zonal peak. (See SPP Stakeholders to Study Admin Fee Changes.)

MOPC Approves Order 845 Compliance Language

The MOPC easily endorsed the Regional Tariff Work Group’s revisions to the pro forma large generator interconnection procedures and large generator interconnection agreement to comply with FERC Order 845. The commission’s order is designed to address delays in interconnection queues, a common complaint among SPP’s membership.

RTWG Chair David Kays, with Oklahoma Gas and Electric, said Revision Request 325 will not be filed until a pending rehearing request before the commission is resolved, which would likely add another 90 days to the timeline.

The vote was unanimous, with only ITC abstaining.

Consent Agenda

The MOPC rejected a change to the ITP’s operational model development, agreeing that ESWG/TWG RR317 would be undoing the Transmission Planning Improvement Task Force’s work.

The change would have removed the day-ahead reliability unit commitment to evaluate economic flowgates in planning models. It was removed from the consent agenda, with two members abstaining from the vote.

The committee unanimously approved the rest of the agenda, which included 10 revision requests, updates to the 2019 ITP assessment’s scope, removal of references to the SPP Regional Entity from the MOPC’s scope, the MWG’s annual violation relaxation limits analysis, and charter changes for the Operating Reliability, Operations Training Project Cost and Regional Compliance Working Groups. (RR318 was discussed separately but also passed unanimously.):

  • BPWG RR319: Standardizes market import service (MIS) over all SPP ties by adding MIS to the Miles City DC tie in Montana, which is partially owned by the Western Area Power Administration.
  • ESWG/TWG RR321: Cleans up several items, grammatical errors and small improvements in the ITP manual that were discovered since its approval.
  • MWG RR288: Allows non-dispatchable variable energy resources converting to dispatchable to use control statuses not originally available to them. SPP’s control statuses are: offline (the resource is not operating); non-regulating (online and capable of following a dispatch instruction or contingency reserve deployment but not eligible to clear regulation service); regulating (online and capable of following dispatch or contingency reserve instruction, and regulation deployment); and manual (online but not able to follow dispatch; e.g., start-up, shutdown, testing, etc.).
  • MWG RR316: Updates the multi-configuration (combined cycle) resource market design by adding two additional commitment parameters: group minimum down time and plant minimum down time. Also removes sync-to-min and min-to-off times from the submitted minimum down time or group minimum down time when the resource transitions between operational configurations. The current design only allows individual registered configurations to submit a minimum down time.
  • MWG RR328: Allows the automation of out-of-merit energy and RUC make-whole payment calculations when a contingency reserve deployment test is issued.
  • MWG RR332: Corrects protocol calculations from designs implemented in RR200 (design change for bilateral settlement schedules and over-collected losses (OCL) distribution) and RR235 (correction to RR200) necessary to ensure bilateral settlement schedules are receiving their correct OCL. The change — which also must be approved by the Regional Tariff Working Group — ensures corrected resettlements back to the original May 1, 2018, release date. The RTWG next meets Oct. 25.
  • MWG RR333: Modifies four charge types necessary to implement RR229 (FERC Order 831 compliance) and discovered by staff during a recent settlements system replacement project. It also must go before the RTWG for approval.
  • ORWG RR318: Changes the contingency reserve requirement calculation to allow the use of the “most severe single contingency” as the basis of the minimum contingency reserve requirement on an hourly basis. SPP said the revision allows it to more accurately and reliably set the reserve requirement.
  • RTWG RR305: Updates Tariff language following modifications to the aggregate facilities study process by removing the requirement to file a service agreement before modeling new transmission service in the ITP models. Also removes the requirement that SPP issue notifications to construct (NTC) and notifications to construct with conditions (NTC-C) before filing a service agreement. Adds a financial commitment date of four years to the issuance of an NTC or NTC-C.
  • RTWG RR322: Changes the Tariff and other documents to reflect that the RTO is no longer using U.S. Energy Information Administration data in monthly load forecasts. SPP said the data in the EIA report are not granular enough because they are at the balancing authority level, rather than the local balancing authority level required. In January, the RTO began using forecast data that are available through the NERC system data exchange (SDX) and historical data where forecasts are not available.

— Tom Kleckner

SPP Strategic Planning Committee Briefs: Oct. 18, 2018

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — SPP Board of Directors Chair Larry Altenbaumer last week unveiled a proposal to reduce the number of face-to-face meetings and add more executive sessions, saying it would improve the board’s focus on its strategic plan.

SPP Chair Larry Altenbaumer shares his thoughts on changes to the Board meetings. | © RTO Insider

While no final decisions have been made, Altenbaumer told the Strategic Planning Committee he is proposing adding two executive time slots to the board and Members Committee’s quarterly meetings and eliminating the two non-quarterly face-to-face board sessions. The executive time would be used for discussions with the state regulators’ Regional State Committee and the Members Committee.

Altenbaumer called the changes part of the board’s “broader evolution,” but that he was sensitive to concerns about taking discussions behind closed doors. He said the executive sessions are not intended to be decision-making meetings but will improve the quality of the discussions.

