The commission also granted a request by NERC and WECC to fund the Western Transmission Expansion Coalition’s (WestTEC) transmission planning study over the next two years by releasing $2.2 million in total from the Peak Reliability Donation Reserve and approved the REs’ use of penalties to grow its financial reserves and reduce its 2025 assessments.
The ERO submitted the budgets to the commission following their acceptance by the ERO’s Board of Trustees at its August meeting in Vancouver. (See “Budgets Headed to FERC,” NERC Board of Trustees/MRC Briefs: Aug. 15, 2024.) NERC CFO Andy Sharp said at the meeting that the final budgets are “materially consistent” with NERC’s three-year projection.
NERC’s 2025 budget is set to rise 8.2% over the previous year to $123 million, according to the ERO’s August filing. Drivers of the increase include an expected need to hire 13 new employees in reliability standards development, enforcement, the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center, and other areas; investments in the ERO’s technology strategy; and planned increases in meetings and travel costs. The E-ISAC’s budget is also set to grow from $41.1 million to $43.8 million.
The budgets for the REs and WIRAB are set to grow as follows:
Midwest Reliability Organization — from $24.9 million to $26.8 million
Northeast Power Coordinating Council — $22.1 million to $25.7 million
ReliabilityFirst — $31.3 million to $33.4 million
SERC Reliability — $32 million to $35.4 million
Texas Reliability Entity — $19.2 million to $20.3 million
Western Electricity Coordinating Council — $35.4 million to $39.3 million
WIRAB — $831,492 to $831,561
The ERO’s total assessment for 2025 is to rise to $270.9 million, up from $241.4 million in 2024. This includes $108.4 million for NERC and $128.3 million in combined assessments for the REs and WIRAB.
WECC and NERC’s requested funding for the WestTEC project will see progressive releases from the funds donated by Peak Reliability upon its dissolution in 2019, with $500,000 released in 2024, $1.5 million in 2025, and $200,000 in 2026. The WestTEC study is to take place over the next two years and is intended to produce transmission portfolios for 10- and 20-year planning horizons. (See WestTEC Seeks to Close $2.1M Funding Gap Despite DOE Boost.)
NERC said the withdrawals will leave a balance of just over $1 million in the Peak Reserve.
Commissioner Judy Chang spoke approvingly about the project at this week’s meeting, calling WestTEC “a collaborative, voluntary interregional planning initiative” that will help meet the long-term needs of the Western Interconnection.
“The Western markets [have been] evolving over the last few years and will continue to evolve in the future … [WestTEC] is very valuable, and I think it’s a good use of Peak Reliability funds to support reliability across the West,” Chang said. “I look forward to seeing the results of those efforts, which [are] also being supported by funds from the Department of Energy.”
First-quarter electricity prices in CAISO markets were down sharply from the same period in 2023, despite sharp spikes during the January cold snap in the Pacific Northwest, the ISO’s Department of Market Monitoring said Oct. 17.
January’s extreme weather events were the “major story for the wholesale electricity markets in the first quarter of 2024,” Ryan Kurlinski, a DMM senior manager, said during a market issues and performance meeting covering Q1.
The winter event saw Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West balancing authority areas hit an average of about $150/MWh in the Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM), compared with $65/MWh in other BAs in the market. As a result, transfer capacity in the WEIM was frequently constrained, preventing lower-priced marginal energy in southern areas from setting lower prices in the north, the DMM found.
Lower natural gas prices across the WEIM compared with Q1 2023 drove decreases in average electricity prices, despite the cold weather events. Prices at both California natural gas trading hubs decreased by more than 60% compared with 2023, helping undercut average power prices by 53%.
“In Q1 of 2024, after we get past the severe cold weather event up in the Pacific Northwest and into mid- and late January, prices significantly drop across the WEIM,” Kurlinski said. “Even with the severe cold weather event, high January prices in the Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West were about 20% lower in Q1 2024 on average compared to Q1 in 2023.”
Congestion and price separation between the Pacific Northwest and other BAAs continued into February and March, though prices were still lower than the previous year.
Congestion played a large role in market impacts during the January cold snap. Historically, congestion rent in the CAISO BA has been in the import direction over the interties, but Q1 saw a “huge spike” in export congestion rent over the ISO’s intertie constraints, symbolizing another one of the “most interesting and major stories of Q1 2024,” Kurlinski said.
“In Q1 2024, intertie congestion rent exploded to $133 million [from $13 million a year earlier]. $130 million of that was in the export direction,” most of which was on the Malin intertie in January, Kurlinski added.
Congestion rent on internal constraints in the CAISO BA in the day-ahead market decreased from $265 million in Q1 2023 to $125 million in 2024.
Additionally, transmission ratepayers lost around $53 million in congestion revenue rent auctions, up from $30 million in Q1 2023.
Kurlinski also noted that real-time balance offset costs in the CAISO area were $51 million in Q1 2024, down from $90 million in 2023. The primary driver of the uplift is load getting paid a different real-time price than generation.
