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November 20, 2024

Resilience Leads Discussion at PJM Annual Meeting

By Rory D. Sweeney

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — Attendees who didn’t pick up on the theme of PJM’s annual meeting last week weren’t listening. “Resilience” was uttered so many times during the General Session that speakers were sheepishly joking about using the word before launching into their own comments.

What did the audience learn from all of it? That it’s complicated. That it requires coordination across multiple organizational levels, and that there’s no template. It’s also likely very expensive — although so are the consequences of disasters when necessary provisions aren’t in place.

Rob Glenn, director of private sector integration for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, urged stakeholders to develop “a culture of preparedness” and run response exercises routinely. Because emergency responders aren’t always paid professionals, he said, coordination needs to occur all the way to the community level and begin well before an event occurs.

Pat Hoffman, the Department of Energy’s principal deputy assistant secretary for the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability, warned of cyberattacks on the industry within the next year from Russian hackers.

“Cybersecurity is one of the most important issues facing this industry today,” she said. “We have a huge bullseye on our back. … At this stage of the game, it’s not if but when, so how do we make sure we can continue to operate after an attack?”

The industry is focusing on improvements in sensing technology to support outage recovery, asset management and machine learning, she said. She said one of the industry’s main strengths is being able to articulate how much damage it has sustained from an event, how secure its network remains, what work needs to be accomplished and the steps necessary to move forward.

Resilience Panel

The meeting included a panel discussion on lessons learned about resilience from recent events. Several of the panelists recounted their experiences helping to rebuild Puerto Rico’s electricity grid following Hurricane Maria last year.

resilience pjm annual meeting
Rojas | © RTO Insider

Saul Rojas, a vice president of technical compliance for the New York Power Authority, said one of the main takeaways was how tired people were. He said he “never felt so powerless as a manager” when his agency’s satellite phones failed, preventing him from communicating instructions to his crews. NYPA is following up with its vendors to figure out the cause of the problem.

Rojas said NYPA had to think “outside the playbook” in mobilizing to an island with unexpectedly rugged terrain. “When I went to Puerto Rico, I was expecting flat lands and beaches,” he said.

Because of the mountainous terrain and lack of vegetation management in rural areas, the general rule was it took 30 linemen two weeks to restore power to less than 10 customers, he said. “Does it really make sense for them to be connected to the grid? Perhaps … reimagining the grid” with distributed energy resources makes more sense, he said.

resilience pjm annual meeting
Hyland | © RTO Insider

Michael Hyland, American Public Power Association’s senior vice president of engineering services, who coordinated with Rojas throughout his time in Puerto Rico, said mobilization was much different than on the U.S. mainland. In contrast with APPA’s mobilization of 60,000 workers in response to Hurricane Irma in Florida, he said, “I can’t just tell them to start driving down I-95.”

He said many utilities don’t recognize the value of mutual aid agreements until they’ve been hit, but that the work in Puerto Rico has been effective. Utilities in Trinidad and Tobago have now joined APPA, he said.

APPA is also developing a variety of drills to simulate potential regional events, such as earthquakes, hurricanes and mudslides. Game theory is also being incorporated to require dynamic responses. “Think [the video game] ‘Oregon Trail,’” he said. “You may die.”

resilience pjm annual meeting
Daigler | © RTO Insider

Don Daigler, Southern California Edison’s director of business resilience, recapped his company’s response to last year’s wildfires, noting that at one point there were five fires within its territory for three weeks. He said much of the state was a “powder keg” because of fuel from unusual amounts of undergrowth combined with the “unprecedented” continuation of the hot, dry, fast Santa Anna winds into December.

The company found issues with incident command, executive engagement, real-time investor relations to mitigate stock-price fluctuations, and ground-level strategies to ensure notification. The company embedded workers with fire and lineman experience to provide useful information to responders.

resilience pjm annual meeting
Durkovich (left) and Aaronson | © RTO Insider

Caitlin Durkovich, a director at Toffler Associates, the strategic consulting and advisory firm founded by “Future Shock” author Alvin Toffler, said the idea is to think about “critical dependencies” between infrastructure systems, such as electricity and water, and realize there are “no bright lines or boundaries” but rather “concentric circles that move outward.” Organizations must be ready to make major changes, said Durkovich, former assistant secretary of infrastructure protection for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Scott Aaronson, Edison Electric Institute’s vice president for security and preparedness, told attendees to focus on unity of effort, message and investment to develop preparedness for a spectrum of possible events.

