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November 15, 2024

Pruitt Begins Hostile Takeover at EPA

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON — EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt will address agency workers Tuesday in a bid to convince them he is not their enemy, despite having repeatedly sued the agency as Oklahoma attorney general.

scott pruitt EPA
Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) was among the Democrats who criticized Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt during an all-night session before Pruitt’s confirmation as EPA administrator.

Pruitt was sworn in by Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito on Friday after the Senate voted 52-46 to confirm him. He was supported by all Republicans except Sen. Susan Collins of Maine. Every Democratic senator except two — Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, both from coal-producing states — opposed him.

The vote came after Democrats argued on the Senate floor overnight Thursday in opposition, saying action should be delayed until Oklahoma officials release emails detailing Pruitt’s communications with oil and gas companies during his tenure as attorney general.

Democrats criticized Pruitt’s campaign contributions from the oil and gas industry and his 14 lawsuits against EPA as attorney general, including challenges to the agency’s Clean Power Plan, Cross State Air Pollution Rule, the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, regional haze rule and emission regulations on new power plants.

‘False Paradigm’

At his confirmation hearing in January, Pruitt said he will seek only to ensure predictable regulation that respects states’ jurisdiction. He said he would seek to end a “false paradigm that if you’re pro-energy, you’re against the environment.” (See Dems Unmoved by EPA Pick’s Charm Offensive.)

Pruitt rejected calls that he recuse himself as EPA administrator from any lawsuits he filed as attorney general, saying said he would consult with EPA’s ethics counsel on a case-by-case basis.

He defended letters he sent to EPA and other federal officials — on state government stationary and signed by him — that had been authored by oil and gas companies. He insisted he was “representing the interests of the people of Oklahoma,” noting that the oil and gas industry is responsible for one-quarter of the state’s budget.

Last week, an Oklahoma judge ordered Pruitt to release thousands of emails related to his communication with the oil, gas and coal industries. The judge ruled in favor of the Center for Media and Democracy, which has been seeking the correspondence under public records laws for more than two years.

Hostile Work Environment?

Pruitt’s plans for the agency are certain to be met with skepticism, if not hostility, by many in the EPA bureaucracy.

Last Monday, about 300 people, including dozens of EPA employees, held a lunch hour rally outside the agency’s Chicago regional headquarters in opposition to Pruitt’s appointment.

scott pruitt EPA
About 300 people, including dozens of EPA employees, held a lunch hour rally across the street from the EPA’s Chicago regional headquarters in opposition to Pruitt’s appointment. | Sierra Club

In addition, more than 400 former EPA officials signed a letter to Congress opposing Pruitt’s confirmation.

“Our perspective is not partisan. Having served under both Republican and Democratic presidents, we recognize each new administration’s right to pursue different policies within the parameters of existing law and to ask Congress to change the laws that protect public health and the environment as it sees fit,” they wrote. “However, every EPA administrator has a fundamental obligation to act in the public’s interest based on current law and the best available science. Mr. Pruitt’s record raises serious questions about whose interests he has served to date and whether he agrees with the longstanding tenets of U.S. environmental law.”

As attorney general, they said, Pruitt had “shown no interest in enforcing environmental laws,” noting that while he issued more than 50 press releases celebrating lawsuits to overturn EPA rules, he issued none referring “to any action he has taken to enforce environmental laws or to actually reduce pollution.”

“We are most concerned about Mr. Pruitt’s reluctance to accept and act on the strong scientific consensus on climate change,” they added.

What’s Next for CPP?

epa democrat boycott scott pruitt
Pruitt | © RTO Insider

Inside EPA reported last week that President Trump is planning to attend a swearing-in ceremony for Pruitt at agency headquarters, where the president will sign executive orders.

The Washington Post reported Monday that one executive order will direct EPA to rewrite the Clean Power Plan and the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to eliminate a moratorium on coal leasing on federal lands.

A second order will direct EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to rewrite the 2015 Waters of the United States rule, which gives the federal government authority over wetlands, rivers and streams that feed into major water bodies. Trump signed legislation last week undoing the Stream Protection Rule finalized by the Office of Surface Mining in December, which prohibited coal mines from dumping waste in waterways.