Bid cost recovery (BCR) payments were also down to $41.5 million from $80.3 million in Q1 2023, largely due to a decrease in the residual unit commitment portion of BCR.
NEW SCOTLAND, N.Y. — Small-scale solar arrays in New York have surpassed 6 GW of capacity, meeting a milestone 2025 goal more than a year early.
It’s a bright spot in a state whose energy transition has been progressing more slowly than hoped.
Leaders of the transition and some of those helping to carry it out gathered at a new 5.7 MW solar farm Oct. 17 to celebrate the occasion and advocate for the addition of many more megawatts to follow.
The site itself is easy enough to reach, a smooth ride on main roads to the town of New Scotland, not far from the state offices where renewable energy policy is written, regulated and facilitated.
But the journey to reach the milestone achieved on this site was much longer: 235,803 distributed solar projects of every stripe had to be completed in every corner of the state before this one could push the combined nameplate capacity above 6 GW.
An uncounted additional number of projects dropped out of the pipeline along the way, just as utility-scale projects have seen high rates of contract cancellation in New York.
So why is distributed solar exceeding expectations by adding emissions-free capacity to the grid a few dozen kilowatts at a time? While multi-megawatt projects are lagging so badly the state is likely to miss a key 2030 renewables target codified in its climate law?
State support has allowed an ecosystem supporting distributed solar to grow to scale in New York, said Doreen Harris, president of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, one of the main architects and managers of the state’s energy transition.
These same policies send clear market signals that small solar is wanted and will be supported. In a telling indicator, New York — an expensive state with limited sunshine — is the nation’s leader in installed community solar capacity.
Smaller projects are nimbler, said Noah Ginsburg, executive director of the New York Solar Energy Industries Association. They face the same obstacles as large projects, with endless variations across hundreds of local permitting entities, but they can move and adjust quickly enough to not die on the vine.
“The timeline for getting a [distributed] project from idea to up and running, we’re talking three years,” he said. “You can navigate choppy waters and get projects over the finish line on that kind of timeline. And I just think New York has developed a really successful model.”
The 6 GW emerged with steady assistance from the state, including the $3.3 billion NY SUN initiative. The state estimates an additional $9.2 billion in private-sector investment has been a result.
The New Scotland project checks another box on the state’s list of priorities: It is one of the first community solar farms to participate in the Solar for All program. The savings achieved through its operation will be funneled to low-income ratepayers.
Moving Forward
Officials and guests at the ceremony spoke afterward to NetZero Insider about what went into reaching the 6 GW milestone and what comes next.
David Sandbank, NYSERDA’s vice president of distributed energy resources and transportation, said the state categorizes distributed solar as everything from residential rooftop arrays producing a few kilowatts on their best day to several-acre arrays rated at several megawatts, like the new one in New Scotland.
The cutoff is 5 MW for projects quantified in alternating current and a little more than 7 MW for those quantified in direct current.
“So if you talk in DC … I’d say the average home project is about 7 KW in this state. So 7 KW to 7 MW,” Sandbank said.
The next milepost is 10 GW of distributed solar by 2030. NYSEIA earlier this year called for kicking that up to 20 GW by 2035.
Distributed solar is a mainstay of NYSEIA’s 235 member companies, and obviously a priority for Ginsburg, but he says renewables are needed at every scale.
“My view on it is that for the state to hit its clean-energy goals, we need to accelerate utility-scale deployment,” he said.
The problem, Ginsburg said, is that some people overlook the contributions of small solar as they focus on major projects that would provide dozens or hundreds of megawatts.
“So, I try to remind people, 93% of the solar that’s up and running in New York is distributed scale; 6 GW is nothing to sneeze at,” he said.
Rory Christian, chair of the state Public Service Commission, said this fact is not lost on policymakers. It also is clear that 6 or 10 or 20 GW of solar does not by itself allow fossil-fuel generation to be retired — solar’s capacity factor is too low in New York, particularly during the short and often cloudy winter days.
There are simultaneous efforts to develop other forms of emissions-free generation and storage to backstop intermittent solar and wind; to anticipate transmission and distribution needs and address them proactively; and to begin managing the other side of the equation — demand.
So while 6 GW of distributed solar is an achievement to be celebrated, it is a mile marker rather than a finish line, a piece of a strategy that still is being planned out.
“We know there’s a gap. It’s documented in the [state climate law]. We are working to address that gap, and we recognize that we need to do more, and so we have the plans in place to do more, and we’re figuring that out as we go,” Christian said.
“What are those dispatchable emissions-free resources? What will those be? How will those function? Where do we put them? We’re looking at that right now.”
Electric utilities are working on their part of the equation.
The new solar farm sits near a National Grid substation and almost beneath some of its transmission lines.
That proximity helps with development, but there are many other factors that go into siting and system planning, said Brian Gemmell, National Grid’s chief operating officer for electric. “It’s all about making [sure] that the reliability is there, the resilience, the infrastructure is appropriately sized for the project.”
The utility is investing billions of dollars in dozens of projects to make its upstate New York network ready for more renewables expected to be built there.