Ott Defends Fuel Security Initiative

PJM CEO Andy Ott wrapped up the discussion by defending the fuel security initiative announced last month and imploring stakeholders, “I need your help” to improve resilience. (See PJM Seeks to Have Market Value Fuel Security.)

resilience pjm annual meeting
Left to right on the dais at the Members Committee meeting: PJM CEO Andy Ott; Dave Anders, PJM; Mike Borgatti, Gabel Associates; Chuck Dugan, EKPC; Vince Duane, PJM | © RTO Insider

“I do believe that fuel security is resilience,” he said, responding to criticism that the initiative is an effort to funnel money to ailing coal and nuclear plants. “Sometimes folks have been critical of our policies. Sometimes, it’s like democracy: It’s not perfect, but it’s the best game in town.”

Schneider Retires

resilience pjm annual meeting
Schneider | © RTO Insider

The meeting culminated in an emotional sendoff for Board of Managers Chairman Howard Schneider, who was forced by term limits to retire from the board. He was the last of the original board members from its inception in 1997 and was its first and only nonexecutive chairman, assuming the position when it was developed in 2007. (See related story, Retiring PJM Chair Schneider Reflects on 21 Years at the Helm.)

Several members of PJM leadership reflected on Schneider’s term, including Ott, who said Schneider taught him how to run the RTO “the right way, to run it with inclusiveness, to run it with integrity.”

Gabel Associates’ Mike Borgatti, chair of the Members Committee, noted that Schneider’s “fingerprints are all over PJM.”

resilience pjm annual meeting
Almgren | © RTO Insider

Ake Almgren, who was later elected to succeed Schneider as chair, praised Schneider for how he “always made the extra effort to engage all board members … making the aggregate board stronger than its individual members.” (See PJM Board Elects New Chair, Welcomes New Member.)

In his farewell remarks, Schneider praised his fellow board members.

“I can truly say to you that you have a strong board with a hardworking and knowledgeable person in every slot,” he said.

He also extended a final peace offering to the Independent Market Monitor, with which he had clashed in the past, calling it “not technically a part of PJM, yet an integral part of PJM.”

“The [Market Monitor] is a good check and balance and has important ideas to convey,” he said.

He requested that PJM and its stakeholders protect its markets, keep grid reliability as a priority and value input from the board.

“It usually provides sage advice,” he said.

Finally, he said, PJM “has prospered over these 21 years and my wish is may it continue to do so.”

Stakeholder Process Reforms

Borgatti teased the launch in June or July of an effort to consider potential changes to the stakeholder process and urged members to become involved in the discussion.

“I think it’s incredibly important that we lean in on this one,” he said. “Anyone who wants to participate needs to be given an opportunity to weigh in.”

FERC Affirms Rulings in Entergy Bandwidth Dispute

By Amanda Durish Cook

The longstanding disagreement over how Entergy once equalized production costs among its operating companies was at the center of two FERC decisions last week, with the commission upholding opinions from two administrative law judges pertaining to a seven-month period of bandwidth calculations from 2005.

The allocation of production costs from 2005 to 2015 among Entergy’s half-dozen operating companies under its multistate system agreement has been a source of disagreement for a decade. Before 2015, the companies functioned as one system, although each had different operating costs. Under the arrangement, Entergy’s low-cost operating companies made payments to the highest-cost company in the system using a “bandwidth” remedy that ensured no operating company had production costs more than 11% above or below the system average.

Regulators in each state where Entergy operates have regularly challenged the annual bandwidth filings, with the Louisiana Public Service Commission long contending that the company’s bandwidth payment calculation was plagued by inconsistencies. (See FERC Affirms Ruling Favoring Entergy Bandwidth Calculation.)

In the first order issued Thursday, FERC affirmed a presiding ALJ’s 2016 finding that interest on the 2005 bandwidth period should begin to accrue starting on June 1, 2006, instead of on June 1, 2005, the first day of a test period, as the Louisiana Public Service Commission had argued (EL01-88-015).

The commission also sided with the judge that Entergy Louisiana should exclude most of its net operating loss accumulated deferred income tax (ADIT) from the bandwidth calculation because it stems from a $1.8 billion tax deduction associated with above-market value energy purchases from a long-term contract with the Vidalia hydroelectric power station ending in 2031. The Vidalia tax deduction was properly excluded from the bandwidth formula to “avoid shifting tax burdens and benefits” to other Entergy operating companies, FERC said. The Louisiana PSC had argued that Entergy Louisiana’s net operating loss ADIT is not a tax savings and should be included in the bandwidth formula.

ferc entergy bandwidth calculations
Hydroelectric station in Vidalia | Brookfield Renewable Power

FERC also agreed that Entergy did not properly account for three regulatory asset deferrals in the 2005 bandwidth calculation and ordered the company to make corrections by switching the deferrals to bandwidth-eligible accounts. The commission confirmed that Entergy should calculate the impact of those accounting changes and make a new compliance filing within 60 days.