Pruitt, who led a legal fight by states against the Clean Power Plan, told the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee that climate change is real but that the impact of human activities and how to fix it are the subject of “continued debate and dialogue.”

Pruitt acknowledged the Supreme Court’s finding in Massachusetts v. EPA that carbon dioxide was a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. “I think the court has spoken very emphatically about this issue, and the EPA has a legal obligation to respond,” he said.

He said he challenged the CPP because the agency created emission limits that coal-fired generators can’t meet — thus requiring a switch to other generation sources and exceeding its authority to regulate “inside the fence line.”

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, which heard arguments on the challenges to the CPP in September, has yet to issue a ruling. If the rule is ultimately upheld — an appeal to the Supreme Court is likely — it will not be a simple matter to undo. (See Analysis: No Knock Out Blow for Clean Power Plan Foes in Court Arguments.)

“Decades of law, much of it created by conservatives’ judicial heroes, requires presidents and agencies to abide by the rule of law and justify regulatory reversals. They have to take a hard look at science and other underlying facts,” Georgetown University Law professor William W. Buzbee wrote in December.

Overheard at the 3rd Annual Energy Storage Policy Forum

WASHINGTON — Nearly 200 energy policy and market experts gathered at the National Press Club on Wednesday for the Energy Storage Association’s 3rd annual Energy Storage Policy Forum. Here’s some of what we heard.

Storage in the States

Jones | © RTO Insider

Several state regulators spoke at the conference, after having just gone through what Washington Utilities and Transportation Commissioner Phil Jones called “NARUC hell,” referring to the winter meetings of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners.

The regulators spoke about how they view their role in setting policies on energy storage and how they communicate with elected officials about the technical aspects of energy markets and technology.

The Washington UTC has been working on a policy statement on modeling energy storage through the integrated resource planning process. Jones said the statement, which he noted is short of a rulemaking, will be released in about two weeks.

The commission has “been a little bit reluctant to do too much in storage, and certainly not a mandate, without legislative blessing, if you will.” But while the commission defers to the State Legislature and Gov. Jay Inslee to make energy policy, Jones said that he emphasizes to them the state’s need to stay ahead of the curve — specifically California’s duck curve. “Unless Washington state acts, California’s duck curve … is going to overrun us,” he said, referring to the state’s drop in net load during the day because of rooftop solar and its sudden increase after the sun sets.

Little | © RTO Insider

The increase in intermittent resources in other states in the Western Interconnection puts pressure on Washington’s grid. “Storage is certainly a solution to this,” Jones said.

The Arizona Corporation Commission — one of about 10 state regulatory bodies elected rather than appointed — is less deferential, said Commissioner Doug Little. “We are the energy policymaking body in Arizona,” he said. “We certainly solicit feedback from the governor’s office and the legislature, but they … rely on us to take a policy leadership role.”

Like Jones, Little said his commission also spends a lot of time educating Arizona legislators about the effects of California’s energy dynamics on the state. The economic benefits CAISO’s Energy Imbalance Market provides ratepayers “gets their attention pretty quickly,” he said.

Lauwers | © RTO Insider

Will Lauwers, emerging technology director for the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, said that the department must “take the ratepayer benefit as our primary cause and consideration” in its development of policy. He said the department also understands that, as part of ISO-NE, the state’s policies will affect other states in the RTO.

Lauwers said Gov. Charlie Baker has been extremely supportive of storage, highlighting the administration’s $10 million Energy Storage Initiative and recent clean energy legislation that authorized the department to set a storage resource procurement goal.

That legislation made Massachusetts the third state in the country to allow its regulators to set such a goal. The first was California, where regulators in 2013 set a target of 1.325 GW by 2020. (Oregon was the second.)

Peterman | © RTO Insider

California Public Utilities Commissioner Carla Peterman said the commission originally came up with a number less than 1 GW, but she said a gigawatt “just sounded better.”

She recalled she said, “‘Let’s put out a number and see if it sticks.’ And eventually it did. So sometimes, you know, that’s how the sausage is made,” prompting laughter from the audience. “You use the best analytics that you can, but ultimately you put something out and then if no one laughs … then you know you might as well move forward.”

Peterman was asked how fast other states should move on storage.

“Very quickly,” she replied. “I can’t emphasize enough that there are so many different things you can do. Just requiring the utilities to do some evaluation is a big step.”