Hurdles to Clear
Dan Berwick, CEO of New Leaf Energy, the New Scotland project developer, said solar development is not an easy proposition in New York. Permitting is hard, interconnection is harder, costs are higher than in other states and profits are lower. But New Leaf keeps at it, he added, and now has nearly 200 projects in development statewide.
State leadership is committed to making renewable development happen, and that makes it possible to clear those hurdles.
“We keep investing, even though it’s tough, because New York has a unique winning formula. New York’s political leadership sets big, clear, bold goals, and then NYSERDA and the Department of Public Service execute on those goals,” Berwick said.
“No other state has a NYSERDA, and that is why there’s no other state where we will develop projects and make substantial investments in projects based only on what a state government says it will do, as opposed to what it has already done. That’s unique, and it’s very powerful.”
The area is a blend of suburban and rural, light industrial sites and homes mixing with fields and woods. It is a quick drive from the state Capitol, yet far enough removed from the city that some people expect to see trees and distant hills rather than solar panels. A nearby apple orchard is a longstanding agritourism destination.
New Scotland Town Supervisor Douglas LaGrange spoke about the balance struck as the project moved through its yearslong development and review.
New Scotland is one of New York’s Climate Smart Communities, he said, and wants to do its part to advance climate protection goals.
“It started years ago when … we saw the opportunity to bring solar into the town and accommodate it, but we wanted to balance it with the beauty of the town,” LaGrange said. “It’s a beautiful area. And there are those that might suggest that solar arrays aren’t the prettiest things in the world, but we came to a point where we could balance both.”
He added: “This is a perfect example of that all coming together.”
Steven and Wendy Burke have owned the 27-acre site for more than 20 years but never developed it themselves. A local farmer cut hay from the portion that was not wooded.
The couple support renewable energy development; she drives an electric vehicle. When they decided to lease their land for solar development, they got some friction from a few neighbors, but it was less about the panels than the effect of the panels.
“There was a couple neighbors that had [objected] in the beginning, not knowing what it was going to look like,” he said.
“Or had questions and how things were going to be done,” she continued, “and wanted to make sure that it wasn’t going to be unsightly, that there was going to be proper screening, that it was going to be maintained properly, which were valid questions, and the town was able to answer those questions.”
One of the more frequent questions, the Burkes and LaGrange both said, was whether the array would be visible from the landmark Thacher Park overlook atop a 700-foot escarpment two miles away.
It is not, thanks to the contour of the hill. And the line of mature trees at the solar farm’s perimeter blocks passing motorists’ view of the panels, save for a gap the driveway runs through.
A line of saplings transplanted inside will close that gap in a few years.
Ginsburg said this is a winning approach.
“I think the reality is that as a species, we are resistant to change, but ultimately we need clean energy in our state,” he said. “Projects like this can be built in a way that’s aesthetic and that’s beneficial.”
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — States can reap long-term savings by upgrading their onshore grids and coordinating transmission development to serve multiple offshore wind projects, but they’ll also face higher upfront costs, supply chain challenges and ratepayer concerns, speakers at a New Jersey conference said Oct. 11.
Planned and coordinated transmission upgrades could save billions of dollars across the OSW sector, but the complexity and extensive planning needed to bring different stakeholders and states together to craft solutions could take more than a decade, speakers at the Time for Turbines 7 conference in Atlantic City said.
New Jersey’s use of the State Agreement Approach (SAA) to create $1.07 billion in transmission upgrades that can deliver 6,400 MW of OSW generation to the PJM grid is a prime example of the benefits of planning, speakers told conference attendees.
Yet time is of the essence for all states, according to Abraham Silverman, assistant research scholar with the Ralph O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute at Johns Hopkins University. The global market for transmission equipment is competitive, and developers need to line up their supply chain now to ensure equipment is available years ahead of when it’s needed, Silverman told the 150 developers, government officials, environmentalists and other stakeholders at the conference.
Abe Silverman, Johns Hopkins University | Christian Fiore
“States are making procurement decisions today that are going to be delivered in the early 2030s,” he said. “2030 is today.
“So if you are going out and buying it, [and] thinking about offshore wind, you need to have all the major questions answered” around what’s being built, voltage levels and suppliers, Silverman said. “And I think, frankly, a lot of us see what happens when developers don’t have their supply arrangements totally locked up, and we end up in real problems, and you get delays.”
Projects in Germany and Scotland are “going ahead and procuring their HVDC equipment and stockpiling it for future use,” said Janice Fuller, former Mid-Atlantic president at Anbaric, which specializes in developing transmission for OSW projects.
“The projects aren’t awarded, but they’re buying [the equipment], and they will have it ready,” Fuller said. “So that also puts us a little bit further behind in that global supply chain.”