In the second order Thursday, FERC affirmed another ALJ’s ruling that Entergy had already addressed the question of how 2005 bandwidth calculations should be handled. The commission said Entergy can use its 2006 compliance filing on bandwidth calculations, which FERC accepted in 2007 (EL01-88-017).

Entergy had questioned whether it could apply its 2006 filing for the bandwidth formula calculation to the seven-month period of bandwidth calculations in 2005 after the Louisiana PSC argued that the 2006 filing was not the properly filed rate for 2005 and could not accommodate a seven-month remedy, as it was designed for an annual calculation. FERC said the Louisiana PSC’s argument amounted to a “collateral attack” on its prior rulings in the Entergy bandwidth calculations.

However, FERC disagreed with the judge that the bandwidth formula used for 2005 must “contain all amendments that have been made to the formula in subsequent years.”

Michigan Farm Granted Partial Waiver of QF Filing Requirements

By Amanda Durish Cook

FERC ruled last week that a Michigan soybean farm operating two small biomass plants is not excused from a requirement to file as a qualifying facility under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act, but it reduced the consequences of the farm’s yearslong failure to do so.

The commission on Thursday said Zeeland Farm Services had a responsibility to file for QF status, even though the company claimed it was unaware of its filing obligation for 10 years. The order partially waived the filing requirement so the two facilities could be largely treated as QFs for the time they operated out-of-compliance (EL17-70, et al.).

The farm owns two 1.6-MW landfill gas-fueled facilities located at its soybean processing facility in Zeeland, Mich. Under a FERC rule enacted in 2006, generating facilities larger than 1 MW must file for QF status.

Zeeland Farm QF Filing FERC PURPA
Zeeland Farm Services | Google Maps

One of Zeeland Farm’s biomass facilities began operating in late 2005, with the other following in 2008. The farm had sold the output to Consumers Energy under two, seven-year power purchase agreements.

FERC did not shield Zeeland from Sections 205 and 206 of the Federal Power Act, leaving the farm facing refunds for “the time value of the revenues collected … for the entire period that the rate was collected without commission authorization.” The farm has already filed a report approved by FERC earlier this month establishing that over the course of the PPAs, it lost money on fuel expenses and operations and maintenance costs, which totaled about $7.9 million (QF17-935). Zeeland collected a total $7.6 million for energy and capacity sold to Consumers, and the commission agreed a refund report should not be required because the farm was unable to recover some variable costs.

FERC also said Zeeland will not have to refund the difference between a market-based rate and a cost-justified rate, as the FPA prescribes, because rates were negotiated with Consumers.

Zeeland said it only became aware of the filing requirement in late 2016, and it filed notices of self-certification last May after informing Consumers of the mistake and conducting a review to make sure the biomass plants still fit the QF definition. Zeeland said its failure to timely submit notices of self-certification was the result of a “good-faith, inadvertent error by individuals and companies otherwise not engaged in the power business.”

But the commission didn’t express sympathy for the oversight. “Zeeland Farm has not justified its failure to comply with a filing requirement that has been present in the commission’s regulations since 2006,” FERC said. “In similar situations, the commission has not been persuaded by claims that the facility met all other requirements for QF status because that argument improperly minimizes the importance of the filing requirement.”

FERC Clarifies CEII Rules, Denies Rehearing

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC on Thursday rejected the Edison Electric Institute’s request for rehearing of its 2016 order on handling of Critical Energy Infrastructure Information but offered clarification on several points.

EEI challenged several aspects of Order 833, which implemented the CEII provisions attached to the 2015 Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act. (See FERC OKs Information Security, FOIA Rules.) It said the commission failed to adequately specify the criteria it uses to determine whether a member of the public is eligible to obtain CEII.

The commission responded that it has obtained “vast experience” since instituting the CEII process in 2003, noting it “routinely processes CEII requests from, among others, consultants, academics, landowners and public interest groups.”

Critical Energy Infrastructure Information EEI FERC
| © RTO Insider

However, it clarified that “public safety benefits” are one criterion that it should consider in balancing “the requester’s need for the information against the sensitivity of the information.”

EEI also said the commission should revise its CEII nondisclosure agreement “to mitigate against the risk of a CEII recipient involuntarily sharing CEII with a hostile actor.”

FERC declined to change the minimum requirements for the NDA but said the commission’s CEII coordinator “may consider adding additional provisions to the NDA on a case-by-case basis.”

The commission also rejected EEI’s contention that it erred in not providing a way for entities to comment on the sharing of commission-generated CEII.

