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November 13, 2024

MISO Stakeholders Give Go-Ahead on SD Interregional Project

By Amanda Durish Cook

The first MISO-SPP interregional project inched closer to reality Thursday with a vote of confidence from the MISO Planning Advisory Committee.

Four stakeholder sectors in attendance at a special April 27 PAC meeting ― Environmental, Transmission Owners, Coordinating and Power Marketers ― voted unanimously to approve the South Dakota project’s regional review. The $5.2 million project will relieve congestion on the tie line shared between the Western Area Power Administration and MISO’s Xcel Energy territory. (See 1 Project Recommended for MISO-SPP Coordinated Plan.)

MISO-SPP Interregional Project
| MISO & SPP

The PAC charter does not require a voting sector quorum for project recommendation votes. MISO moved its stakeholder vote from the Interregional Planning Stakeholder Advisory Committee to the PAC late last year amid concerns that a vote in the IPSAC wouldn’t give stakeholders time to process voting issues and would be poorly attended. (See “PAC Could Hold IPSAC Vote Outside of Interregional Meetings,” MISO Planning Advisory Committee Briefs.)

SPP, meanwhile, will hold its stakeholder vote at a Seams Steering Committee teleconference May 3. SPP officials have also recommended its stakeholders approve the project, the only joint recommendation to come out of the RTOs’ coordinated system plan study conducted last year.

Both stakeholder votes are nonbinding. The MISO-SPP Joint RTO Planning Committee — composed of staff with ultimate say over interregional issues — can override the votes.

Before the vote was conducted, MISO officials hinted that they would press for regional review regardless of their stakeholders’ views.

“We’re just trying to memorialize stakeholder opinion,” MISO’s Eric Thoms explained of the vote.

MISO PAC liaison Jeff Webb said the small project has already come a long way because it comes recommended by both MISO and SPP leadership, a first for the RTOs. “This is a procedural motion more than anything,” he said. “We’re merely seeking input … and we anticipate that no stakeholders would oppose the project. We have the right to take your vote under advisement, and we’re very much inclined to check this project out.”

MISO will proceed with a regional review process only if the JRPC also votes in favor of the project. If it is approved, the RTO would most likely process the project as part of its 2017 Transmission Expansion Plan, said Davey Lopez, MISO adviser for planning coordination and strategy.

At an April 25 Informational Forum, MISO CEO John Bear said the possible approval of the first MISO-SPP interregional project would be a “rare” occurrence, given the complex approval process the project must clear.

MISO would designate its portion of the project as miscellaneous, unable to qualify for cost allocation, because it does not meet the 345-kV voltage threshold required of its market efficiency projects. The RTOs have no voltage threshold on interregional projects, but they do have a $5 million cost criteria, a requirement that either RTO must see a 5% or greater share of the project’s benefits and a condition that the estimated in-service date be within 10 years of project approval.

Acting on a complaint by Northern Indiana Public Service Co., FERC last year ordered MISO to eliminate its 345-kV threshold on interregional projects with PJM. (See FERC Signals Bulk of NIPSCO Order Work Complete.)

Salt River Project Signs on to Become 9th EIM Participant

By Robert Mullin

Phoenix-based Salt River Project (SRP) on Thursday signed an agreement with CAISO that puts the utility on track to join with the Western Energy Imbalance Market (EIM) in April 2020.

| Salt River Project

By linking up with the EIM, SRP will follow a course already charted by Arizona’s biggest utility, Arizona Public Service, which began trading in the West’s only real-time electricity market last October. (See Arizona Public Service, Puget Sound Energy Begin Trading in EIM.)

Publicly owned SRP is Arizona’s second largest electricity provider and the biggest supplier of water in the greater Phoenix area. It serves more than 1 million customers within a territory that covers more ground than the state of Delaware.

The utility estimates that it will save up to $4.5 million yearly by participating in the EIM.

“The EIM can help save money for SRP and its customers by providing real-time access to the lowest-cost resources across a significant portion of the Western grid,” John Coggins, SRP’s senior director of power delivery, said in a statement. “It will complement SRP-owned generating resources and energy purchases from the wholesale market.”

Salt River Project Arizona Public Service EIM
Theodore Roosevelt Dam

SRP controls about 9.5 GW of generating capacity, which includes the utility’s ownership of 3,461 MW of natural gas, a 688-MW share in the output from the Palo Verde nuclear plant and 745 MW of renewable generation, more than half of which is hydroelectric. The portfolio also includes 2,225 MW of coal-fired generation.

Perhaps most important for the EIM, which relies on having ample transmission capacity to prevent market separation, SRP offers key transmission assets that will improve transfer capability in the desert Southwest. Among them are 500-kV lines extending from Phoenix to points north and west, including to the Mead and Marketplace wheeling points near the California-Nevada border, the Navajo generating station in northern Arizona and the Palo Verde plant west of the city. Palo Verde, Mead and Marketplace all function as key pricing points for power wheeled into the Southern California market.

