Search
`
November 16, 2024

Va. Data Centers, Residential Growth Boost Dominion Demand

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

Data centers and residential customer growth are driving increased electric demand for Dominion Energy in Virginia, with weather normalized sales up about 2% for the first half of the year.

New customer connections in the first six months jumped 7% over 2016, and the company connected five new data centers between April and June, company officials said in their second-quarter earnings call Wednesday.

CEO Thomas Farrell said an anticipated increase in federal defense spending under the Trump administration would “provide strong support for the Virginia economy, which is the largest recipient of defense dollars in the nation.”

“All of these factors support our expectation that annual electric sales growth of at least 1% will continue,” Farrell added.

The company reported second-quarter earnings of $390 million ($0.62/share), a drop from last year’s $452 million ($0.73/share). Operating earnings for the quarter were $421 million ($0.67/share) versus $441 million ($0.71/share) for 2016. The main difference between reported and operating earnings were costs related to Dominion’s acquisition of Questar.

Operating revenue was $2.81 billion, up 8% from almost $2.6 billion a year earlier. The company is predicting earnings growth of at least 10% in 2018.

Transmission spending will contribute to that growth. Dominion added $327 million in transmission assets in the first half of the year, and the company plans to invest $800 million in transmission annually for at least the next decade.

Extensions for Va. Nukes, Subsidy for Millstone Sought

dominion energy virginia
Cove Point Liquefaction Project | Dominion Energy

Farrell said company officials are “working very hard” to win financial support from Connecticut lawmakers for its Millstone nuclear plant. He did not respond to an analyst’s question on whether the company would share Millstone’s financials to rebut criticism that the plant is already profitable and doesn’t need assistance.

However, he said the company will participate in the study ordered by Gov. Dannel Malloy last month. The state’s Department of Energy and Environment and Public Utilities Regulatory Authority are to report to the legislature on the plant’s financials in January 2018. (See CT Gov Orders Financial Analysis of Millstone Plant.)

Paul D. Koonce, CEO of Dominion’s Power Generation Group, said that the timing of legislative action depends on the resolution of the Connecticut budget, which he hopes lawmakers will complete by Labor Day.

Meanwhile, the company has begun the process for winning license extensions for its North Anna and Surry nuclear plants in Virginia. Officials said state legislation will allow the company to recover through a rate rider the costs of extending the plants’ lives, which could be as much as $4 billion.

Company officials also provided updates on several projects:

  • Farrell reiterated the company’s plans to add as much as 2,000 MW of offshore wind if two test offshore wind turbines planned for 26 miles off Virginia Beach “demonstrate that they work well in these waters and produce the kind of capacity that we expect.” (See Dominion Plans 12-MW Offshore Wind Project, 2nd in US.) 
  • The Cove Point Liquefaction Project is 95% complete, on target for the beginning of commercial service later this year.
  • Construction of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline project should begin in November, assuming FERC restores its quorum by the end of September. “There’s certainly some vocal opposition in some isolated localities, but overall, folks in Virginia support the pipeline as they do in West Virginia [and] North Carolina, and we expect to get all the necessary permits later this fall,” Farrell said. Dominion won’t discuss potential expansion of the pipeline until it has the FERC permit in hand, he said.
  • The 1,588-MW Greensville County combined cycle plant is almost half complete and is on time and on budget with commercial operations expected late 2018.
  • The company said it expects to select sites later this year for one or more pumped-storage facilities in Southwest Virginia. The General Assembly approved recovery of the facilities’ costs through a rider.
dominion energy data centers virginia
Greensville County combined cycle plant construction | Dominion Energy

Solar

The company said data centers, military installations and the state government are driving demand for renewables. Three facilities totaling 119 MW went into commercial operation in the second quarter. In total, the company expects to add 438 MW of solar this year and another 200 MW by the end of 2018, bringing its total to 1,800 MW. The company’s integrated resource plan calls for up to 5,000 MW of solar by 2032.

“Solar uses a lot of land, and that’s beginning to become obvious to people as maybe not quite as obvious to folks in the West, where vacant land is abundant,” Farrell said. “So we’re exploring all of our options to meet our customers’ demands for decades to come. That’s part of why we’re looking at the relicensing of North Anna and Surry as well, and pump storage in the Virginia mountains.”

On Thursday, the company announced it has acquired two 5-MW solar facilities and plans to purchase two other solar farms totaling 10 MW later in the third quarter from Strata Solar, of Chapel Hill, N.C.

[Editor’s note: Quotes from the earnings call are according to a transcript by Seeking Alpha.]

Entergy Q2 Earnings Beat Expectations

By Tom Kleckner

With its merchant nuclear power plants all but part of history, Entergy reported second-quarter earnings Wednesday that almost doubled investor expectations.

The New Orleans-based company said second-quarter profits were $409.9 million ($2.27/share), compared with $567.3 million ($3.11/share) a year ago. A Zacks Investment Research survey of Wall Street analysts had forecasted earnings of $1.20/share.

Entergy took a $152.3 million loss related to its plans to sell or close its five Entergy Wholesale Commodities nuclear plants. (See Entergy, Consumers Announce Closure of Palisades Nuke and Entergy to Shut Down Indian Point by 2021.)