“The FAST Act does not require, and EEI identifies no provision in the FAST Act requiring, the commission to provide notice and opportunity for public comment about the prospective release or sharing of commission-generated CEII. Furthermore, the commission is not persuaded that we should establish a requirement for stakeholder input when the commission combines information not filed as CEII with other information and potentially creates CEII,” FERC said.

“We, however, clarify that nothing in the FAST Act or the commission’s CEII regulations prevents the CEII coordinator from exercising discretion in an individual situation to solicit comments from a submitter of CEII or other information when evaluating whether to release a commission-generated CEII document.”

PJM Markets and Reliability Committee Preview: May 24, 2018

Below is a summary of the issues scheduled to be brought to a vote at Thursday’s PJM Markets and Reliability Committee meeting, which will be held at the PJM Conference and Training Center and not its normal location at the Chase Center in Wilmington, Del. Each item is listed by agenda number, description and projected time of discussion, followed by a summary of the issue and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.

RTO Insider will be in Valley Forge, Pa., covering the discussions and votes. See next Tuesday’s newsletter for a full report.

Markets and Reliability Committee

2. PJM Manuals (9:10-9:45)

Members will be asked to endorse the following proposed manual changes:

A. Manual 36: System Restoration. Revisions developed as part of the manual’s annual review; includes clarifications regarding synchro-check relays, blocking governors and black start generators.

B. Manual 3: Transmission Operations. Biannual review to update operating procedures. Revisions update remedial action schemes, sectionalizing schemes and definitions for the Cleveland and Eastern interfaces; designates voltage limits for Ohio Valley Electric Corp.’s impending integration; adds language regarding reactive reserve check submittals and clarifies notes on load shed activity.

C. Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations. Revisions developed to ensure consistency between the manual and Operating Agreement regarding price-based offers of more than $1,000/MWh. The change was necessitated by FERC Order 831, which required RTOs and ISOs to raise their hard caps for verified cost-based incremental energy offers to $2,000/MWh. (See “Offer Cap Resolution,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs: May 2, 2018.) Also includes conforming changes regarding bidding locations for virtual transactions.

D. Manual 14A: New Services Request Process. Annual review. Revisions developed to introduce the Queue Point software for submitting data for feasibility and system impact studies.

E. Manual 7: Protection Standards. Revisions developed by the Relay Subcommittee to add clarity, update terms and add reliability requirements.

F. Manual 14D: Generator Operational Requirements. Revisions developed to define procedures and notification deadlines for transferring ownership of generation resources. (See “Gens Get Commercial Realities into Gen Transfer Processes,” PJM Operating Committee Briefs: May 1, 2018.)

3. Cost Containment (9:45-10:25)

Members will be asked to vote on proposals to include consideration of cost-containment commitments in PJM’s analysis of transmission construction bids. This is the continuation of a discussion that was tabled for four months as stakeholders attempted to find consensus. PJM has two proposals it plans to offer, but LS Power’s proposal will be considered first since a vote on it was deferred at the January MRC. (See Cost Containment Proposal Survives; Headed to MRC.)

4. Variable Operations & Maintenance Packages (10:25-10:45)

Members will be asked to vote on proposals to change rules on submitting variable operations and maintenance (VOM) costs for recovery. Two proposals were endorsed at April’s Market Implementation Committee meeting:

  • The PJM package, which was supported by a 75% vote, would allow only actual maintenance costs directly tied to electric production can be included in a unit’s incremental energy offer.
  • The default VOM package, which won an 81% endorsement, would allow resources to choose between filing actual costs under the PJM package or a default value no greater than the new build data published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

A third package developed by the Independent Market Monitor may also be considered. (See “VOM Proposal,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs: April 4, 2018.)

5. Operating Agreement Confidentiality Provision (10:45-10:55)

Members will be asked to endorse OA revisions allowing PJM to share member confidential information with the Eastern Interconnect Data Sharing Network (EIDSN) in addition to NERC and other reliability entities. EIDSN was created in 2014 to develop industry tools that NERC has decided it no longer wants to create and maintain.

— Rory D. Sweeney

Emerging Tech Taking Center Stage at MISO Market Symposium

MISO last week announced that it will hold its second Market Symposium in downtown Indianapolis on Aug. 15-16.

This year’s theme is “Markets in 3D: Preparing for Digitalization, De-marginalization and Decentralization,” and the two-day event includes industry experts discussing how wholesale market design and technology may change with increasing use of connected devices, distributed energy resources and renewable generation with near-zero marginal costs.