Under its agreement with CAISO, SRP will pay the ISO a $910,000 fixed implementation fee to cover preparations for EIM membership. Those include integrating SRP’s full network model into the market’s software, facilitating data exchange and performing market simulations leading up to the go-live date.

SRP will be the ninth balancing authority to join the EIM. Besides APS, current members include PacifiCorp, NV Energy and Puget Sound Energy. Portland General Electric is scheduled to begin trading in the market this October, followed next spring by Idaho Power. Sacramento Municipal Utility District and Seattle City Light are slated to join in April 2019, making them the first publicly owned participants.

CAISO estimates that the EIM has produced $142 million in gross benefits for its members since the market commenced operation in November 2014. The benefits represent either cost savings — for example, the reduced need for reserves and greenhouse gas credits — or increased profits from merchant operations. The market’s ability to reduce renewable curtailments also enables participants to collect renewable energy credits that would not otherwise be issued. (See EIM Benefit up 8% in Q4 with APS, Puget Sound Additions.)

MISO’s Next Step on Storage: ‘Common Issues’; Task Team?

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — MISO will schedule a “common issues” meeting in response to a request from a group of stakeholders to better define energy storage, a prelude to the possible formation of a task team dedicated to the issue.

Consumers Energy, DTE Energy, Ameren, Xcel Energy and Indianapolis Power and Light, which all own storage resources, submitted a joint request that MISO create a model for storage’s participation in the market and track its growth using the RTO’s Market Roadmap project list. The companies asked that MISO revise its Tariff, dispatch methodology, capacity constructs and models used to determine interconnection rights to “recognize the physical and operational characteristics of energy storage resources.”

At an April 26 Steering Committee meeting, Chair Tia Elliott said the common issues meeting will be used to gather information before creating an energy storage task team or work group. The meeting date has not been scheduled by MISO’s stakeholder relations team.

The RTO is already under pressure to revise its rules for storage under FERC’s Feb. 1 order in response to a complaint by IPL over compensation for the 20-MW battery at its Harding Street Station. (See MISO Ordered to Change Storage Rules Following IPL Complaint.)

Justin Stewart of MISO’s stakeholder relations unit said the stakeholders’ request was too broad to be covered by a single Market Roadmap assignment, saying it “touches too many market functions.”

Under the stakeholder redesign completed last year, Steering Committee members can assign completed issues submissions forms to other committees, reject considering the issue altogether, assign it as a common issue or send it back for more detailed information.

Aligned with NOPR

DTE’s Nick Griffin, who authored the request, said his proposal aligns with the aims of FERC’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on energy storage, issued in November. (See FERC Rule Would Boost Energy Storage, DER.)

“Whether or not FERC mandates this, we feel this will be useful to leverage storage in the MISO market,” Griffin said.

Steering Committee members said the topic could warrant a common issues meeting and then a possible task team. But they said creating storage market definitions was too tall an order for a typical Market Roadmap assignment.

“The topic of energy storage does touch many of the areas under [the main MISO committees]. It may be appropriate for us to consider a task force or a work group … where these issues related to energy storage can be discussed,” Elliott said.

MISO Executive Director of External Affairs Kari Bennett said the RTO was open to creating a stakeholder group to handle energy storage topics as part of a “big picture evaluation.”

MISO energy storage
MISO’s Kim Sperry (L) and Kari Bennett | © RTO Insider

“I think there’s a lot of embedded issues in here, and the Market Roadmap typically only handles one issue. … I think that a common issues meeting could be used to tease out all of those individual issues,” Alliant Energy’s Mitchell Myhre said.

MISO Executive Director of Market Design Jeff Bladen said a task team could use its six-month lifespan to come up with a “package of recommendations,” then have the RTO’s committees review their possible responsibilities in creating market definitions for storage. “Because it’s so important, it would be important for stakeholders to get a chance to think through all of those issues in a multifaceted fashion,” Bladen said.

Compliance Filing in IPL Complaint

In March, MISO requested a rehearing of FERC’s order in the IPL complaint, arguing that the storage NOPR is a “near-complete” overlap of the ordered storage revisions (EL17-8). MISO said IPL’s insistence that it participate fully in the market is hollow, as the Harding Street storage only provides primary frequency response.

However, with FERC at a near-standstill from the lack of a quorum, MISO made a compliance filing April 3 in response to the order, proposing the creation of a new resource category, Stored Energy Resource – Type II, that would not be limited to regulating services (ER17-1376). The proposal would require that storage function largely as a demand response resource, except that it would be treated as a regular generation resource for settlements and would not be eligible for revenue sufficiency guarantee payments or day-ahead margin assurance payments.

“We made a compliance filing in the docket, but it doesn’t do justice to the issue,” Bladen said, indicating that a more detailed market model for storage is inevitable.