At the same time, the company has received final regulatory approval to build a pair of nearly identical 990-MW combined cycle gas-fired plants in Louisiana and Texas. The Lake Charles Power Station in Westlake, La., is expected to go online in 2020, while the Montgomery County Power Station near Houston should begin operations in 2021.

entergy earnings q2 2017
Entergy’s Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, closed in 2014.

“These projects will contribute to our portfolio transformation efforts to replace older, less efficient plants with new generation,” Entergy CEO Leo Denault told analysts during a Wednesday earnings call, pointing to state-of-the art emission controls that capture and use waste heat to boost generation. “They are an important part of our strategy to meet our voluntary commitment to develop an electric system that is well-positioned to operate in a carbon-constrained economy.”

Denault said the two plants are expected to provide Entergy’s Louisiana and Texas customers at least $3 billion in combined net benefits and lower production costs. The plants are also expected to provide thousands of jobs during construction and generate more than $2 billion in economic activity for their local communities, he said.

Entergy has also amended its application for the proposed New Orleans Power Station, which has encountered opposition from the City Council. Denault said the company has renewed its request for the original 226-MW combustion turbine but also proposed a 128-MW unit as an alternative.

Exelon Confident on ZECs; Will Seek PJM Changes

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

Exelon officials said Wednesday they will press PJM to enact rule changes boosting off-peak prices and are confident nuclear subsidies in New York and Illinois will survive court challenges.

The comments came as Exelon reported second-quarter earnings of $80 million ($0.09/share), a drop from $267 million ($0.29/share) a year earlier, as its generation division saw a $250 million loss.

Adjusted operating earnings for the quarter were $509 million ($0.54/share), down from $604 million ($0.65/share) in 2016, reflecting the end of the reliability support services agreement for its R.E. Ginna nuclear plant in New York, increased nuclear outage days and lower realized energy prices. Those negatives were partially offset by rate increases that boosted utility earnings and zero-emission credit revenue ($0.05/share) for the Ginna, Nine Mile Point and James A. FitzPatrick nuclear plants beginning April 1.

Joe Dominguez, executive vice president of governmental and regulatory affairs and public policy, said federal district court rulings rejecting challenges to the New York and Illinois ZEC cases suggested opponents will have a difficult time prevailing on appeal.

“The district court decided these cases at a very preliminary stage, whereas a legal matter the courts had to assume all the facts that the plaintiffs pled were accurate. Those facts were not accurate, but even under the plaintiffs’ versions of the case, the courts found that they had no legal claim whatsoever,” Dominguez said. “In both decisions, the district courts rejected the entire waterfront of the plaintiffs’ claims beyond the … procedural issues. That speaks to how high a hill they will need to climb on appeal to reverse those decisions.”

David Gaier, spokesman for plaintiff NRG Energy disagreed. “We don’t think we’re down for the count at all,” he said.

Initial briefs are due Aug. 28 in the plaintiffs’ appeal of the ruling on the Illinois ZECs, pending before the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The plaintiffs plan to ask the 2nd Circuit Court to review the New York ruling.

Lobbying Position Improved

Dominguez said the court rulings have helped Exelon’s lobbying posture in other states considering ZEC-type programs. He said opposing lobbyists have cited the legal questions as risks for policymakers, saying “‘Why would you take a tough vote on this only to have it overturned in the courts?’ These decisions resolve that issue.”

CEO Chris Crane said “we remain hopeful” that Pennsylvania officials will enact similar subsidies to prevent the closure of Three Mile Island. (See Seeking Subsidy, Exelon Threatens to Close Three Mile Island.)

Dominguez said, however, that pricing carbon emissions in the wholesale markets would be preferable to ZECs. “It’s more clear to us now than ever that federal wholesale markets need to evolve to fully incorporate attributes like resiliency, fuel diversity and the environmental qualities of the generation resources. If the markets don’t evolve, then the markets are going to have a diminished role in energy policy going forward. We are committed [to markets] but the markets should be well-functioning. Our commitment to markets only extends so far as it provides the best outcomes for our customers.”

Dominguez said the company was heartened by PJM’s plan for energy market changes that would allow baseload generators such as nuclear plants to set clearing prices in off-peak hours. The RTO has said it will file the changes with FERC by the first quarter of 2018, with implementation targeted by summer 2018. “We are going to push very hard to make sure that happens,” promised Dominguez, who said the changes should increase off-peak energy prices and reduce capacity prices. (See RTOs to Congress: Don’t Lose Faith in Markets.)

Not Considering GenCo Spin-off

Crane said that although Exelon believes it is undervalued by Wall Street, it is not considering spinning off its generating unit into a separate company. He cited the “synergies” between its generation fleet and its distribution utilities. Exelon noted that all its utilities scored in the top quartile of the Customer Average Interruption Duration Index and that Baltimore Gas and Electric and Commonwealth Edison achieved their best-ever System Average Interruption Frequency Index scores.

“We are differentiating ourselves from any other merchant generator in the business. [We have] strong balance sheets, a different class of assets, very well run and fairly matched to our load books. So, we like where we’re at and wouldn’t speculate on anything else,” he said. We “really can see the value creation and want the market to recognize it as we do execute on what we say.”