MISO CEO John Bear at the 2016 MISO Market Symposium | © RTO Insider

“The MISO team is working to create a forum for industry leaders at the forefront of future market design to explore longer-term challenges and opportunities,” MISO CEO John Bear said in a statement. “The symposium will provide a venue to interact with thought-leaders, explore emerging technologies and build relations with decision-makers and innovators who are at the helm of a changing industry.”

The symposium will feature FERC Commissioner Richard Glick as special guest speaker, and MISO has again partnered with the Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) to host the event.

MISO’s first symposium was held in 2016, and the sold-out event focused on future low-carbon energy trends. (See Panelists Envision Low-Carbon Future at MISO Symposium.)

This year’s symposium also includes an emerging technology and market solution showcase. MISO is currently accepting applications for booth exhibits and five-minute presentations on industry innovations on the main stage.

“We know our industry is transforming,” said MISO Research and Development Director Jessica Harrison. “We want to foster thought-provoking discussions so that the industry can meet future challenges with innovative solutions that ultimately improve service and value for consumers.”

— Amanda Durish Cook

CAISO Board Approves Forecast Error Measures

By Jason Fordney

CAISO’s Board of Governors on Wednesday approved new provisions to account for errors in load forecasts by allowing grid operators to manually update the forecasts to deal with changing conditions on the grid.

CAISO imbalance conformance rules board
Berberich | © RTO Insider

At its May 16 meeting in Folsom, Calif., the board also heard from CEO Steve Berberich about the tight supply conditions the ISO foresees this summer, as well as what he called “a very serious issue” regarding inverters that caused an 860-MW loss of solar resources on April 20.

The board approved the new “imbalance conformance” rules that allow the ISO to account for errors in renewable energy forecasts or instances when generators deviate from their dispatch orders. The Energy Imbalance Market Governing Body approved the rules last month. (See EIM Body Approves Imbalance Conformance Rules.)

The board also approved alterations to the Imbalance Conformance Limiter, an ISO software tool designed to prevent price spikes caused by imbalance conformance adjustments. The limiter keeps the market from trying to dispatch more supply than is available in a particular dispatch interval to account for imprecision in the adjustments.

Hildebrandt | © RTO Insider

CAISO Department of Market Monitoring Director Eric Hildebrandt told the board that while the department supports the changes, the magnitude of load adjustments has increased dramatically, doubling between 2016 and 2017. The adjustments should be more random in nature and not used as systematically as they have been, he said.

In his presentation, Hildebrandt said “the ISO appears to use load conformance as means to procure additional imports in the hour-ahead process to ensure more ramping capacity is available in the 15-minute and five-minute markets.”

The Monitor recommends the ISO focus on how it can reduce the need for operators to make manual adjustments in real time.

Southern California Edison opposed the changes, saying that the new limiter enhancements should be implemented in addition to the old limiter logic in order to maintain price stability. Powerex also opposed the measures, saying they might suppress scarcity pricing in some situations, according to a presentation from CAISO Vice President of Market Infrastructure Keith Casey. FERC must approve the changes before they take effect.

Warnings of Tight Supply, Inverter Issues

Berberich explained to the board that on April 20, the Mira-Loma-Vincent 500-kV line in the SCE service territory relayed, causing 860 MW of solar to trip off because of voltage fluctuations.

CAISO Board of Governors left to right: Richard Maullin, Angelina Galiteva, Dave Olsen, Mark Ferron, Ashutosh Bhagwat | © RTO Insider

“It’s a really exciting event down in the control room when we lose 860 MW,” Berberich said during his CEO report.

CAISO has been trying to reprogram inverter settings so they can ride through the relays and is working with NERC to create an appropriate industry-wide standard to address the problem. While the ISO has been able to reprogram some inverters, others cannot be reprogrammed, leading it to rely other resources at certain times.

“We are going to keep a close eye on this issue,” Berberich said, adding that the ISO views the new NERC standard as an important goal. He said public calls for demand reductions will be key in managing grid conditions this summer.

“We expect to have very tight conditions this summer,” Berberich said, adding that the gas system is operating at a “bare minimum.”

An ISO presentation showed that after modeling 2,000 scenarios, it was found there is a 50% probability of a Stage 2 emergency for at least one hour this summer. CAISO declares a Stage 2 emergency when it becomes clear that operating reserves will be less than 5% after dispatching all resources, including demand response. The ISO did not include in its modeling the gas supply limitations from restricted use of Aliso Canyon, which it said could represent further reliability risk. (See CPUC OKs Temporary Increase in Aliso Canyon Injections.)

FERC said last week it will closely monitor grid conditions in Southern California this summer as the region faces the likelihood of above-normal temperatures. (See FERC Keeps an Eye on ERCOT, CAISO as Hot Summer Approaches.)