Avangrid Q1 Net Income up 13% on NY, Conn. Rate Hikes

By Michael Kuser

Rate increases in New York and Connecticut helped Avangrid boost first quarter earnings by 13%.

The company, which benefited from increases for New York State Electric and Gas and Rochester Gas & Electric in New York, and United Illuminating in Connecticut, on Tuesday reported consolidated net income of $239 million ($0.77/share), compared with $212 million ($0.69/share) for the same period in 2016. Operating revenues were up 5.2% to $1.76 billion from $1.67 billion.

Rochester Gas & Electric Substation | Avangrid

CEO James P. Torgerson told analysts on a conference call that the company is “on track” to meet its target of 8 to 10% compound annual earnings growth through 2020. Company officials also talked about prospects for the company’s renewable generation business and gave a status report on other federal and state regulatory issues.

The company has “no expectations” of seeking a rate increase in 2017 for Central Maine Power, Torgerson said. Gov. Paul LePage has said high electric rates are hindering business, even though the state has the lowest industrial and residential energy prices in New England as of February, according to the Energy Information Administration. LePage claims, however, that Maine competes not with other states in New England, but with states like Michigan and Alabama, which have lower rates.

New York

On the slow progress in securing approval of NYSEG and RG&E’s combined proposal for advanced metering infrastructure, Torgerson noted that the New York Public Service Commission has only two out of five commission seats filled. As part of the state’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative, the utilities are starting their AMI work by installing 20,000 smart meters in Ithaca.

avangrid renewables offshore wind farm
Avangrid’s Barton Wind Farm

Settlement talks on a request by multiple intervenors seeking to compel the utilities to institute a “collaborative process” on AMI issues have been slowed by the investigation into RG&E’s response to a freak wind storm on March 8, which left more than 30,000 households without power for days.

RG&E’s $145 million R.E. Ginna retirement transmission alternative project went in operation in the first quarter. The project upgraded transformers and other equipment at two substations, increasing the capacity for one 115-kV and three 345-kV underground lines.

Connecticut

Torgerson also said “timing is getting critical right now” on a decision by Connecticut lawmakers on whether or not to pay subsidies to Dominion Energy’s Millstone nuclear plant in Waterford. S.B. 106, which is pending in the legislature now, “would put more cost back on to the customer,” Torgerson said. “I think Dominion would say [it will] lower the cost, but I think it actually raises a little.”

“There’s been really no detailed information provided to be able to make a determination as to whether that plant truly needs to get a subsidy or not to continue to run and what kind of profitability it has,” added CFO Rich Nicholas. “I think that’s the biggest rub right now that’s going on with Millstone and Connecticut.” (See Millstone No Dead Weight for Dominion, Says Opponents’ Study.)

ROE Move Now Up to FERC

Torgerson and Nicholas both commented on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals’ April 18 ruling overturning FERC’s 2014 order setting the base return on equity for Central Maine and other New England transmission owners at 10.57%. The court said the commission failed to meet its burden of proof in declaring the previous 11.14% rate unjust and unreasonable. (See Court Rejects FERC ROE Order for New England.)

“We all know that the 11.14% was in the range of reasonableness that FERC had set out, so we’re waiting to see what FERC will decide to do,” Torgerson said. “Then if they get over that, then we’ll have to determine if setting the base ROE at the midpoint of the upper half of the range of reasonableness is just and reasonable in and of itself.”

Nicholas looked for a more long-term resolution: “I think that the hope would be that maybe as we get new commissioners [at FERC] … that maybe they revisit the whole process and see if they can find a process whereby you avoid this pancaking where we now have four different complaints on the same issue.”

Renewables Unit Continues Growth

Avangrid Renewables’ contribution to earnings per share increased by 41% in the first quarter from Q1 2016, rising to 26% of adjusted EPS. The company is looking to keep the growth momentum going with future projects, including by bidding on offshore wind projects in Massachusetts.

On April 25, Avangrid participated in the bidders conference for clean energy proposals in Massachusetts. Torgerson said that he hoped to leverage parent company Iberdrola’s experience — the company has about 1.3 GW of offshore wind in operation or under construction — to win a contract to supply some of the 1,600 MW of offshore wind being solicited by Massachusetts.

The notice of intent to bid is due in early May, with proposals due at the end of July. The selection will probably come by the end of January 2018, Torgerson said.

Avangrid offshore wind
North Carolina Offshore Wind Map | BOEM

“They are really encouraging proposals that would include generation able to commit to deliveries by the end of 2020,” he said. Torgerson said the Massachusetts clean energy projects “not only will benefit Massachusetts and help them reach some of their renewable targets but also … help consumers in Maine by lowering energy prices in Maine.”