CFO Jack Thayer told analysts Exelon believes future power prices will be higher than suggested by forward curves, whose liquidity has declined over the past year. Trades for 2020 and beyond represent only 6% of the futures volume at the PJM West hub on the ICE and NASDAQ exchanges, he said.

exelon pjm nuclear plants
Exelon

“We would note that our fundamentals group has a more constructive view on power markets than these illiquid forward curves suggest, but we appreciate that there is perceived safety in using the forwards,” he told the stock analysts on the call. “However, when running your numbers, we would just encourage you all to appreciate what is underpinning those forward prices.”

CAISO Leads EIM Q2 Benefits, Exports

By Robert Mullin

CAISO hauled in the largest share of the $39.52 million in benefits produced by the Western Energy Imbalance Market (EIM) during the second quarter, the grid operator said in a report released Monday.

The ISO was also the market’s dominant exporter of energy over the period as California coped with combined surpluses of solar and hydroelectric output on its system after a wet winter.

CAISO took in $15.49 million in benefits, compared to $8.81 million for PacifiCorp, $8.13 million for Arizona Public Service and $2.47 million for Puget Sound Energy. NV Energy’s estimated $4.62 million in benefits did not include data for June, which is still pending verification.

EIM CAISO exports pacificorp puget sound
| CAISO

The EIM’s total benefits increased by $8.52 million — or 27% — over the first quarter. (See CAISO EIM Exports Rise With Spring, Report Shows.) That spread will increase with the addition of NVE’s June figures.

The gross benefits represent either cost savings for serving load or increased profits from merchant operations within the EIM’s participating balancing authority areas (BAAs). The market’s ability to reduce curtailments also enables participants to collect renewable energy credits that would not otherwise be issued.

The benefits calculation nets out inter-BAA transfers that were scheduled ahead of the EIM’s 15- and five-minute market runs to avoid attributing contracted flows to the market.

CAISO exported more than 1.11 million MWh of electricity in the EIM’s five-minute market during the quarter, the report shows. Most of that energy was transmitted into NVE’s territory to be wheeled into the PacifiCorp-East area, but APS also absorbed a significant portion. The inclusion of APS and PSE last October greatly increased the transfer capability within the EIM, improving California’s ability to move its solar surpluses into other areas of the West.

EIM CAISO exports pacificorp puget sound
Last year’s addition of Arizona Public Service and Puget Sound Energy to the EIM has significantly increased the market’s transfer capacity, facilitating exports from CAISO | CAISO

That export capability enabled CAISO to avoid curtailing 67,055 MWh of renewable output from April to June, displacing 28,700 metric tons of CO2 emissions , the report said. The ISO estimates that, since 2015, avoided curtailments from EIM operations have reduced carbon emissions by 204,941 metric tons, the equivalent of removing more than 43,000 passenger cars off the road for a year.

CAISO’s exports are likely to decline sharply this summer as California absorbs more of its own renewable output in the face of increased summer loads, a pattern seen last year. (See PacifiCorp Increases Share of EIM Benefit in Q3.)

The report also noted the EIM’s impact on the procurement of flexible ramping capacity, which represents resources capable of responding to the variable output of renewable generators.

Because variability can decrease in one BAA at the same time that it’s increasing in another, the EIM enables participants to share flexible resources — allowing each BAA to procure fewer resources than would have been necessary on a standalone basis. These “flexible ramping procurement savings” during the second quarter represented about 39% of what would have been the total requirement of the participating BAAs absent the EIM, the report showed.

The EIM has yielded $213.24 million in gross benefits since commencing operation in November 2014 with PacifiCorp as its first member.

Day-ahead Prices Going Negative in CAISO

By Jason Fordney

Negative day-ahead prices surged in CAISO during the first quarter as combined surpluses of solar and hydroelectric output frequently left the market upside-down.

Prices went negative during 51 hours in the day-ahead market over the three-month period, compared with just three hours in all of last year, the ISO’s Department of Market Monitoring said.

“This is something we first just started seeing in this quarter,” Senior Analyst Gabe Murtaugh said during a July 31 call to discuss the department’s first-quarter report.

Negative prices indicate that the cost to procure wholesale power was at or below $0/MWh, which happens when there is an oversupply of solar power and other renewables while demand is relatively low.

Negative prices occurred in the day-ahead market during about 10% of the hours in the 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. time frame during the first quarter. They also happened more frequently during weekends when electricity loads were lower.

day-ahead prices caiso day-ahead market
| CAISO

Real-time prices also dipped frequently into negative territory during the quarter, occurring at about 10% of intervals in the 15-minute market and 13% of intervals in the five-minute market.

The negative pricing has become central to the debate around renewables in California, with some arguing that it is the result of a rush to integrate renewables without completely accounting for or understanding their impact on reliability and markets.

CAISO average energy prices decreased sharply in the first quarter, from about $35/MWh in December 2016 to about $23/MWh in March. This coincided with increased renewable output and low loads, the Monitor said. Prices in the 15-minute market are consistently lower than day-ahead prices and moved in about the same direction and magnitude each month.

“On average, five-minute market prices in March were notably low at about $17/MWh. This was the lowest average monthly five-minute market price during the past several years,” the Monitor said in the report.