NYPSC Reviews Storm Recovery, Summer Grid Prep

ALBANY, N.Y. — About 194,000 customers in New York were without electric power in the state after a series of thunderstorms hit on May 15, the Public Service Commission heard Thursday.

NYPSC outages thunderstorms
Worden | © RTO Insider

The outages were mostly in the Lower Hudson Valley, the same area that suffered severe outages in March, said Michael Worden, director of the commission’s Office of Electric, Gas and Water.

“We have about 5,550 [full-time equivalents] of line, tree and service crews there providing support to the area,” Worden said. “That includes on the order of 1,250 out-of-state, out-of-region crews, and also includes a large contingent of New York crews that have been redeployed from, for example, Western New York. So there’s a significant recovery effort going on.”

By Saturday, most customers had had their power restored, with only about 13,600 still out, according to PowerOutage.us, which aggregates utility-reported outage data.

The commission is continuing to investigate the various utilities’ March outages and storm response efforts, Worden said.

Grid Ready for Summer

New York’s bulk electric system is prepared to reliably meet this summer’s load forecast, according to the Department of Public Service.

Department staff based its assessment on a review of utility data and meetings with individual utilities and NYISO, Vijay Puran, DPS senior engineer for electric transmission planning, told the commission.

NYPSC outages thunderstorms
| NY Department of Public Service

“Utilities will complete all planned major reinforcements, inspections and repairs prior to the start of the summer season, and they have adequate spare equipment on hand to meet unforeseen circumstances,” Puran said during a presentation.

The ISO predicts demand will peak at 32,904 MW this summer. With a total resource capability of 42,169 MW on hand, the grid’s margin of safety comfortably exceeds the 18.2% required installed reserve margin, Puran said.

NYPSC outages thunderstorms
| NYISO

Peak demand forecasts have dropped by more than 3,000 MW since 2015, which the ISO “attributes to the positive effects of the state’s energy programs and to underlying forecast econometric growth rates,” he said.

NYPSC outages thunderstorms
Rhodes | © RTO Insider

Puran said hundreds of megawatts of load reduction are available to Consolidated Edison through its demand response programs, and other utilities have similar load-relief measures they can turn to if needed.

DPS staff expect the cost for electricity this summer to be higher than last year but 9 to 12% below the five-year average.

“I hear this as an outlook that is good news for New Yorkers, giving us comfort that we can confidently expect adequate supply and reasonable costs,” PSC Chair John B. Rhodes said.

National Grid Utilities Audit

In its consent agenda, the commission ordered a management and operations audit of three National Grid USA subsidiaries: Niagara Mohawk Power, Brooklyn Union Gas and KeySpan Gas East (18-M-0195). The effort will focus on construction program planning and operational efficiency.

NYPSC outages thunderstorms
New York PSC Commissioners left to right: Diane Burman, John B. Rhodes (Chair), Gregg C. Sayre, and James S. Alesi. | © RTO Insider

“The audit will include an assessment of the utilities’ readiness to respond to the Reforming the Energy Vision initiative and closely examines how the utilities plan for and manage information systems projects,” Rhodes said in a statement. “The audit will also address issues from previous management audits that require follow-up review, such as organizational structure, project estimating processes and work management processes.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2013 highlighted the importance of management and operations audits of the state’s utilities, and introduced — and subsequently signed — legislation that required utilities to file plans for implementing audit recommendations.

This is the fourth comprehensive audit since 2013, and three additional audits are underway, the commission said.

“To date, these audits have recommended numerous productivity enhancements, better risk mitigation strategies, and improved planning processes, as well as other operational improvements at New York’s utilities,” the commission said. “These process improvements result in savings for customers over time, and those savings are captured in rate cases.”

— Michael Kuser

House GOP Seeks Changes to New Source Review

By Michael Brooks

The House Energy and Commerce Committee last week heard testimony on Republican-backed legislation that could allow power plants and industrial boilers to avoid expensive upgrades under EPA’s New Source Review (NSR) program.

Facilities are subject to NSR if they make non-routine modifications that increase annual emissions; such plants must use the “best available control technology” to minimize the emissions increase.

The bill, written by Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-Va.), would amend the definition of “modification” under Clean Air Act Section 111a to mean any alteration to a facility that increases its hourly pollutant emission rate.

NSR New Source Review EPA
| EPA

The modification clause does not specify how a facility’s emissions should be measured to determine if a change would result in a pollution increase, which has led to multiple lawsuits since the clause was added in 1970. Under the NSR program, EPA has used a projection of annual emissions based on the modification.