In March, Avangrid Renewables won the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s auction for an offshore wind lease on 122,000 acres about 24 nautical miles off the coast of Kitty Hawk, N.C. It was one of the final accomplishments of Avangrid Renewables CEO Frank Burkhartsmeyer, who is resigning May 17 to become CFO of Oregon-based natural gas provider NW Natural. (See Avangrid Renewables CEO Steps Down to Take NW Natural Role.)

No 2nd Term for FERC’s Colette Honorable

By Michael Brooks

FERC Commissioner Colette Honorable announced Friday she will not seek a second term on the commission. Her current term expires June 30.

“After much prayer and consideration, I’ve decided not to pursue another term at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,” Honorable said in a statement. “I appreciate the strong bipartisan support I’ve enjoyed over the years and look forward to continuing this important work after leaving the commission.”

Honorable at an EBA event in 2016 | © RTO Insider

Honorable was nominated by President Barack Obama in August 2014 to fill the remainder of former Commissioner John Norris’ term. The Senate unanimously confirmed the former Arkansas Public Service Commission chairman  in December 2014. (See Senate Confirms Honorable to FERC.)

Neither Honorable nor FERC said when she would leave the commission. “We have nothing more than her statement,” a FERC spokeswoman said.

Honorable could serve until her successor is confirmed or the end of the current Congressional session, whichever comes first.

In the past, some commissioners have stayed on past their terms’ expiration dates, saying they would wait until a replacement is named.

But Commissioner Tony Clark left at the end of September last year after his term expired in June without any nomination being submitted. And the commission has been without a quorum since February, when Chairman Norman Bay resigned after President Trump named Cheryl LaFleur acting chair.

Honorable had been interviewed on E&ETV’s “OnPoint” web show April 24 and gave no hint of her impending decision. She also said the commission was “hopeful that any day, any week we will hear who the nominees will be” and that she had no insight into when they would be announced.

Stakeholders and members of Congress have grown increasingly agitated that the president has not submitted any nominations to the Senate.

Honorable’s chances of being reappointed diminished with Trump’s election. Although the commission has not traditionally been marked by partisan divisions, the president gets to appoint members of his party to three of the five seats and pick the chairmanship. (See CPP, FERC’s Bay, Honorable Among Losers in Trump Win.)

Since Republicans Philip Moeller and Clark left, the five-member panel had been all Democrats: Honorable, Bay (whose term ran through June 2018) and LaFleur (June 2019).

Although Bay’s departure left an opening for a second Democrat, FERC insiders had not expected Honorable to remain.

DC Circuit Puts Hold on CPP, MATS Challenges

By Michael Brooks and Rich Heidorn Jr.

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals granted the Trump administration’s requests to hold in abeyance lawsuits challenging EPA’s Clean Power Plan and Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, small but important victories for the president — just before his 100th day in office — as he tries to reverse the Obama administration’s regulations on fossil fuel-fired power plants.

The orders also come just before a march in D.C. protesting President Trump’s policies on climate change.

The administration filed its requests on the CPP and MATS cases — along with several others regarding numerous lawsuits concerning Obama-era environmental regulations — shortly after Trump signed an executive order at EPA headquarters last month directing agencies to review all existing regulations “that potentially burden the development or use of domestically produced energy resources.” (See Trump Order Begins Perilous Attempt to Undo Clean Power Plan.)

The court on Friday ordered the suit against the CPP, filed by 26 states , to be paused for 60 days, with EPA required to file a status report in 30 days.

Stay

Implementation of the CPP was stayed by the Supreme Court in February 2016, shortly after the states filed their challenge, and the D.C. Circuit heard more than seven hours of oral arguments in September. The stay was a surprise to many and came without explanation, but it’s likely the Supreme Court wanted to avoid what happened with MATS.

The court in June 2015 found that rule illegal because EPA had not considered its costs. But because the rule, first proposed in March 2011, had not been stayed during the years of litigation, companies had been making investments and closing power plants in order to comply by the April 2015 effective date.

Instead of voiding the rule, the Supreme Court remanded the case back to the D.C. Circuit, which ordered EPA to rewrite the rule with a proper cost-benefit analysis. The court’s Thursday order suspended the case until further notice. EPA is required to file a status report in 90 days.

The holds give the administration more time to figure out how to revise — or potentially rescind — the rules. It is unclear how it intends to do this. But in the case of the CPP, the order does stave off the court from potentially upholding the rule.

Chief Judge Merrick Garland did not participate in the order, as he had recused himself from cases while his nomination to the Supreme Court by President Obama was pending before the Senate.

EPA Request

EPA asked the court to delay action on the CPP challenge on March 28, the day Trump signed an executive order directing EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to begin the lengthy process of undoing the rule.