CAISO also curtailed more renewable generation in the quarter, rising to a high in March of nearly 6%, compared with peak curtailment less than 3% a year earlier. Renewable curtailment rose above 80,000 MWh in both February and March, compared with less than 60,000 MWh in March 2016, according to ISO data.

During nearly all first-quarter intervals when prices were negative, the market economically dispatched generation down and CAISO did not have to curtail self-scheduled generation.

day-ahead market day-ahead prices caiso
Rooftop solar and other renewables pushed up negative prices in CAISO in the first quarter

Prices at times surged above $750/MWh at certain times because of generator ramping limitations when solar resources rolled off the system at sunset.

“During these intervals, steep increases in net load exceeded flexible ramping capacity procured through the flexible ramping product and required the power balance constraint to be relaxed because of insufficient available incremental energy,” the Monitor said.

Congestion in the Western Energy Imbalance Market (EIM) continued to isolate PacifiCorp-West (PACW) from CAISO and PacifiCorp-East (PACE), the Monitor said. This drove down prices in PACW and Puget Sound Energy compared with the ISO and the rest of the EIM.

Arizona Public Service and PSE joined the EIM in October 2016, adding new transfer capacity. This reduced congestion between APS, CAISO and PACE, the Monitor said. EIM market prices in the APS area were close to those in NV Energy, PACE and CAISO.

The Monitor earlier this month said that bid limits placed on PacifiCorp, NVE and APS are no longer needed because of increased transfer capacity in the EIM. (See CAISO Monitor Says EIM Bid Limits No Longer Needed.)

The report reiterated the Monitor’s recommendation that the ISO’s congestion revenue rights auction be eliminated and replaced with a market or locational price swaps based on bids for CRRs. (See CAISO Monitor Proposes End to Revenue Rights Auction.) CAISO is in the midst of an initiative to investigate the efficiency of the auction.

PSEG Sees Support for Nuclear, to Seek Revenue Decoupling

By Peter Key

Public Service Enterprise Group CEO Ralph Izzo said last week that the company has received “just about universal support for the continued operation” of its nuclear plants.

Speaking during the company’s second-quarter earnings call on Friday, Izzo also revealed that PSEG’s Public Service Electric and Gas plans to ask the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities to decouple its distribution revenue from its sales volume to enable it to support large-scale investments in energy efficiency.

PSEG — which owns the Hope Creek Generating Station and 57% of the adjacent Salem Nuclear Generating Station in New Jersey, and 50% of the Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station in Pennsylvania — wants financial compensation for its emissions-free generation, which it says is at risk from low power prices.

PSEG nuclear power
Salem & Hope Creek Nuclear Reactors on Artificial Island

Izzo said it’s good that the Department of Energy recognizes a challenge “with baseload generation and fuel diversity,” which will be the subject of a report the department plans to release soon. He called “the recent PJM proposals on how to deal with inflexible units … potentially quite helpful.” (See New York ZEC Suit Dismissed.)

PSEG nuclear power
Izzo | PSEG

Still, Izzo said, “the problem, according to the forward price curve, is at New Jersey’s doorstep, and there’s no denying it.” As a result, he said, PSEG will “continue to educate stakeholders at the state level about the need to preserve the diversity and resiliency of our electric generating mix.”

PSE&G will make the decoupling request in a rate case it plans to file no later than Nov. 1. A growing number of utilities are seeking to decouple their revenue from their sales. The move enables them to get the money they say they need to maintain their infrastructure even if their sales are flat or declining. In California, for example, utilities receive incentives to encourage their customers to use renewables and conserve electricity.

PSEG earned $109 million ($0.22/share) in the quarter, down from $187 million ($0.37/share) in the second quarter of 2016. The company said its most recent figures were affected by accelerated depreciation associated with the June 1 retirement of its last two coal-fired generating stations. PSEG’s revenue in the most recent quarter was $2.13 billion, up from $1.91 billion a year ago.

Texas Heat Leads to more ERCOT Demand Records

A Central Texas heat wave is leading to surging demand for electricity, helping ERCOT continue its streak of breaking demand records.

The Texas grid operator’s latest record came Friday when it reported 69,525 MW of demand between 4 and 5 p.m., the fifth time in July it exceeded last year’s mark of 67,469 MW.

ercot texas demand records
ERCOT operators monitor the Texas grid. | © RTO Insider

Temperatures in Austin, where ERCOT is headquartered, hit 105 F on Sunday, breaking a 60-year-old record for the date and marking the 13th straight day of triple-digit heat. Nearby San Antonio broke heat records Saturday and Sunday with temperature readings of 105 and 104 F, respectively. The previous records were set in 1950 and 1946, respectively.

On Saturday, ERCOT broke the weekend peak demand record by nearly 1,500 MW when it recorded a preliminary total of 68,413 MW between 4 and 5 p.m. — after hitting 67,728 MW in the previous hour.

And the ISO has set new monthly demand records for nine of the past 12 months, including the last four.

“The system has performed well so far this summer,” said ERCOT spokesperson Robbie Searcy. Unable to resist the use of a pun, she said, “We have kept up with monthly record demand in June and July, and blazed past the previous weekend record without any reliability concerns.”

ERCOT’s final resource adequacy seasonal assessment projected demand to peak this summer at 72.9 GW in August, above the all-time high of 71.1 GW set in August 2016.