“This type of annual emissions projection approach necessitates the consideration of complex factors such as projecting future demand of the product being produced and the selection of baseline emissions to use as a comparison point,” committee Republicans said in a memo ahead of a Environment Subcommittee hearing on the bill Wednesday. “Additionally, in certain instances, this type of emissions projection results in an overestimation of emissions, which is shown by comparing the projected emissions with a source’s true emissions after the fact.”

The bill would also exempt from NSR any modification that “reduces the amount of any air pollutant emitted by the source per unit of output or is designed to restore, maintain or improve the reliability or safety of the source.” Republicans said that NSR has impeded or canceled projects intended to reduce a facility’s pollution. The law already exempts routine maintenance or repair from review.

Support

At Wednesday’s hearing, Bill Wehrum, assistant administrator of EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, told the subcommittee that the Trump administration does not have an official position on the bill. “Having said that, I strongly support the overall goals of the discussion draft,” he said. “The principal focus of the discussion draft on refining the definition of ‘modification’ in the Clean Air Act would go a long way towards simplifying application of the NSR program.”

Wehrum praised the bill’s exemption of pollution-reducing additions, noting that, “sometimes, the operation of such equipment, while it results in tremendous emissions reductions for some pollutants, may in some instances actually lead to increases in the emissions of other pollutants.” He said EPA had attempted to implement such a provision but was overruled by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Kirk Johnson, senior vice president of government relations for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, said NSR has “more often served as an impediment, rather than an enhancement, to maintaining and improving efficiency at power plants.”

“One significant obstacle of the NSR permitting program is its application to equipment repair and replacement as well as even routine maintenance activities at existing generating units,” Johnson said. “Although routine maintenance, repair and replacement are supposedly excluded from being considered as ‘major modifications’ — and thus not subject to NSR — what qualifies as these NSR exemptions often changes with shifting EPA interpretations. This has led to utilities performing what they thought qualified as routine maintenance, repair and replacement, only to be cited for NSR violations years after the fact.”

Opposition

Paul D. Baldauf, assistant commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, however, said Griffith’s bill could increase out-of-state emissions and extend the life of older generators, causing the state to fall out of attainment for the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). Baldauf cited as an example a generator that undergoes changes to increase its efficiency while also increasing the maximum heat input — the amount of fuel burned per hour — to increase electric output.

“This project would decrease the pounds of CO2 and some other pollutants emitted per megawatt-hour but would increase the megawatts generated,” he said. “Without additional controls, such a project would result in both increased hourly and annual emissions of all its pollutants, including CO2, criteria pollutants and air toxics, resulting from the increased fuel use. These increased emissions could likely result in adverse health impacts despite the increase in efficiency of the unit.”

Environmental consultant Bruce C. Buckheit, who served as director of EPA’s Air Enforcement Division during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, also opposed the bill. “The draft is not needed by the regulated community for any purpose and would not advance one of the fundamental purposes of the Clean Air Act — to eliminate, over time, the disparate treatment of new and existing sources,” he said. “It would severely impair the ability of the modification rules to effect this purpose and would exacerbate the current barrier to investment in new manufacturing and electric generating facilities created by the difference in the treatment of new and existing facilities.”

Democrats are likely to oppose the bill. “Without a firm requirement that facilities reduce the levels of all the dangerous pollution they emit, they simply will be allowed to pollute more,” Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), ranking member of the full committee, said in a statement. “That’s what the language in the bill on ‘maximum achievable hourly emission rate’ is all about.”

FERC Narrows GHG Review for Gas Pipelines

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC’s Republican majority on Friday narrowed the circumstances under which it will estimate greenhouse gas emissions from natural gas pipeline projects, sparking dissents by its two Democratic commissioners.

The commission unanimously rejected a rehearing request by conservation organization Otsego 2000, which contended FERC had not conducted a sufficient environmental review in its 2016 approval of Dominion Energy Transmission’s New Market Project. The project includes two new compressor stations and upgrades to three others in upstate New York (CP14-497-001).

ferc ghg emissions gas pipelines richard glick cheryl lafleur
Wetland at existing Borger Compressor Station | Dominion Transmission

But Democrats Cheryl LaFleur and Richard Glick dissented from the commission’s declaration that it will no longer prepare upper-bound estimates of GHG emissions when “the upstream production and downstream use of natural gas are not cumulative or indirect impacts of the proposed pipeline project.” They instead contended the decision effectively eliminates any consideration of GHG emissions associated with a project.

Republicans Kevin McIntyre, Neil Chatterjee and Robert Powelson said they were taking the action to “avoid confusion as to the scope of our obligations under [the National Environmental Policy Act] and the factors that we find should be considered” when determining whether a project is in the public convenience and necessity under the Natural Gas Act.