“The Clean Power Plan is under close scrutiny by the EPA, and the prior positions taken by the agency with respect to the rule do not necessarily reflect its ultimate conclusions,” EPA said in its motion. “EPA should be afforded the opportunity to fully review the Clean Power Plan and respond to the president’s direction in a manner that is consistent with the terms of the executive order, the Clean Air Act and the agency’s inherent authority to reconsider past decisions. Deferral of further judicial proceedings is thus warranted.”

Environmental groups — including the Sierra Club, Environmental Defense Fund and Natural Resources Defense Council — filed a response April 5 contending that EPA’s request “would have the effect of improperly suspending the rule without review by any court, without any explanation and without mandatory administrative process.”

“The relief EPA seeks flouts the terms of the order by which the Supreme Court temporarily stayed enforcement of the rule. The Supreme Court did not invalidate the rule; consistent with the authority granted courts by the Administrative Procedure Act, it issued a stay pending a decision by this court and an opportunity for Supreme Court review. Now EPA wants the stay, but not the judicial review that formed the basis for it,” they wrote. “Granting EPA’s motion would effectively convert that temporary enforcement relief pending judicial review into a long-term suspension of the rule likely continuing for years, without any court having issued any decision on the rule’s merits.”

CPP’s Vulnerabilities

Based on the judges’ questions and comments during oral arguments in September, it appeared four of the five challenges — a Constitutional issue; a bill drafting error; EPA’s alleged failure to provide sufficient notice of changes between the original and final plan; and a claim that it relied on dubious assumptions on the growth of renewables — had little chance of prevailing. But the judges seemed to be seriously considering the argument that EPA overreached its authority by creating CO2 emission limits that coal-fired generators can’t meet, forcing a “generation switch” to natural gas and renewables. (See Analysis: No Knock Out Blow for Clean Power Plan Foes in Court Arguments.)

Some observers say the administration may not succeed in killing the CPP, and that if it does, it will have little impact because the power industry’s decarbonization will continue without the rule.

At a panel discussion at the Energy Bar Association annual conference in April, David Doniger, director of the NRDC’s Climate and Clean Air program, said that most of the players in the electric industry have adjusted to the CPP’s goals and are unlikely to reduce decarbonization efforts because of Trump’s action.

“Whatever its noble objectives, it’s relatively irrelevant whether or not [the CPP is] enforced,” added panelist Ian C. Connor, global co-head of J.P. Morgan’s Power & Utility Group. “I have little doubt … that the industry will materially decarbonize and outstrip what the CPP is trying to do.” (See EBA Panel: CPP’s Demise not Certain — and it Doesn’t Matter.)

CPP Supporters: EPA Must Act on Carbon

New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman tweeted in response to the court’s action Friday: “Despite today’s temporary pause in litigation, the facts remain the same: @EPA is still legally obligated to limit carbon pollution.”

“We are in a race against time to address the climate crisis,” EDF General Counsel Vickie Patton said. “The Supreme Court is clear that EPA has a duty to protect Americans from dangerous climate pollution under our nation’s clean air laws, and Environmental Defense Fund will take swift action to ensure that EPA carries out its responsibilities under the law. Climate progress and clean energy cannot be stopped by the litigation tactics of polluters.”

CPP Opponents: Good Riddance

William Yeatman, senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which opposes the CPP, said the action means one of two potential outcomes: “1) Either the rule is nixed because the EPA determines that it is precluded from issuing a climate rule for existing power plants because they are already regulated under the Clean Air Act’s hazardous air pollution program, or 2) the EPA significantly revises the rule to bring it ‘inside the fence line’ of electricity generating units, such that the agency no longer claims the authority to dictate to the states what their energy choices must be.

“Either way, the outcome will pardon the American economy from the ill-effects of the Clean Power Plan, which would have empowered the EPA to remake the electric industry,” Yeatman said.

Jeff Holmstead, a partner with the Bracewell law firm who headed the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation from 2001 to 2005, called the news “important but not terribly surprising.”

“I don’t think the D.C. Circuit has ever gone ahead and decided on the legality of a rule when a new administration says it plans to rescind or revise it. The only question now is whether the case will be held in abeyance or remanded back to EPA. If the court had upheld the rule, it wouldn’t have prevented the new administration from revoking it, but it might have made this effort harder.  At the very least, today’s ruling means that it will not take as long for the administration to undo the Clean Power Plan.”

PJM Asked to Explain Day-Ahead Commitment Assumptions

By Rory D. Sweeney

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — Is PJM’s day-ahead auction more art or science?

That question was raised by several stakeholders at Tuesday’s special session of the Market Implementation Committee on price transparency, after the disclosure that PJM operators — rather than algorithms — make the final decision on which units clear the day-ahead auction.

PJM day-ahead auction
Scarpignato (right) and Adam Keech, PJM | © RTO Insider

PJM’s Mike Ward, who manages the day-ahead market operations, downplayed human involvement in the process, saying “most of the tweaking is on the edges.” But that didn’t satisfy Calpine’s David “Scarp” Scarpignato or Public Service Enterprise Group’s Gary Greiner, who questioned the subjectivity of the operators.