Planning Initiatives
Procurement is just one challenge conference speakers said is facing New Jersey and other states as they try to prepare their grids for the 60% increase in transmission capacity needed to bring about widespread electrification, according to Princeton University’s 2021 Net-Zero America report.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) says ratepayers will save $900 million from its project to upgrade onshore transmission infrastructure to link OSW projects to the grid. The BPU and PJM created the project under the SAA, and the BPU in February sought FERC approval to use the SAA in a second solicitation but later put that plan on hold.
“Essentially, what we are trying to do is avoid a bunch of individual onshoring efforts and to minimize environmental impacts, minimize community impacts, minimize project risk and risks of delays that may come from a bunch of one-offs coming in,” said BPU Executive Director Robert Brabston.
The order requires RTOs and ISOs to undertake long-term transmission planning — with a 20-year time frame, taking into account anticipated load growth, state laws and generation retirements. The plans must be updated every five years.
Brabston said New Jersey can benefit from Order 1920’s planning requirements by addressing the “vastly different networks in the state.” These range from the well-developed infrastructure in the north to areas in the south that were “built to cobble together the agricultural part of the state and the population centers.” While southern areas have the space to house data centers and grid-scale solar projects, the grid there “wasn’t built for it, it’s not ready for it,” he said.
“So we need to be able to do things like pursue grid-enhancing technologies, because you can’t just build all new pipes and wires for infrastructure,” he said. “If you’re going to modernize utilities, you’ve got to modernize the utilities. It’s not just new wires. It’s reconductoring. It’s all kinds of other stuff.”
That means “getting this project selection criteria updated so it takes more factors into account and is more transparent,” he said.
Collaborative Strategy
Long-term planning was also central to New Jersey and nine other East Coast states in July establishing the Northeast States Collaborative on Interregional Transmission to explore mutually beneficial interregional transmission to increase the flow of electricity among ISO-NE, NYISO and PJM, as well as assessing offshore wind infrastructure needs. (See 10 Northeastern States Sign MOU on Interregional Transmission Planning.)
“The theory is, if it saves $900 million when New Jersey does it alone, how much is it going to save when we work with Maryland, New Jersey and Delaware, or New York and New England and all the other places?” asked Silverman, who helped put together the coalition. He noted New York had also studied the benefits of creating an “offshore wind backbone” similar to New Jersey’s and found it would save ratepayers $500 million.
Silverman said it’s not just about the savings, but also improved reliability, faster interconnection times and “derisking” of projects “so that when we ask developers to put billions of dollars of capital at risk, they really feel comfortable coming to that table.”
“We’ve seen success within individual states or even on a regional basis, like New England. But we also need to get states talking to each other and cross over some of these artificial barriers.”
Cost Allocation Straitjacket
However, that kind of collaboration raises questions about technology standardization, Fuller said.
As generators bid their projects and suppliers try to determine how to prepare for projects that won’t break ground —or water — for another decade, it’s crucial for both sides to agree on uniform standard for the technology being used, she said.
“That plays into your ability to have mesh-ready projects, projects that could be brought together in the future and connected together,” she said.
Janice Fuller, former president, Mid-Atlantic, Anbaric | Christian Fiore
Another ongoing issue is who pays for the projects, Brabston said.
“One of the key things from a New Jersey perspective is trying to get out of this straitjacket of: If it’s a state policy thing, the state has to pay 100% by itself,” he said, which fails to account for the fact that “all states stand to benefit from this to a greater or lesser extent. We should be talking about cost allocation, not an all-or-nothing kind of thing,” he said.
Fuller called the New Jersey initiative the “canary in the coal mine” for other states and stakeholders, particularly because it received 80 bids from 13 developers. (See NJ BPU OKs $1.07B OSW Transmission Expansion.)
“I think the industry stood up, and other states stood up, and said, ‘Oh, that’s real. They got a real robust response with really creative solutions, and it’s going to have a tremendous ratepayer impact,’” she said.
One challenge is communicating the benefits to the public, Fuller said. She said renewable development often prompts skeptics to say, “Why do we need to do this? It’s going to impact our electric bills, and the ratepayers aren’t going to be able to tolerate that.”
But infrastructure upgrades can produce multiple benefits, including realizing substantial savings for consumers and reducing the number of cables and beach crossings needed, she said.
Fuller suggested using the phrase “benefit allocation” to make projects more palatable to the public.
“We always talk about cost allocation,” she said, but changing the term could show “it’s not just fair sharing of the cost, it’s understanding where the benefit lies, and so you’re paying your share of the benefit.”
ISO-NE is not planning to pursue development of simultaneously clearing seasonal capacity auctions as part of its capacity auction reform (CAR) project, Chris Geissler of ISO-NE told the NEPOOL Markets Committee (MC) on Oct. 16, updating stakeholders on the RTO’s most recent plans for its multiyear effort to overhaul its capacity market.
The CAR project encompasses ISO-NE’s ongoing work to improve resource capacity accreditation, reduce the time between auction and capacity commitment periods (CCPs), and split the annual CCPs into distinct seasons. The RTO aims to complete the project in time for the 2028/2029 CCP (CCP 19) and has delayed its next forward capacity auction for three years to develop the reforms. (See FERC Approves Additional Delay of ISO-NE FCA 19.)