Area heat indices have been as high as 109 F, but temperatures are expected to drop into the high 90s for much of this week.

— Tom Kleckner

Texas Commission Rejects SPS ROFR Request

By Tom Kleckner

AUSTIN, Texas — The Public Utility Commission of Texas agreed Friday that Southwestern Public Service does not have the exclusive right to build transmission facilities in its service territory, signaling a final order will be considered at its next meeting.

The PUC’s decision was not the answer SPS was looking for when it filed a request asking the commission to determine whether Texas law includes a right of first refusal that overrides FERC Order 1000. (See Texas PUC Agrees to Take up SPP, SPS Request on ROFR.)

ERCOT PUCT Right of first refusal ROFR
Audience at last week’s PUCT Meeting | © RTO Insider

Wes Reeves, spokesman for SPS parent Xcel Energy, said the company “is disappointed with this ruling and will seek rehearing and appeal.” The PUC’s next meeting is scheduled Aug. 17 (Docket No. 46901).

ERCOT PUCT right of first refusal ROFR
ERCOT’s Warren Lasher (left) listens as TIEC’s Katie Coleman makes her point | © RTO Insider

SPS contends that the state’s Public Utility Regulatory Act (PURA) allows it, as the incumbent utility operating outside ERCOT, the ROFR to build in the service area prescribed by the PUC. That would prevent a potential competitive project under Order 1000.

The commission disagreed, sticking to its staff position that “an incumbent utility’s expertise in providing service within its certificated service area does not confer an exclusive legal right to construct transmission facilities within the utility’s certificated service area.”

Anderson | © RTO Insider

Commissioner Ken Anderson offered little of his own reasoning but noted ERCOT’s Competitive Renewable Energy Zone (CREZ) project backed his position.

“The fact is, whether it’s CREZ lines or non-CREZ lines, we have transmission lines owned by different service providers inside and outside ERCOT that crisscross each other’s distribution service territory,” he said.

SPS filed a lawsuit in state district court in January, seeking approval to build the project and an injunction prohibiting SPP from issuing a notification-to-construct. The two parties agreed to suspend the proceeding to give the PUC an opportunity to decide how to interpret PURA.

Parties to See LP&L Contested Case After Aug. Meeting

All parties involved in Lubbock Power & Light’s planned migration of its load from SPP to ERCOT agreed they are ready to move on to a contested case, but not until after the PUC’s Aug. 17 meeting (Project No. 45633).

Marquez | © RTO Insider

Commissioner Brandy Marty Marquez said the delay would give her and PUC staff more time to study data compiled by ERCOT and SPP in a joint study on the potential move’s financial and reliability impacts.

“Everybody’s ready to go but me,” said Marquez, requesting a hearing schedule be set at the commission’s next open meeting.

Anderson agreed, saying he hasn’t yet “completely digested” the studies.

“There’s a lot of good data in the SPP and ERCOT report,” he said. “It’s not brought together in [a] bottom line, but you can derive it with little work.”

The study indicated SPP would see small production cost decreases in all of its transmission zones except for SPS, which serves LP&L’s 430 MW of load in a contract that has been extended into 2021. ERCOT would see production cost increases but hopes to balance that out by unlocking wind energy in the Texas Panhandle. (See Lubbock Load Could Boost ERCOT Production Costs by $66M.)

LP&L has said it intends to complete a study similar in scope and scale to the grid operators’. It wants to begin the contested case in May 2018, allowing it to successfully integrate with ERCOT before its “bridge agreement” with SPS expires.

ERCOT Technical Advisory Committee Briefs: July 27, 2017

AUSTIN, Texas — ERCOT stakeholders last week tabled a proposal to eliminate the reduction of congestion revenue rights (CRR) payments — “deration,” in the ERCOT vernacular — after the measure failed to pass the Technical Advisory Committee.

The nodal protocol revision request (NPRR821) would reverse the deration-settlement mechanism, which was introduced to deter market manipulation but has resulted in large financial losses to generators.

Lower Colorado River Authority’s Randa Stephenson | © RTO Insider

Lower Colorado River Authority’s Randa Stephenson recalled when her company lost $2 million over three months because of a forced outage at one of its power plants. She said generators face downside risk because CRRs are settled in the day-ahead market, which sometimes doesn’t align with real-time outcomes.

“All the generators are trying to do here is the right thing,” said Stephenson, a former TAC chair. “We’re trying to hedge our congestion risk in the real-time, and we don’t feel like we can do that right now.”

The deration price for a CRR path is determined at the constraint level and applied to the CRR payout. CRR payments can be derated if transmission elements are oversold, the target payment is a positive value, or the CRR source or sink is a resource node.

Stakeholders willing to eliminate CRR deration have expressed concern that NPRR821 unfairly changes allocations so that load will bear 100% of the risk associated with deration. Other participants countered that the shortfall is borne by CRR holders when a balancing account is exhausted and said the shortfall risk is not exclusive to load.

“We think the deration process that’s in place now is appropriate,” said Amanda Frazier of Luminant, the only generator to vote against eliminating CRR deration. “It’s a risk that can be managed. It allows for appropriate values of CRR on paths where we have unexpected outages that cause those paths to be oversold.”