“I’m sure you’re doing things that ‘make sense,’ but when you get people making the decisions, I could adjust things differently around the edges than what you might,” Scarp said.

“We’ll run two, three, four more cases to keep adjusting it. We don’t just take it [once], that’s it and we approve it,” Ward said. “It’s hard to describe how we do it. … I judge [the benefit or harm] by the number of people calling and complaining.”

To avoid cutting into units’ profit, the operators compare LMPs to costs, Ward said, and consider many other factors, such as minimum or maximum runtimes.

Greiner | © RTO Insider

“Are there rules for that or is it more art than science?” Greiner asked.

“We don’t want people to lose money,” Ward responded. He noted that the percentage of load bidding into the day-ahead auction has risen from 75% when he started to “close to 100%” today.

PJM’s Chris Callaghan explained the RTO’s commitment review process, which ensures system reliability by allowing reliability engineers to provide input for commitment decisions and review the final plan. Any additional units identified as necessary from that final reliability check are committed in the Reliability Assessment and Commitment run. Engineers look first at non-cost options, followed by gas-fired combustion turbines, then by steam-generation units to satisfy reliability at the least cost, he said.

Continuing the discussion on price formation, PJM’s Scott Benner explained the RTO’s current thinking on complying with FERC Order 831, issued in November. The order caps at $2,000/MWh all incremental offers allowed to set LMPs and requires validation of offers exceeding $1,000/MWh to “ensure that a resource’s cost-based incremental energy offer reasonably reflects that resource’s actual or expected costs.”

PJM plans to implement a process to address those requirements in November but must submit its compliance filing by May 8, Benner said. A third-party vendor will provide “near real-time” commodity prices to enable PJM to calculate theoretical cost-based offers and compare them with actual offers received.

“We should be able to understand their costs or at least their general spot market activity,” Benner said.

“We’d be checking to make sure if your offer was in accordance with your fuel-cost policy,” PJM’s Jeff Schmitt said.

Throughout the presentations, stakeholders and PJM staff recommended objectives for the group’s final product, many of which focused on providing deeper insight into how the RTO makes price-formation decisions.

DC Circuit Upholds FERC Ruling in PURPA Dispute

By Wayne Barber

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday declined to overturn a FERC decision requiring Portland General Electric to purchase the full output of an Oregon wind power project under the Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act.

The three-judge panel also rejected a claim by PáTu Wind Farm that PGE was required to accept the wind producer’s power through dynamic scheduling.

The court dismissed the utility’s petition for lack of jurisdiction and denied PáTu’s argument on its merits.

PURPA ferc power purchase agreement
Pa’Tu Wind Farm Construction | PaTu / White Construction Company

The case centered on a 2015 FERC ruling in which the commission determined that PGE must purchase all of the six-turbine, 9-MW wind farm’s power under a power purchase agreement between the two parties set out under PURPA.

Because PáTu, located in rural Oregon, is not directly linked to PGE’s grid, it sells power to the utility under the state Public Utility Commission’s approved PPA for “off-system” generators.

In order to transmit power to PGE’s grid, PáTu obtains transmission services from the Wasco Electric Cooperative and the Bonneville Power Administration. Wasco wheels PáTu’s power to BPA, which in turn transmits the energy to PGE’s Troutdale substation, the PPA’s designated point of delivery.

“Before the ink had dried on the power purchase agreement, the parties locked in a dispute over the nature of Portland’s purchase obligation,” the court said.

Believing it had purchased a firm product, PGE required PáTu to set day-ahead schedules under which the wind farm committed to delivering whole blocks of energy for each hour of the day. If PáTu overscheduled its deliveries, PGE paid the favorable avoided cost rates for the power delivered and required the wind farm to make up the difference by buying firm power from BPA, which was compensated at the lower market rate because it was not generated by PáTu.

On the other hand, if PáTu underscheduled, PGE only accepted and paid for only scheduled deliveries, forcing the wind farm to dispose of the excess at less-favorable rates, the D.C. Circuit noted.

PáTu contended that PGE could only buy all of its variable output through “dynamic transfer” — or scheduling in real time. PGE countered that, under its PURPA agreement, the wind farm was a customer of the utility’s merchant arm, not a transmission customer, and was therefore ineligible for dynamic scheduling.

In December 2011, PáTu filed a complaint with the PUC. The regulator saw nothing in the PPA requiring PGE to utilize dynamic scheduling, concluding that the utility must purchase all power PáTu generates and delivers.

But drawing a distinction between power “produced” and power “delivered,” the PUC appeared to leave PGE free to refuse to purchase any power produced in excess of what PáTu scheduled.