“Does this reduce the transparency of the organization? We want to be very much on guard that does not happen,” Altenbaumer said. “We want to ensure that in the forums where decisions are made that all stakeholders have the opportunity to participate. I think [meeting with] an outside resource in a smaller setting provides a greater quality of interaction.”

The new chairman, who took his position at the head of the table following April’s board meeting, said he was driven by the outcome of efforts to integrate the Mountain West Transmission Group. SPP received pushback late in the process from the RSC and members, who felt cut out of some of the earlier discussions.

The work to integrate Mountain West is officially ongoing, but most Western entities are now focused on securing reliability coordination services from SPP and CAISO with the pending shutdown of Peak Reliability. (See Peak Reliability to Wind Down Operations.)

ITC’s Alan Meyers | © RTO Insider

“Despite a lot of effort and a ton of meetings [with Mountain West], I think we failed at effectively communicating with both the RSC and our members,” Altenbaumer said. “I had a lot of one-on-one interactions with members to address an issue. On many strategic issues, there is a variety of opinions on how those items need to be addressed. If we can facilitate a discussion with all members on the Members Committee, we’ll get a more robust discussion and up-front direction for all our stakeholder groups to address those issues.”

Altenbaumer said the organizational strategy should be determined by the board and Members Committee, but he remarked, “I don’t think we’ve always acted as owners of that strategy.” He said he prefers setting aside time to “discuss matters of strategic importance” in place of quarterly reports.

SPS’ Bill Grant | © RTO Insider

The chairman reassured the SPC that it is still the committee responsible for developing SPP’s strategic plan.

“This is where the technical expertise resides,” he said. “I hope there will be dialogue back and forth to ensure we’re discussing issues of strategic matters.”

Altenbaumer wants to eliminate the board’s June education session and the December meeting in which the board approves the budget. The December meeting would become a conference call.

He is also proposing the board delegate to the Markets and Operations Policy Committee decisions “that need not be brought to the board.”

SPC Takes No Action on Clean Energy Rule

The committee decided not to have SPP provide comments on EPA’s proposed Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule, determining there is little to be gained, but much to lose.

In explaining the ACE rule to the SPC, Vice President of Engineering Lanny Nickell said the rule is “less onerous” than the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, which required a 32% cut in emissions below 2005 levels by 2030.

SPP’s Lanny Nickell (r) discusses the proposed Affordable Clean Energy rule as Director Mark Crisson takes notes. | © RTO Insider

The ACE rule applies only to existing coal-fired plants and does not set a federal carbon-emission rate, requiring states to set unit-specific standards, Nickell said.

“From a reliability perspective, it’s a lot more flexible and easier to anticipate than output limitations,” he said.

Nickell conducted several CPP studies after its 2014 release. The final analysis indicated that a state-by-state compliance approach could result in nearly 40% higher costs than a regional approach.

Nickell said there is no reason for SPP to study the ACE rule’s “rate-based approach” or to issue a statement. “I don’t have any personal concerns about its reliability implications,” he said. EPA has issued an Oct. 31 deadline for public comments.

SPP Director Phyllis Bernard in discussion with Evergy’s Denise Buffington. | © RTO Insider

“We haven’t made a quantitative analysis” of the new rule, he pointed out. “It would be an opinion we are offering, what we think the implication of ACE would be. We would be making an opinion without a quantitative analysis.”

“I love you guys, but you’re thinking like electrical engineers rather than politicians,” said Director Phyllis Bernard, who has a strong background in administrative law. “Your opinion, while qualitative, is far superior from the opinion of someone out there who is putting out spin. You can make a difference. If you say nothing, the default position may go back to something you don’t want to hear. If you think something in the proposed rule is positive, you should say that.”

Several members urged SPP to rely on the facts — no reliability impact; the market is producing emission-reductions through the dispatch of cleaner fuels — and provide comments.

“If you don’t say anything, someone will go on the record and dictate the final rule,” said Basin Electric Power Cooperative’s Mike Risan.

“Once we say something, it invites questions,” Altenbaumer countered. “One of the first questions I would ask is, ‘How can you make that assertion if you haven’t done any studies?’ I don’t know why you go down that path if there are no benefits, other than a feel-good.”

SPC Chair Mike Wise | © RTO Insider

Mike Ross, SPP’s senior vice president of government affairs and public relations and a six-term member of the U.S. House of Representatives for Arkansas, cautioned against going public with comments on the rule.

“If we’re not careful, we’re going to be labeled pro-environment or anti-environment, pro-coal or anti-coal, pro-Trump or anti-Trump. That’s not our job,” Ross said.

“Our job is to be fuel agnostic and let the markets choose the fuel source and to focus on reliability. The proposed rule by this administration is going to be adopted, whether we comment or not, and since it won’t impact reliability, I don’t think we should comment. It’ll be tied up in the courts for years. When we are trying to make decisions on 40- and 50-year assets, our country needs a national energy policy that transcends administrations and political parties.”

Asked whether the ISO/RTO Council has weighed in on the ACE, CEO Nick Brown noted that the industry group was silent on the CPP.

“It’s certainly not going to step up as a group and comment on this, as it doesn’t appear to have any impact on the bulk power system,” Brown said.

— Tom Kleckner