Bay Makes an Appearance

Many at the conference expressed their enthusiasm for the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that FERC issued in November requiring RTOs to allow storage resources above 100 kW to participate in their energy, capacity and ancillary services markets. (See FERC Rule Would Boost Energy Storage, DER.)

Bay (left) and Jason Burwen, ESA policy and advocacy director | © RTO Insider

On hand to fete the staffers in attendance who worked on the NOPR was former Chairman Norman Bay, who asked them to stand and be recognized before a discussion with Jason Burwen, policy and advocacy director of the ESA.

“Storage clearly has unique characteristics,” Bay said. “It’s not like traditional resources in the markets. Traditional resources fell into one category or another. … Storage can play in” generation, load, transmission and distribution. “So it seems to me that the market rules have got to recognize those unique characteristics.”

RTOs: We Support Storage

Representatives from four grid operators in the Eastern Interconnection said their markets offer ways for energy storage resources to participate, even as FERC in its NOPR said that some existing rules are unfair to storage.

Left to right: Levitt; Bladen; Christopher Parent, ISO-NE director of market development and DeSocio | © RTO Insider

“The notion that energy storage should be able to participate in all markets is one that PJM supports,” said Andrew Levitt, PJM senior market strategist. “That is, from my perspective, a basic mission of PJM: opening all markets to resources that are technically capable of serving those markets.”

“In MISO’s case, we had some anachronistic things in our Tariff that we’re going to be getting rid of and, in fact, had been planning to for some time,” said Jeff Bladen, MISO executive director of market services. But even before FERC’s recent order in response to a complaint by Indianapolis Power and Light, “we had many paths for storage to participate in the markets.”

FERC, however, concluded that MISO prevents storage from fully participating, ordering it to revise its Tariff. In the event that MISO’s compliance filing conflicts with a final ruling on storage participation, the RTO would have to make further revisions, the commission said. (See MISO Ordered to Change Storage Rules Following IPL Complaint.)

Burwen pushed back, pointing out FERC’s NOPR was premised on the fact that there are barriers to participation for storage. He asked what RTOs need to change in order to recognize storage resources’ unique attributes.

“What we really need from you folks is help,” said Michael DeSocio, NYISO senior manager of market design. “We need your help to figure out what are these parameters that are missing, that are necessary.”

– Michael Brooks

MISO Endorses 2 Michigan Projects for Expedited Review

MISO is recommending two of three Michigan projects requested for expedited review be approved before its 2017 Transmission Expansion Plan.

miso michigan transmission expansion plan
METC Project Map | MISO

The RTO recommended that transmission developer Michigan Electric Transmission Co. (METC), an ITC Holdings subsidiary, move ahead with a new $12 million, 120-kV substation and 2 miles of new double-circuit 120-kV structures in east Michigan, and a new $6.6 million, 120-kV station to serve 5 MW of new DTE Energy load in southeast Michigan.

In submitting the request, METC had argued that waiting until December 2017 to get regular MTEP approval did not allow enough time to support the projects’ early 2018 planned in-service dates. (See “Four Expedited Review Projects Under MISO Inspection,” MISO Planning Advisory Committee Briefs.)

After an independent study and a Technical Study Task Force review, MISO agreed.

A third project, a 138-kV station to serve 35 MW of new Consumers Energy load in western Michigan, was withdrawn from expedited review after Consumers delayed the needed in-service date to Jan. 1, 2020, because of a request from the load customer. The project will move into the normal MTEP 17 cycle for evaluation.

— Amanda Durish Cook

New Jersey Went All in on Solar, but was it a Good Bet?

By Rory D. Sweeney

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. — A panel of experts discussing New Jersey’s energy future agreed Wednesday that the Garden State has made great strides on installing renewable generation resources but differed on whether the progress is sustainable.

Brand | © RTO Insider

“We’re at where we thought we’d be in 2028 [on the state’s renewable portfolio standard], but at a substantial cost,” said Stefanie Brand, the director of New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel.