ISO-NE previously had floated the possibility of simultaneously running the seasonal auctions for each year to enable generators to account for fixed annual costs and submit bids that are contingent on clearing in both seasons.
However, Geissler said the RTO is concerned that developing a simultaneous auction design could jeopardize the timeline of the CAR project.
“The time and resources needed to pursue such a design would take away from other parts of CAR, including the RAA modeling and accreditation efforts,” Geissler said, adding the RTO has “concluded that the risks of pursuing this approach for CCP 19 outweighed the benefits.”
Power generators and consumer groups have pushed for a simultaneously clearing seasonal auction, arguing that the design could reduce risks for generators and overall costs for consumers.
In comments submitted to ISO-NE in the summer, Calpine wrote it has “grave concerns” with a seasonal auction that does not account for generators’ annual costs, adding that “simultaneously clearing seasonal auctions, with offers for each season and the entire commitment period, must be in [the] CAR scope.”
Geissler said ISO-NE will consider developing a simultaneous seasonal auction design after the CAR project is complete.
ISO-NE is also not planning to include in the project a focus on correlated outages and resource start times, or reforms to how the capacity market treats retained resources, although the RTO may consider these aspects for development after CCP 19.
Modeling resource start times in the resource accreditation process has been a priority for some storage developers, but ISO-NE found “it is not feasible to consider resource start times for CCP 19 due to technical limitations,” Geissler said.
ISO-NE similarly determined it is infeasible to model correlated outages, citing data availability challenges and the limitations of the RTO’s resource adequacy modeling platform. Geissler noted that ISO-NE’s proposed approach to accounting for the region’s gas constraints will account for correlated outages stemming from limited gas availability.
While New England gas generators often struggle with fuel availability during cold days, outages due to extreme cold weather also pose a significant reliability risk. On Christmas Eve in 2022, resource outages during the evening peak triggered a capacity shortfall event, and ISO-NE said the outages “were caused by cold temperatures or mechanical problems, and not due to inadequate fuel supplies.”
Geissler also provided additional information on how the reformed capacity market will treat resources that are retained due to local transmission security concerns. He said resources operating under reliability-must-run contracts “are expected to offer into the day-ahead and real-time energy markets in a manner similar to other capacity resources” and “are economically committed and dispatched based on their energy supply offers.”
In an Oct. 9 memo, ISO-NE said it is not planning to change its current approach to pricing retained resources at $0 in the capacity supply curve.
Geissler noted that if ISO-NE finds a future need for resource retentions for energy security reasons, it “commits to simultaneously assessing and including a different pricing mechanism for stakeholder consideration.”
CAR Schedule
ISO-NE said it is planning to begin discussions with stakeholders on the detailed design of the prompt market and resource retirement reforms in early 2025, with the intention of filing this portion of the reforms in late 2025.
The RTO is planning to begin discussions on resource accreditation and the seasonal market design in late 2025 after the first phase of the project is complete.
Geissler emphasized that both filings will need to stand on their own given the uncertainty of FERC’s response.
The committee referred to the NEPOOL Generation Information System (GIS) Operating Rules Working Group a request from the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources to update the GIS to include information “regarding when a facility became eligible under Massachusetts clean, alternative and renewable energy standards.”
Despite last week’s acceptance of PRC-029-1 (Frequency and voltage ride-through requirements for inverter-based resources) by NERC’s Board of Trustees, the ERO isn’t quite finished with the ride-through protection standard, the organization’s Director of Standards Development Jamie Calderon told NERC’s Standards Committee.
The board approved the new standard in a special meeting Oct. 8 after it passed its final industry ballot with a weighted segment average of 77.48%, following a sometimes-rocky development process that saw the board exercise its authority to bypass parts of the stakeholder approval process to meet FERC’s deadline for the standard. (See NERC Examining Lessons from IBR Standard Development.)
Calderon explained to the SC’s monthly conference call Oct. 16 that NERC staff had identified “some minor errata” in the standard and its implementation plan after they were submitted to the board, necessitating a few small wording updates:
changing the word “manufacture” to “manufacturer” in PRC-029-1
adding an effective date for the definition of “ride-through” in the implementation plan
removing the term “voltage” from the description of IBRs that cannot meet ride-through requirements in the implementation plan
The errata passed the committee’s vote unanimously. No further industry comment or ballot is necessary; the corrected version will be filed with FERC in the petition for approval of PRC-029-1.
Claudine Fritz of Exelon, noting the “rushed” development of the final standard, asked that NERC make sure to reserve time in the future for proofreading so such errors can be caught and corrected before board approval. Chair Todd Bennett of Associated Electric Cooperative explained that the ERO is conducting an internal effort to identify lessons learned from the development of PRC-029-1 and other IBR-related standards, as NERC Vice President of Engineering and Standards Soo Jin Kim previously told the board.