TAC Vice-Chair Bob Helton (Dynegy), TAC Chair Adrienne Brandt (CPS Energy), ERCOT COO Cheryl Mele | © RTO Insider

TAC’s consumer and independent retail electric provider (REP) segments voted unanimously with Luminant against the measure, providing 10 of the 12 “no” votes. The 15 favorable votes were not enough to meet the required two-thirds threshold to approve the measure.

Read Comstock, Source Power & Gas | © RTO Insider

“The real issue is the risk itself is not changing … and you’re transferring the risk to load, instead of the market participants that are participating in the CRR auction,” said one REP representative, Read Comstock of Source Power & Gas. “I have sympathy for LCRA’s issue, but I’m assuming the price they offered considered that risk that existed. This same risk is going to be transferred to load with this NPRR change.”

Morgan Stanley’s Clayton Greer | © RTO Insider

“This NPRR is just like insurance. You overpay for insurance, and I think we’re going to wind up overpaying for the CRRs,” said Morgan Stanley’s Clayton Greer, who voted to eliminate deration. “Right now, we have hedges that don’t work when you need them. It’s like buying flood insurance that has an exemption for when it rains. Whenever the outages are taken, that’s when the congestion hits — and that’s when we actually need the coverage.”

Asked by stakeholders to weigh in, Beth Garza, the Independent Market Monitor, said she would leave the “very hard discussion” on money and value assessments to the TAC to decide.

“One of the aspects brought up in discussion that hasn’t been brought up today in the deration process is a way to manage potential manipulation,” Garza said. “I would argue it’s a very heavy-handed way to do that, and an unnecessary way to monitor for manipulative intervention in the CRR market. We don’t see a need for the current deration process.”

“This is very unique when it happens. It’s just the generators that get the derates and take the hit,” Stephenson said. “We’re trying to have a tool here that makes sense for us when we have these unique situations. It’s very hard to predict behavior if we’re going to have price blowouts on the upside, or CRRs get more expensive and give the load more money.”

Comstock urged stakeholders to remain engaged in the auction process. If not, he said, “we’re going to see CRR market participants push for more capacity to be sold at longer terms, because they’re not concerned about risk that exists if they are oversold.”

ERCOT’s July TAC meeting | © RTO Insider

Stephenson, who was sitting in for John Dumas, the LCRA’s normal TAC representative, said she would bring back additional comments and math samples of the “unique situations” to provide a “deeper discussion” on the proposed change.

The motion to table passed by a 23-6 margin. Further discussions will take place at the Wholesale Market Subcommittee (WMS), and possibly the Qualified Scheduling Entity Managers Working Group, before returning to TAC.

“821 is getting rid of the entire deration process in order to fix a relatively small problem,” Frazier said. “There are very directed ways to address the LCRA issue. That’s an issue we are interested in trying to resolve as well.”

EEA Price Adder Change Tabled

The TAC also tabled for another meeting the only revision request that required significant discussion.

The Texas Industrial Energy Consumers has opposed NPRR768 throughout the stakeholder process. The NPRR would revise the categories of ERCOT-initiated actions, such as energy emergency alerts (EEAs), that trigger a real-time deployment adder so that prices reflect current system conditions.

TIEC’s Katie Coleman | © RTO Insider

“What ERCOT is really doing [when it calls DC tie imports] is replicating what a good market outcome would be,” said the TIEC’s legal counsel, Katie Coleman. “I know EEAs don’t happen often, but when they do, this could keep prices at the cap for significantly longer than they would be otherwise, and this is real money for my members.”

Referencing ERCOT’s systemwide offer cap of $9,000/MWh, Coleman said, “When you have an EEA in ERCOT and prices are at $9,000, everybody has every incentive to sell power into the ERCOT market.”

In her opening statement, Coleman also said the TIEC is concerned NPRR768 would apply to the Southern Cross Project, a proposed HVDC transmission project that would transport more than 2 GW of electricity from Texas to Southeast markets.

“When you’re talking about making a price adjustment for up to 2,000 MW of import, that starts to be real money,” she said.

In delaying action on the proposal in the past, stakeholders have noted the Southern Cross proposal was part of a recent docket before the Public Utility Commission of Texas (45624). In a resulting compliance docket (46304), the commission directed ERCOT to determine the project’s “appropriate” market participation classification, necessary transmission upgrades and cost allocations, and whether any price adjustments are necessary. (See “Southern Cross HVDC Project,” ERCOT Technical Advisory Committee Briefs.)

Coleman said that the commission did not direct ERCOT to take specific action on NPRR768 or similar proposals, and that the ISO’s decision to file the NPRR, rather than leave the issue to stakeholders, was concerning.

“It’s not necessarily an appropriate role for ERCOT to be filing things that increase prices for customers,” she said.

Luminant’s Amanda Frazier | © RTO Insider

Frazier said Luminant, a participant in the Southern Cross litigation before the PUC, asserted a price correction would be needed if ERCOT curtailed DC ties for reliability reasons. As the Southern Cross DC tie would be a merchant tie, she said, there was little reason to be concerned about replicating market actions.