A study commissioned by the rate counsel found that the state’s current solar RPS will cost ratepayers $5.2 billion through 2028 (net present value). A bill proposed last year would ramp up the state’s RPS faster, adding another $276 million (NPV) in costs, the advocate told legislators last year.

new jersey solar
Gabel | © RTO Insider

Steven Gabel of Gabel Associates, an industry consulting firm, pointed to the “saw-tooth” nature of the clearing prices from recent PJM Base Residual Auctions to argue that the RTO’s price signals “aren’t doing the job” to incentivize generation development. The grid operator’s implementation of Capacity Performance was a “titanic event” to increase reliability, Gabel said, yet clearing prices in the auctions since then have provided ambiguous signals.

Aggregating winter and summer resources won’t solve the issues, either, he said, because the payments go to the resource that gets used instead of being distributed to both.

The discussion was hosted by Rutgers University’s Center for Energy, Economic & Environmental Policy, part of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy.

Hendry | © RTO Insider

Andrew Hendry, the president of the New Jersey Utilities Association, prognosticated on the state’s potential return to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative following the 2017 gubernatorial election. Republican Gov. Chris Christie pulled the state from RGGI in 2011.

“I think it’s very likely that if a Democrat wins, we’re going to be back in RGGI,” he said.

Gabel said state Sen. Bob Smith, a Democrat who chairs the Environment and Energy Committee, has a “big appetite” and “pent-up demand” for energy reform in the state.

He said state policy has not changed much from the state’s 1980s-era energy plan. “For 32 years, we’ve been talking about it,” he said. “We have to turn this around. … For me, the needle points more toward ‘let the market sort this out.’”

Brand was skeptical of a market-driven focus, saying that’s why the state’s solar renewable energy credits (SRECs) are being sold for $250 when they’re much cheaper in other states. Solar developers are receiving “windfall profits” because “we’re over-incenting,” she said.

New Jersey has the second highest subsidies for rooftop solar, behind California, she said. By comparison, North Carolina and Arizona are growing solar capacity but with subsidies that are “more in line” with other states.

“The fact is I don’t think we need $250 SRECs,” she said. “I don’t buy it. … We get less solar, not more.”

Gabel said that’s what the market will bear. “We moved away from an administrative structure for SRECs to a market.”

Brand cautioned that it won’t be long before ratepayers can’t afford to purchase electricity. “Our prices are high and they’re very volatile,” she said. “Not all good things deserve a subsidy.”

She included nuclear in that, noting that PJM’s analysis on Artificial Island’s three reactors found that Delaware stands to receive the most benefit from planned transmission upgrades for the nuclear complex. “Much of the electricity that comes out of these plants doesn’t go to New Jersey,” she said. “Before we subsidize these plants, we have to figure out if we’re subsidizing Delaware.”

Left to right: Hendry, Gabel and Brand | © RTO Insider

The Garden State remains heavily dependent upon its nuclear fleet, receiving 56% of its power from such sources, she acknowledged. “I don’t think we’ll see any offshore wind in the immediate short term,” she added.

Hendry said that data analytics will be an important part of the state’s energy future, but Brand argued that advanced meters aren’t helping consumers. “The primary benefit you get in advanced meters is lost jobs” because companies need to employ less people as meter readers, she said.

“We cannot afford to give everybody net metering” because it reduces the number of customers who pay for social-benefit charges, like low-income subsidies, she said. “We have to make sure everybody has access to heat, electricity. … Everybody has to pay their own way.”

She also questioned the FERC-approved rate adder utilities get for joining PJM: “At this point, it’s a free 50 basis points.”

PGE Sees Future Growth Tied to EVs

By Robert Mullin

Pacific Gas and Electric will continue to be a “critical partner” in California’s efforts to meet its ambitious greenhouse gas reduction goals despite “uncertainty at the federal level,” the company’s top executive said last week.

The company’s key area of focus in that effort: capitalizing on the electrification of transportation as the state strives to put 1.5 million electric vehicles on the road by 2025.

PG&E electric vehicles
PG&E is positioning itself to capitalize on California’s push to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through increased adoption of electric vehicles. | City of Pasadena

“With the transportation sector accounting for about 40% of California’s greenhouse gas emissions, we expect to play a significant role in helping the state address these emissions by investing in the infrastructure necessary to enable electric vehicle adoption,” PG&E CEO Tony Earley said during a Feb. 16 call to discuss fourth-quarter earnings.