More Standards Actions
Other actions approved by the SC this week include authorizing the posting of proposed standard EOP-012-3 (Extreme cold weather preparedness and operations) for a formal comment and ballot period. The comment period began Oct. 17, along with the opening of ballot pools. Voting will open Oct. 31 and close Nov. 5 along with the comment period.
This is NERC’s second time revising its cold weather standard in response to a FERC order. The commission accepted EOP-012-1 in 2023 but ordered revisions to be completed by this year. Those revisions resulted in EOP-012-2, which FERC accepted in June, with an order of additional changes to be completed by March 2025. (See FERC Orders Further Cold Weather Standard Modifications.)
The new standard is intended to address shortcomings identified by FERC in its predecessor, which include ensuring entities can understand the generator cold weather constraint criteria, allowing NERC to confirm the validity of cold weather constraints and clarifying implementation deadlines for corrective action plans.
NERC Manager of Standards Development Alison Oswald said the team is pursuing a shortened comment and ballot period — 20 days rather than the usual 45 — to improve its chances of meeting FERC’s deadline. At least two more ballots are planned after this.
In addition, the committee authorized appointing 12 members, including chair and vice chair, to the standard drafting team for Project 2024-02 (Planning energy assurance).
This is one of two teams working on this project, which is intended to create requirements for performing energy reliability assessments. The team approved at this week’s meeting will address assessments for the planning time horizon, while another team tackles assessments on the operational planning time horizon.
Elections on the Horizon
With 10 committee members’ terms expiring at the end of the year and one member resigning, the SC will hold elections to select their replacements in December.
Those with expiring terms are:
Amy Casuscelli, Xcel Energy (Segment 1)
Charles Yeung, Southwest Power Pool (Segment 2)
Vicki O’Leary, Eversource Energy (Segment 3)
Patti Metro, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (Segment 4)
Jim Howell, Treaty Oak Clean Energy (Segment 5)
Justin Welty, NextEra Energy (Segment 6)
Venona Greaff, Occidental Chemical (Segment 7)
Philip Winston, independent (Segment 8)
William Chambliss, Virginia State Corporation Commission (Segment 9)
Steve Rueckert, WECC (Segment 10)
In addition, Peter Yost of Con Edison, whose term representing Segment 6 was to have expired at the end of 2025, has stepped down from the SC due to retirement, said Bennett, of Associated Electric Cooperative.
Nominations will be accepted from Oct. 21 to Nov. 12, NERC Standards Developer Dominique Love said, with the election held from Dec. 4-13. For Segment 6, the recipient of the most votes will serve the full two-year term, while the runner-up will serve out the remainder of Yost’s term.
FERC continues to fiddle with the return on equity MISO transmission owners can earn, this time setting the base amount at 9.98% while once again eradicating the risk premium model from the calculation.
The Oct. 17 order is the latest in a yearslong string of adjustments to the MISO TOs’ ROE and might represent a step closer to settling the more-than-decade-old debate over which rate inputs are appropriate (EL14-12, et al.).
FERC said when examining the case, it found no evidence that investors use the risk premium model, a conclusion it came to once before in 2019. The commission insisted it made “a principled and reasoned decision supported by the evidentiary record.”
By ousting the risk premium model, FERC again is down to relying on two models — the discounted cash flow (DCF) and the capital asset pricing (CAPM) — to establish a zone of reasonableness and set the ROE at its midpoint. FERC said the new zone of reasonableness is between 7.39 and 12.58%.
FERC ordered MISO TOs to adopt the 9.98% base ROE effective near the end of September 2016 and provide refunds to customers with interest for a 15-month refund period beginning with the date of the initial complaint Nov. 12, 2013.
The commission has tinkered with and set an assortment of ROEs for MISO TOs in recent years: In 2013, it was using a 12.38% rate; after the complaint from MISO transmission customers, it landed on a 10.32% rate in 2016, which was reduced to 9.88% in 2019 and then upped to 10.02% in 2020. FERC said in the latest order that it continued to find the circa-2013, 12.38% base ROE excessive.
FERC has cut the risk premium input once before, when it set the 9.88% base ROE, then changed course when it established the new ROE in 2020 under a Republican majority of commissioners. When formulating an ROE for the privately held MISO TOs, the commission attempts to formulate their stock price as if they were publicly traded. The risk premium model tries to emulate the cost of equity using the premium that investors would expect to earn on a stock investment over the return they would expect to earn on a bond investment.
FERC found the ROE case back on its docket because of the risk premium model’s inclusion since 2020. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2022 vacated FERC’s 10.02% value. The court said it didn’t understand why FERC would spend pages describing the risk premium model’s shortcomings, circular nature and scarce use only to reinstate its application in 2020. (See DC Circuit Sends FERC Back to Drawing Board on MISO ROE.)
FERC left the other two models alone and continued to find a DCF zone of reasonableness at 6.97 to 12.07%, and the CAPM’s range is 7.80 to 13.09%.
While this time FERC said no further changes to the ROE methodology are necessary, it left the door open to including the risk premium model once again if parties can show that potential benefits outweigh concerns with the model.