PáTu appealed to the Oregon Court of Appeals, which affirmed the PUC’s decision without opinion. The wind farm owner then filed a complaint with FERC, arguing that PGE must buy all of its output, scheduled or not, and that dynamic scheduling was the only way to accomplish that result.

FERC concluded that the PPA and PURPA regulations required PGE “to accept PáTu’s entire net output … delivered to Portland,” the D.C. Circuit noted.

FERC rejected PáTu’s specific request for dynamic scheduling, explaining that it has never required a utility to use any particular method to carry out its purchase obligation. It nonetheless clarified that, contrary to what the PUC had suggested, PGE could not escape its PURPA obligation by imposing overly rigid scheduling requirements or by refusing to purchase all power that PáTu produces.

CAISO Considers Fast-Track Approval for 2 Tx Projects

By Robert Mullin

CAISO management is considering whether to approve two low-cost transmission upgrade projects using an accelerated procedure that bypasses the usual stakeholder process and the Board of Governors.

One project would entail landscaping changes needed to accommodate an uprate on the Pacific DC Intertie, Southern California’s direct link with hydroelectric generation coming out of the Pacific Northwest.

The other would employ cutting-edge technology to avert the temporary threat of summertime overloading on key transmission lines serving the San Diego area.

CAISO bylaws allow for ISO management to approve projects with capital costs less than $50 million on an expedited basis under conditions in which there is an “urgent” need for the project, coupled with a “high degree of certainty” those projects won’t conflict with other solutions being considered in the normal transmission planning process.

Another requirement is the accelerated timeline must be “driven by the ISO’s evaluation process or external circumstances,” according to CAISO. The process also comes with some obligations on the part of management, including requirements to allow stakeholders to review and comment on the project, followed by a briefing of the board.

The two projects under consideration could receive approval early next month, the ISO said.

External developments are driving the need for the proposed Pacific DC Intertie project, requested by Southern California Edison in response to upgrades performed by the Bonneville Power Administration at the line’s northern terminus at Celilo Station, near The Dalles Dam in Oregon.

caiso pacific dc intertie
Bonneville Power Administration upgrades at Celilo Station — the northern terminus of the Pacific DC Intertie — has prompted CAISO to seek expedited approval for improvements needed at the southern end of the line to allow Southern California to capture the benefits of an uprate. | © RTO Insider

BPA’s improvements have increased the line’s north-to-south transfer capability from 3,100 MW to 3,220 MW. To capture its estimated 60 MW share of the uprate, SoCalEd must pay for its portion of the costs to grade and recontour the land under the southern end of the line, which it owns jointly with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP).

Total costs are expected to come in at less than $1 million. CAISO considers the nudge in capacity to be “extremely cost effective” for SoCalEd — estimated at less than $10/kW.

“We do think it would be a waste not to capture the incremental benefits,” Neil Millar, the ISO’s executive director of infrastructure development, said during an April 25 call to discuss the projects.

“Barring new information to the contrary, the ISO is interested in moving forward with approval” of the intertie project, CAISO has said. SoCalEd expects LADWP to complete the grading work in October.

The proposed San Diego area project is more technologically complex.

San Diego Gas & Electric is seeking to deploy advanced power flow devices on area transmission lines in order to reduce the utility’s local capacity requirements during the summer of 2018.

The utility is concerned that completion of the Sycamore-Penasquitos 230-kV transmission project — recently pushed back from early to late June 2018 — could meet with further delays. That would increase the risk next summer of overloading the Mission-Old Town 230-kV circuit — a pair of lines serving a populous load pocket in the city — under circumstances in which peak loads shift dramatically because of variability in behind-the-meter solar output. CAISO estimates that it could be forced to shed as much as 370 MW of load within 30 minutes of a line outage.

The risk is, in part, being precipitated by the retirement of the 950-MW natural gas-fired Encina power, which could be given an extended life to help mitigate the potential overload problem until the Sycamore-Penasquitos line is energized.

John Jontry, manager of Electric Transmission Grid Planning at SDG&E, noted that keeping Encina’s capacity in reserve would be a costly solution.

“The less generation we have to procure, the less we have to pay,” Jontry said.

The utility is instead proposing using a combination of a portion of Encina generation complemented by power flow control devices installed on the Mission-Old Town line that would, in an emergency, create up to 5 ohms of impedance on the line, forcing flows into other parts of the system.

“The devices push power away from the line to which they are connected,” said Andee McCoy, an executive with Smart Wires, the company that manufactures the equipment.

McCoy added that the “breadth” of the deployment could be correlated with the amount of Encina generation expected to be online next year.

Depending on the number deployed, estimated costs run from $6 million to $12 million, compared with $8 million to $10 million for a phase-shifting transformer and $20 million to $30 million to reconducutor the lines for what is effectively a temporary issue for the utility.

Jontry also lauded the fact that a “big chunk” of the capital costs are covering devices that could be redeployed to other areas when they’re no longer needed for the Mission-Old Town line.