The utility earned $692 million during the fourth quarter of 2016, compared with $134 million during the same period a year earlier. Full-year earnings came in at $1.39 billion, up 60% from the previous year. Operating revenues for the year increased 5% to nearly $17.67 billion on rising electric (+2%) and natural gas sales (+20%), largely the result of rate increases over the previous year. The company also booked an additional $325 million in out-of-period gas revenues based on a 2016 California Public Utilities Commission decision related to a previous under-collection of gas transmission fees.

Earley noted that the PUC in December authorized PG&E to spend $130 million over the next three years to build the infrastructure to support about 7,500 automobile charging stations. The company last month filed an additional request to lay out $250 million to support the charging of medium- and heavy-duty vehicles, such as transit buses.

“We are confident in our ability to execute on a strong growth plan through continued investments in upgrading and modernizing our system, as we help the state achieve its clean energy goals,” said PG&E electric division President Geisha Williams, who will assume the company’s top spot later this year upon Earley’s retirement.

PG&E’s electric transmission business is coming under pressure from slow load growth across the state, which has reduced the need for new transmission projects, according to CFO Jason Wells.

But the company said the reduction in incremental transmission projects should be offset by spending to interconnect new utility-scale renewable projects developed to meet California’s 50% by 2030 renewable portfolio standard — helping to keep 2018 and 2019 outlays equal to current levels.

Wells roughly quantified how the increased use of electric vehicles could help the utility counter the trend of decreasing retail loads stemming from energy efficiency measures and the wider adoption of rooftop solar. A plug-in electric car consumes about half the electricity of an average household.

“So you can think of for every two electric vehicles we add to the system, essentially we’re offsetting the decline that we see from distributed generation,” Wells said.

Based on state agency estimates, the utility expects to have about 600,000 electric vehicles and 150,000 charging stations within its service area by 2025, Wells added. There are currently about 5,000 public chargers in the region.

Williams said PG&E should be somewhat buffered from the expected statewide growth of community choice aggregators (CCAs), which directly draw customers away from the state’s three investor-owned utilities.

“Our service area is made up of many small municipalities and counties,” Williams said. “So, in our case, we think that that transition to higher levels of CCA adoption are going to take a little bit longer.”

But PG&E is still preparing for that potential shift by maintaining a “flexible” energy portfolio, according to Williams.  The utility procures more than half of its energy supplies from third parties under long-term agreements, 40% of which represent output the company is under no obligation to take after 2021.

“So, we believe, we’ve got the triggers that we need to be able to meet the load over time,” Williams said.

PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Preview

Below is a summary of the issues scheduled to be brought to a vote at the Markets and Reliability and Members committees meetings Thursday. Each item is listed by agenda number, description and projected time of discussion, followed by a summary of the issue and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.

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

Markets and Reliability Committee

2. PJM Manuals (9:10-9:30)

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

A. Manual 22: Generator Resource Performance. Revisions developed as part of a periodic review of the manual.

B. Manual 27: Open Access Transmission Tariff Accounting and Manual 13: Emergency Operations. Revisions will add Mid-Atlantic Interstate Transmission Co. as a transmission owner in PJM. MAIT is a new subsidiary of FirstEnergy that owns and operates the company’s transmission assets in the Met-Ed and Penelec utility territories. (See NJ Opposition Derails FirstEnergy’s Tx Reorganization — but not Projects.)

3. FERC Order 825 – Shortage Pricing (9:30-9:50)

Members will be asked to endorse the proposed shortage pricing and operating reserve demand curve solution and associated manual revisions. (See “Order 825 Implementation Moves Forward,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

4. Transmission Substation Equipment in FERC Order 1000 (9:50-10:05)

Members will be asked to endorse proposed a Regional Transmission Expansion Plan process changes related to the treatment of transmission substation equipment under FERC Order 1000, and associated Operating Agreement revisions. (See “Endorsements Sail Through by acclamation,” PJM Planning Committee and TEAC Briefs.)

5. Draft Pseudo-Tie Agreements (10:05-10:20)

Members will be asked to endorse a pro forma pseudo-tie agreement and a reimbursement agreement for pseudo-ties into PJM, along with related Tariff and Operating Agreement revisions. (See “Committee Endorsements,” PJM Operating Committee Briefs.)