The commission said it understood that cutting the risk premium model reduces the “diversity of inputs” and increases the weighting for the CAPM and DCF model. FERC said it could be open to using “a blended historical and forward-looking risk premium in the CAPM in future proceedings as a potential means to mitigate volatility concerns with the commission’s ROE methodology.”
Proponents of SPP’s Markets+ argue in their latest “issue alert” published Oct. 16 that the framework allows more flexibility for integrating greenhouse gas emission reduction programs across various states than CAISO’s Extended Day-Ahead Market (EDAM).
The alert is the fifth in a series of seven notices highlighting the purported advantages of Markets+ over EDAM and the Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM). The first covered differences between how the two markets would be governed, the second focused on reliability, the third compared pricing practices, and the fourth tackled market seams.
The contributing parties include Arizona Public Service, Chelan County Public Utility District (PUD), Grant County PUD, Powerex, Public Service Company of Colorado, Salt River Project, Snohomish PUD, Tacoma Power, Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, and Tucson Electric Power.
In their fifth alert, the proponents argue that Markets+ is better positioned to address risks associated with market price formation, deliverability and congestion that can “materially impact the feasibility and expected value of investments in clean energy that can be brought to load.”
For example, Markets+ uses fast-start pricing and graduated scarcity pricing approaches, which, according to the proponents, send “transparent price signals to encourage investment and use of clean and flexible resources and storage when they are needed most.”
The alert also points to the flow-based dispatch used in Markets+, which the proponents claim will increase “the deliverability of resources across the [balancing authority]-to-[balancing authority] and [transmission service provider]-to-[transmission service provider] seams within the footprint, resulting in less congestion and more delivered clean energy than the EDAM design.”
Additionally, Markets+ provides enhanced protection from congestion costs by allocating congestion revenue to firm transmission rights holders in proportion to the congestion costs incurred on their specific transmission paths, according to the alert.
“This approach provides an opportunity for remote resources to hedge congestion costs and reduce the price risk of delivering clean energy investments to load,” the alert stated. “In contrast, the EDAM congestion revenue structure increases the financial risk for those delivering remote clean resources as the congestion revenue allocation is split between the market operator (at BAA boundaries) and EDAM entities (internal congestion).”
“This bifurcation creates significant uncertainty that the allocation methodology selected by each EDAM entity may not allocate congestion costs on an individual transmission path basis, preventing those delivering remote resources from being able to accurately forecast or hedge against congestion,” the alert added.
GHG Pricing, Tracking and Reporting
The alert also touts Markets+’s greenhouse gas emissions pricing features and tracking and reporting system.
It says the “Type 1A” option in Markets+ would ensure that external supply contracted to serve load in a GHG pricing zone will be attributed to that zone if dispatched.
“This provides load-serving entities with an increased ability to hedge their exposure to GHG costs through advanced contracting of clean supply,” it says. “It is our understanding that the same functionality is not currently available in EDAM.”
Additionally, a “Type 2” option allows a market participant located outside a GHG pricing zone to economically offer its own surplus clean energy to be attributed to a GHG pricing zone, allowing it to “retain the clean supply needed to serve its load obligations while providing an opportunity to be compensated for its surplus clean energy.”
The alert says also that the Markets+ reporting and tracking mechanism allows the market to quantify emissions associated with “residual” dispatched energy not “otherwise claimed by load-serving entities in the market.”
“The design enables participants to determine how energy is attributed to meeting their own load and how unattributed surplus energy is accounted for in residual energy reporting,” it says.
“We are pleased to have worked closely with a diverse group of Western entities to meet each state’s GHG tracking and reporting needs with the development of M+ GHG protocols,” Lisa Tiffin, senior vice president of energy management at Tri-State, said in a statement. “GHG tracking, including from energy markets transactions, will be critical for Tri-State as we progress in the energy transition.”
“CAISO also has recently proposed to develop a GHG tracking and reporting framework based on stakeholder requests and the Markets+ approach may serve as a starting point,” the alert says. “This development highlights how the existence of two competing organized markets provides greater opportunity for both markets to continuously evolve with improved products, services and market design.”
Reached for comment, CAISO said its Western Energy Imbalance Market already supports renewable integration across the West “by efficiently optimizing low-cost renewable generation and dispatching it to serve demand in the middle of the day when it is most abundant, reducing the costs of serving load for utility customers. The Extended Day-Ahead Market (EDAM) design, approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), builds on those proven advantages.”
The issue alert follows the release of a white paper by The Brattle Group, published in early October, offering a point-by-point comparison of CAISO’s Extended Day-Ahead Market and SPP’s Markets+ that leans in favor of EDAM but stops short of endorsing either market. (See Brattle Study Likely to Fuel Debate over EDAM, Markets+.)
Regarding greenhouse gas pricing mechanisms, the Brattle study notes that EDAM builds off the Western Energy Imbalance Market, saying EDAM benefits from this tried and tested approach.