“[Southern Cross] will have those incentives to operate, so this is more of a backup position,” Frazer said. “Where if ERCOT is taking command and control over someone’s assets that would otherwise be doing something else — and they’re doing that to preserve the reliability of the ERCOT system — then there should be a price correction for that action, which is how we treat other reliability actions.”

“The problem is, the Southern Cross facility [is] not being built to facilitate market transactions in and out of ERCOT,” Coleman countered. “It’s being built to facilitate moving wind from SPP and Texas to regulated utilities in the Eastern Interconnection so they can fulfill renewable requirements.

“We’re concerned the incentives won’t be appropriate for people to sell into ERCOT, even when prices are $9,000.”

The WMS will be given the opportunity to weigh in before the discussion is scheduled to resume during August’s meeting.

TAC Approves 5 Revision Requests

The TAC approved two additional NPRRs, revisions to the load profiling guide (LPGRR) and the retail market guide, and a system change request (SCR):

  • NPRR822: Establishes the procedure for identifying resource nodes as an “other binding document” instead of a “business practice manual,” and adjusts the process for handling a retired resource’s nodes by allowing ERCOT to convert CRRs at that node to a different, nearby settlement point.
  • NPRR833: Adjusts NPRR827’s language to account for the steady state when ERCOT implements the long-term, automated change affecting point-to-point (PTP) obligation bid clearing. The NPRR updates the day-ahead market optimization engine to address situations where a contingency disconnects a resource node. The engine will pick up the PTP megawatts and distribute them to other nodes, instead of ignoring them in a contingency analysis if that PTP sources or sinks at the disconnected point.
  • LPGRR063: Clarifies the wording referring to the competitive retailer (CR) of record for certain profile type requests, and specifies only the CR of record may request certain profile assignments.
  • RMGRR149: Clarifies certain communications processes for electric service identifiers (ESI IDs) without a REP.
  • SCR792: Allows ERCOT to send the consecutive clock-minute average exceedances of Balancing Authority ACE Limit (BAAL) to the appropriate entities, and creates a situational awareness display in the information system’s public area that displays consecutive clock-minute average exceedances of BAAL.

— Tom Kleckner

SPP Board of Directors/Members Committee Briefs: July 25, 2017

DENVER — The SPP Board of Directors and Members Committee approved the Markets and Operations Policy Committee’s decision to allow the Z2, Export Pricing and Gas-Electric Coordination task forces to expire. (See related story, SPP Moves Ahead with ‘Tweaked’ Panhandle Congestion Study.)

Stakeholders also approved two recommendations from the Z2 Task Force. The first eliminated credits for non-capacity upgrades, such as substation facilities, while the second disposed of credits for short-term transmission service of less than a year.

SPP’s Board of Directors and Members Committee meets in Denver | © RTO Insider

The motion passed the Members Committee with two “no” votes (NextEra Energy Resources and Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority) and an abstention (ITC Holdings).

However, in nearly a year of work, the task force was unable to reach consensus on simplifying the vexing process spelled out in Attachment Z2 of SPP’s Tariff, in which financial credits and obligations are assigned for sponsored transmission upgrades. The group expressed “significant concern” over SPP’s existing congestion rights processes and the “perceived lack of hedging” but was unable to reach consensus on using incremental long-term congestion rights (ILTCRs) to replace Z2 credits.

NextEra Energy Resources’ Aundrea Williams | © RTO Insider

“With respect to transparency, neither of these two changes does anything to move the ball forward,” said NextEra’s Aundrea Williams. “The vast majority of the task force agreed there was a better market solution out there but couldn’t support it. Perhaps when the TCR market is improved, that’s the time to look at the Z2 process.”

During the MOPC meeting last month, members learned staff would have to resettle nine years of historical Z2 credits and obligations because of billing disputes, “minor” software defects and problems in calculating the present value of creditable balances. (See “More Z2 Woes; SPP to Resettle 9 Years of Data,” SPP Markets and Operations Policy Committee Briefs: July 11-12, 2017.)

Board Reaffirms Seams Project with AECI

Golden Spread Electric’s Mike Wise | © RTO Insider

Unfazed by a nearly 50% cost increase, stakeholders reaffirmed their endorsement of the proposed $13.75 million seams project with Missouri-based Associated Electric Cooperative Inc. (AECI).

Golden Spread Electric Cooperative and Southwestern Public Service opposed the project, while NextEra and American Electric Power abstained.

The project involves installing a new 345/161-kV transformer at AECI’s Morgan substation and an uprate of a related 161-kV line, both near Springfield, Mo.

SPP’s Lanny Nickell explains the High Priority study | © RTO Insider

Nickell attributed the project’s increase to an increase in the amount of work needed to upgrade the 161-kV line. Staff’s cost-benefit re-evaluation of the project since last month’s MOPC meeting has shown SPP will still receive most of the benefits. (See “Staff to Review AECI Joint Project After Cost Increase,” SPP Markets and Operations Policy Committee Briefs: July 11-12, 2017.)

Based on the amount of unforeseen work, AECI has agreed to increase its share of the project’s cost to 10.9%, or $1.5 million. SPP will bear the remaining $12.25 million.

The project would be regionally funded, as it solves congestion issues on SPP’s side of the seam. It is contingent on reaching an agreement for compensating AECI, which will own the project and be responsible for its construction, operations and maintenance.