NEPA requires FERC to prepare an environmental impact statement for pipelines that may significantly impact the environment but allows for a less detailed environmental assessment if it determines the project is not likely to have significant adverse effects.

Notice of Inquiry

In separate partial dissents, LaFleur and Glick said they were disappointed that the majority initiated the policy shift just a month after issuing a Notice of Inquiry to reconsider the commission’s 1999 policy statement on gas pipeline permitting (PL18-1). (See FERC Outlines Gas Pipeline Rule Review.)

LaFleur said the new policy reverses the commission’s practice since late 2016 of including more information on upstream and downstream GHG emissions in its pipeline orders. That included “upper-bound” estimates of downstream emissions that assumed all the gas transported by the project would be burned for electric generation, heating and other purposes.

ferc ghg emissions gas pipelines richard glick cheryl lafleur

“The commission placed caveats on the information and analysis, stating generally that the downstream impacts do not meet the definition of an indirect impact and are not mandated as part of the commission’s NEPA review,” LaFleur acknowledged. “The commission nonetheless made a full-burn calculation to determine an upper-bound GHG emissions amount, unless it had specific information to calculate net and gross GHG emissions.”

The commission used Department of Energy studies for generic estimates of the impact of projects on upstream natural gas production, including production-related GHG emissions.

LaFleur said the commission’s obligations increased under the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals’ August 2017 Sabal Trail ruling, which found that the emissions resulting from burning the natural gas transported by a commission-approved project are an indirect impact. (See FERC Must Consider GHG Impact of Pipelines, DC Circuit Rules.)

“Today, however, the majority has changed the commission’s approach for environmental reviews to do the exact opposite. Rather than taking a broader look at upstream and downstream impacts, the majority has decided as a matter of policy to remove, in most instances, any consideration of upstream or downstream impacts associated with a proposed project,” LaFleur wrote. “The majority’s reasoning for excluding the information and calculations is generally that it is inherently speculative and does not meaningfully inform the commission’s project-specific review. I disagree.

“At a time when we are grappling with increasing concern regarding the climate impacts of pipeline infrastructure projects, the commission should not change its policy on upstream and downstream impacts to provide less information and be less responsive,” she added.

‘Remarkably Narrow’

Glick criticized the majority for what he called a “remarkably narrow view of its responsibilities under NEPA and the NGA’s public interest standard.”

“The principal reason that the commission does not have … ‘meaningful information’ [on GHG impacts] is that the commission does not ask for it,” Glick said, noting that FERC could require pipeline developers to provide information about the source of the gas to be transported and its end use.

“A simple data request would seem to fall easily within what constitutes the commission’s ‘best efforts,’” Glick said. “In the absence of any such efforts, the commission should not be able to rely on the lack of ‘meaningful information’ to satisfy its obligations under NEPA and the NGA to identify the reasonably foreseeable consequences of its actions.”

“There will undoubtedly be some cases where those emissions are, in fact, too speculative to be considered ‘reasonably foreseeable,’” he continued. “But there may also be others, such as Sabal Trail, where an adequate record would provide sufficient information to make those emissions reasonably foreseeable.”

Glick said he was not suggesting that the commission stop approving new pipeline projects. “What I am arguing is that, as a result of the commission’s new policy, we frequently will not know whether the benefits outweigh the costs because the commission is not asking enough questions or doing enough analysis.”

Dissents ‘Mischaracterize’ Shift

The majority said the dissents “mischaracterize” the policy shift as changing the commission’s public interest and environmental review.

“Our decision does not in any way indicate that the commission does not consider, or is not cognizant of, the potentially severe consequences of climate change,” the majority wrote. “We will continue to analyze upstream and downstream environmental effects when those effects are sufficiently causally connected to and are reasonably foreseeable effects of the proposed action.”

They also said the order does not “prejudge or preclude the [commission] from considering the questions on greenhouse gas emissions posed in the Notice of Inquiry.”

The Republicans said that even if the commission presumed a causal relationship between the New Market Project and upstream production, “the scope of the impacts from any such production is too speculative and thus not reasonably foreseeable.”

“Neither the commission nor the applicant generally has sufficient information to determine the origin of the gas that will be transported onto a pipeline. We disagree with the dissent’s assertion that we lack information about specific upstream production or downstream uses simply because we ‘did not ask for it.’ To be clear, the commission only has jurisdiction over the pipeline applicant, whose sole function is to transport gas from and to the contracted for delivery and receipt points. While the shippers might contract with a specific producer for their gas supply, the shipper would not know the source of the producer’s gas, and, for that matter, producers are not required to dedicate supplies to a particular shipper and thus likely will not know in advance the exact source of production. In short, ‘just ask[ing] for it’ would be an exercise in futility.”