“The experience of the last ten years and our own forward-looking simulation analysis indicates that the WEIM/EDAM approach is effective at delivering customer savings while limiting leakage, which could otherwise reduce the effectiveness of GHG regulations,” according to the Brattle study. “Therefore, stakeholders in EDAM have more certainty that the GHG pricing mechanism will achieve efficient outcome while minimizing leakage.”
CARMEL, Ind. — Though it’s largely compliant with the directives of FERC’s Order 1920 on regional transmission planning, MISO intends to seek a yearlong extension of the June 2025 compliance deadline.
MISO said it expects to file an extension request with FERC at the end of this month to give it more time to describe how it meets all planning directives.
At an Oct. 16 Planning Advisory Committee, Director of Expansion Planning Jeanna Furnish said that though MISO believes it’s “directionally compliant” with Order 1920 through its work on long-range transmission planning (LRTP), “much work and assessment is still needed to show compliance.”
Some stakeholders said it seemed strange MISO would need a year to demonstrate to FERC that it’s already planning projects in general accordance with the order.
The Union of Concerned Scientists’ Sam Gomberg said that “at first blush,” a yearlong extension seems excessive. A former FERC commissioner has said MISO is ahead of the pack on transmission planning initiatives and acknowledged the commission modeled the order largely on planning taking place within the footprint. (See MARC 2024 Displays Mixed Feelings on Transition Feasibility.)
Stakeholders asked if MISO planners were getting a jump on drafting a compliance plan should FERC reject a delay.
“We are trying to get the extension request in as soon as possible so we can manage that timeline,” MISO’s Jeremiah Doner said.
Meanwhile, MISO has put out a call for transmission study ideas from stakeholders for its 2025 Transmission Expansion Plan (MTEP 25). MISO, as it has with other recent MTEPs, warned it will be limited in what new studies it can accommodate because much of its planning bandwidth is dedicated to LRTP.
FERCacted on rehearing requests for Order 1977 on Oct. 17, finalizing the rules it will follow under limited backstop siting authority for transmission lines.
The major change FERC made to the original proposal, which was approved this year alongside Order 1920 on transmission planning, was to require projects seeking rights of way on Tribal lands to include their proposals in Tribal engagement plans. Developers will have to describe how they will work with Tribal landowners on right-of-way issues.
“We at FERC are focused on Tribal engagement,” FERC Chairman Willie Phillips said in a statement. “It is important that project sponsors work closely with Tribal landowners on these right-of-way issues as part of their overall engagement with Tribes on transmission matters.”
The order lays out how FERC will handle backstop siting applications in National Interest Electricity Transmission Corridors. They were established by the Energy Policy Act of 2005, but for much of that time, the authority was hobbled by a court decision. Congress updated the law in 2021 to say FERC could overrule a state that denies a transmission line’s application that would go through NIETC if approved by the Department of Energy.
The new rule includes a Landowner Bill of Rights, codifies an Applicant Code of Conduct as a way for applicants to show good faith engagement with landowners and directs applicants to develop engagement plants for outreach to environmental justice communities and Tribes.
The New York PSC filed for rehearing, arguing FERC should be able to step in only a year after a complete application has been filed with a state regulator. FERC agreed a final application is an important consideration for the process but declined to include the requirement the PSC sought.
The pre-filing process requires developers to inform FERC of the status of any state applications and allows state regulators to raise issues around their review when any application is being debated before the federal regulator. The commission will look at issues case by case, the rehearing order said.
The Louisiana PSC asked that FERC give deference to state decisions and presume they are correct, with the burden of proof on developers to overcome state decisions. FERC said it would take the state decisions into account but that they are not determinative under the law.
“If the commission finds that the statutory criteria under section 216(b) have been met, it may issue a permit to construct or modify electric transmission facilities in a national corridor notwithstanding a state’s denial of the same,” FERC said. “The commission’s consideration, as described in the final rule, of whether an application meets the statutory criteria for commission jurisdiction does not improperly intrude upon state authority.”
A group of public interest organizations argued that FERC should automatically include all of a state docket’s information as it reviews a line for backstop siting. FERC rejected that request, saying while it will consider relevant information from state proceedings, some of the filings could be irrelevant to the federal process.
The public interest groups argued the lack of automatic filing could set a procedural trap to keep relevant information out of the FERC proceeding, noting the start of a pre-filing process and the filing of an actual application with the commission are intended to encourage stakeholder participation and disseminate information about the case. Applicants must make a good faith effort to notify “any known individuals or organizations that have expressed an interest in the state siting proceeding,” the order said.
The Pennsylvania PUC wanted rehearing on the Landowner Bill of Rights, arguing that states should be able to help develop such documents and the current version ignores state siting authority, which could misinform landowners.
FERC said having multiple versions of the Landowner Bill of Rights could lead to confusion and inefficiencies.
“Requiring applicants to provide affected landowners with a copy of the Landowner Bill of Rights — a generic document developed by the commission and intended to provide information about the federal permitting process in a broad and consistent manner — does not preclude an applicant from providing additional information to landowners about additional rights under state law or ongoing state siting proceedings, if applicable,” FERC said.