Brown: SPP has Good Story for Congress

SPP CEO Nick Brown | © RTO Insider

Previewing testimony he would deliver to a Congressional energy subcommittee the day after the board meeting, SPP CEO Nick Brown said he had a good story to tell. (See related story, RTOs to Congress: Don’t Lose Faith in Markets.)

“SPP is obviously one of the nation’s RTOs that has been successful in reliably implementing a significant amount of wind,” he said. “We have been very successful at reliable operations because of three specific actions we have taken over the last decade.”

Those actions, Brown said, included SPP’s $10 billion infrastructure build, deploying a day-ahead market for unit commitment and consolidating 18 balancing authorities into a single entity.

“Take any of the three away, and we would not be where we are today,” he said. “Make no mistake, we have been very successful because of the bold moves our members have taken over the last decade.”

Vote on FERC Nominees Possible in August

FERC’s Patrick Clarey said the U.S. Senate’s shrinking August recess may give the body time to act on nominees waiting to join the five-person commission, which currently consists of acting Chair Cheryl LaFleur.

Republicans Robert Powelson, a Pennsylvania commissioner, and Neil Chatterjee, energy adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), advanced out of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in June on the strength of 20-3 votes. A confirmation vote by the full Senate has not been scheduled, but it is on the executive calendar, Clarey said.

“There could be a vote any time,” he said.

The White House has said President Trump intends to nominate Republican attorney Kevin McIntyre as chair and Richard Glick, the Democrats’ general counsel for the committee, to fill the remaining two spots on the commission. (See Trump Names Energy Lawyer McIntyre as FERC Chair.)

However, McIntyre and Glick’s official paperwork has yet to be submitted, Clarey said.

FERC has been without a quorum since Chairman Norman Bay stepped down in February. Colette Honorable left the commission when her term expired June 30.

Oversight Panel Members to Serve as Liaisons with SPP Officers, Businesses

Oversight Committee Chair Joshua W. Martin III said the committee’s members will “establish ongoing contact” with SPP officers and staff and oversee defined areas of responsibility.

The liaisons are: Harry Skilton (internal audit), Phyllis Bernard (compliance), Graham Edwards (Market Monitoring Unit) and Bruce Scherr (security).

In another personnel-related action, Brown notified members that NextEra’s Williams, Duane Highley (Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corp.), Dave Osburn (Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority), David Hudson (SPS), Philip Crissup (Oklahoma Gas & Electric) and Jon Hansen (Omaha Public Power District) have all reached the end of their terms on the Members Committee. With the exception of Crissup and Hansen, all have chosen to run for re-election.

Consent Agenda Includes 8 Revision Requests

Members and the board unanimously approved a consent agenda that included eight revision requests and several other items:

  • MWG-RR185: Clarifies which SPP criteria document (Planning Criteria or Operating Criteria) is referenced when used in the market protocols and the Tariff’s Attachment AE, and directs users to the correct document.
  • MWG-RR82: Ensures combined cycle units avoiding outage deviation penalties and do not lose eligibility for start-up cost make-whole payments (MWPs) because of physical or environmental limitations. Adds a previously discussed increase in the MWPs’ grace period for commitments from one hour to two hours. The revision’s implementation date was scheduled for this August to allow SPP to complete development of software that allows market participants to register and submit separate offers for each of the combined cycle units’ multiple configurations.
  • MWG-RR222: Includes a multi-configuration combined cycle resource’s (MCR) committed and actual configuration for each interval in a bill determinant report, allowing MCRs to shadow the configuration SPP is using to settle these resources.
  • MWG-RR225: Cleans up confusing and misleading Tariff language on ILTCRs that could have construed ILTCRs as load-serving entities or non-LSEs.
  • MWG-RR226: Changes settlement location pairs that have potential for unconstrained flow to electrically equivalent settlement locations during the auction revenue rights process to comply with a FERC order (ER17-310). SPP will post the settlement locations before the annual ARR allocation process, along with the system topology and other data.
  • MWG-RR229: Satisfies FERC Order 831’s requirements on energy offer caps by using actual costs for MWPs on offers above $1,000/MWh. According to the order, costs underlying a resource’s cost-based incremental energy offer above $1,000/MWh must be verified before that offer can be used to calculate LMPs.
  • ORWG-RR228: Clarifies existing planning criteria language for system operating limits to reduce the potential of misinterpretation by entities complying with NERC reliability standards.
  • RTWG-RR233: Ensures that eligible network customers will not be billed twice for the same deliveries by not assessing charges against a specific use of an owner’s facilities that do not receive the benefit the charges provide to other transmission owners.

Also approved on the consent agenda:

  • The scope for the expedited re-evaluation of the Kummer Ridge-Roundup 345-kV line. (See “MOPC Endorses Re-evaluation of Basin Electric Project,” SPP Markets and Operations Policy Committee Briefs.)
  • A request that FERC waive SPP rules to allow restating of settlement prices for TCRs at Omaha Public Power District’s Fort Calhoun nuclear plant site. The plant was retired Dec. 1, 2016, but incorrect modeling of shift factors from Dec. 1 to Dec. 14 resulted in the marginal congestion component being overstated and the TCR settlements sourcing at the location being understated.

— Tom Kleckner