“We’re kind of breaking new ground here because it’s a new way of looking at utility infrastructure,” Jontry said.

CAISO will present the proposed upgrades during the board’s May 1 meeting and will take stakeholder comments until May 2.

PJM Capacity Task Force Debates the Value of Price Transparency

By Rory D. Sweeney

WILMINGTON, Del. — What’s a megawatt really worth?

That question is at the base of the current debate about PJM’s capacity market construct, which last week shifted to whether there is a willingness to consider moving away from centralized markets.

At Friday’s meeting of the Capacity Construct/Public Policy Senior Task Force, the coalition of cooperatives and municipal power authorities that initiated the task force’s creation presented an alternative perspective on the objectives of a resource adequacy construct.

The task force was approved in January after the coalition pushed for months to revisit PJM’s controversial Capacity Performance construct. It began meeting in March. (See PJM Capacity Task Force Considering 60+ ‘Design Concepts’.)

Is the Market the Problem?

Navigant economist Cliff Hamal, representing American Municipal Power, offered a critique of a presentation that PJM’s economist Hung-po Chao gave at the task force’s first meeting in March. Hamal argued that PJM’s centralized capacity market is itself the problem.

Left to right: John Farber of Delaware PSC staff, Steve Lieberman and Ed Tatum of American Municipal Power listen as Cliff Hamal (far right), an economist with Navigant, presents his analysis on the purpose of PJM’s capacity market. | © RTO Insider

“My goal was to try to ask the question whether the objective of this task force [should be] to maintain … what I believe to be an imperfect, problematic centralized auction and deal with state actions, or consider much broader options that have the potential to do it cleaner,” he said.

He argued that the task force’s objectives should allow consideration of market options based on long-term bilateral contracts that attract least-cost financing and have the potential to provide adequate supplies at a lower cost.

Other stakeholders questioned Hamal’s perspective, saying that eliminating the market would reduce variety and the ability to accurately price various options, potentially harming market participants.

“The buyer that enters into the long-term contract now has a liability that the rating agencies insist get shown on their books, such that by entering into this long-term contract, it increases the amount of debt that the rating agency sees and potentially results in a downgrade of the entity’s debt ratings because it’s incurring more debt,” said a representative of a generation owner that is actively building combined cycle plants. “You’re not looking at the other side of the equation for the buyer in that it increases the rate associated with all of his borrowing, and that’s a huge deterrent.”

Mike Borgatti of Gabel Associates argued the proposal limited the ability to shop for alternatives. He gave an example of buying wind production for $300/MWh when the capacity auction clearing price was $100/MWh.

“The difference there is that I know I could have bought other capacity for $100, but I liked this flavor of capacity better, so I overpaid for it,” he said. “The market has functioned correctly, and the price signal out there informed my transaction. If the price signal doesn’t exist out there, I don’t know if $300’s a good deal or a bad deal.”

Chocolate vs. Vanilla

Borgatti attempted to make the same point with a less esoteric product: ice cream.

“Look, chocolate’s over here; it’s available in the market for $3/gallon. I’m a vanilla guy, so I’m gonna go over here and I’m going to procure vanilla at a premium price because I love vanilla. That transaction is totally legitimate; I did what I wanted to … I love my vanilla. I’m sitting on my couch in my underwear having a great time,” he said. “I think it’s hard to think about a market that doesn’t have any price transparency. … It’s very difficult to know [if another construct would be better] because you got rid of the price that you would benchmark it against.”

“Your position seems to favor long-term contracts as a way to attract cheaper capital, but a potential result could be long-term contracts with cheaper capital but underlying resources that are much higher cost than other resources that would compete down the road,” Direct Energy’s Jeff Whitehead said. “If I take a 20-year position on a power plant that has a certain cost, 10 years from now, there might be another power plant technology available that’s much cheaper, so while I might get a cheaper cost of capital, I might actually get a more expensive overall solution.”

Hamal acknowledged there are tradeoffs, but he emphasized that the task force is establishing objectives at this point, not choosing among alternatives.

The remainder of the meeting attempted to distill some of the 71 objectives proposed for “a well-functioning capacity construct” into categories, but that effort fell apart as stakeholders felt the nuance of certain proposals was being lost. Dave Anders, who is facilitating the task force for PJM, decided to abandon that effort and instead include all of them into a poll to measure stakeholders’ interest in each proposed objective. PJM will be sending the poll out to all stakeholders signed up to receive notifications about the task force.

The task force also worked on developing a list of public policy initiatives states might make and plans to complete it at the next meeting, Anders said. Work will then begin on determining how to balance the state activities against PJM’s current capacity construct.

Jennifer Chen of the Natural Resources Defense Council gave a presentation on subsidies to add context to the public-policies list.

The task force has a target of the end of the year to determine if any changes to the capacity market should be made.