6. Replacement Capacity (10:20-10:40)

Members will be asked to endorse a proposed problem statement and issue charge regarding procurement of replacement capacity in the Incremental Auctions. (See “PJM Has No Objection to IMM’s ‘Paper Capacity’ Report,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

Members Committee

Consent Agenda (1:20-1:25)

Members will be asked to endorse:

B. Tariff, Operating Agreement and Reliability Assurance Agreement revisions to clean up definitions.

C. Revisions to the PJM Tariff regarding operating parameters.

1. Transmission Substation Equipment in FERC Order 1000 (1:25-1:45)

Members will be asked to endorse changes to RTEP processes. See MRC item 4, above.

2. Energy Market Uplift Senior Task Force (EMUSTF) (1:45-2:15)

Members will be asked to endorse proposed Phase 1 and Phase 2 proposals endorsed by the MRC in January. (See “Work on Uplift Moves Forward Despite NOPR,” PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Briefs.)

– Rory D. Sweeney

Rivals Debate Next Step for MISO After Rejection of Auction Design

By Amanda Durish Cook

NEW ORLEANS — Two consultants on either side of MISO’s rejected capacity auction redesign faced off in a post-mortem debate at the Gulf Coast Power Association’s MISO South Regional Conference last week.

miso capacity auction redesign
Spees | © RTO Insider

Kathleen Spees, a principal adviser at The Brattle Group who endorsed MISO’s forward auction design for the RTO’s retail-choice areas and worked on a simulation analysis for the RTO, said some of MISO’s design elements could be revised to win FERC approval. But Independent Market Monitor David Patton pressed for a reconsideration of the hybrid prompt proposal he designed with the RTO last year.

The rejected auction proposal was an attempt to provide investment price signals to incent generation in retail choice areas in southern Illinois and Michigan. (See FERC Rejects MISO’s 3-Year Forward Auction Proposal.)

Spees, who joked that she and Patton should have come dressed as Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump for the debate, said FERC’s unusually short order lacked commission guidance on how MISO’s proposal could be salvaged. The order was among more than 60 the commission issued in the last week before losing its quorum with the resignation of former Chairman Norman Bay.

miso capacity auction redesign
Patton | © RTO Insider

“I think that leaves many of us scratching our heads about what to do next,” Spees said at the Feb. 16 conference. She said she thought a compromise could be reached over how far into the future the auction is held and suggested that, in a new proposal, MISO keep a sloped demand curve for its retail-choice areas while regulated utilities maintain vertically integrated statuses.

Patton said MISO “dodged a bullet” with the rejection. “You operate the system as a whole. You can’t pretend that 10% of your footprint operates separately,” he said.

The Monitor continued to advocate for his own proposal, which would apply a sloped demand curve to deregulated areas and produce separate clearing prices for retail-choice and regulated load.

Spees said MISO’s proposal failed because it did not maintain an integrated market or contain a transmission allocation plan between two markets. “MISO has a uniquely challenging situation where there are two business models in conflict,” she said. There is “a not-so-small-it-can’t-be-ignored portion of the system that relies on market signals.”

Patton said current rules only buoy regulated utilities, which continue to expand generation even when wholesale prices don’t support construction.

“We exist in an environment where only a regulated market can afford to build anything,” he said. “We’ve designed a capacity market in MISO that doesn’t set efficient prices; it sets inefficiently low prices, especially in MISO South.”

Spees (left) and Patton | © RTO Insider

Patton said while he monitors both prompt and forward markets, he prefers a prompt design. He said while it’s “nifty” for future resources to be able to sell capacity, an owner of a plant with a 30-year lifespan won’t usually make decisions on the viability of their generation based on clearing prices in year one.

Spees, however, said a three-year forward auction provides more of an opportunity for supply and demand to reach equilibrium and avoid “boom and bust” cycles with volatile clearing prices. However, she said accurate load forecasting in a three-year market presents a challenge. “In my view, we’ve seen both prompt and forward markets do well…They both can be workable constructs,” she said.

The two were in agreement in opposing MISO’s adoption of New England’s Pay-for-Performance capacity bonuses and penalties. PJM adopted similar rules in its Capacity Performance construct. Patton said he preferred incentives to stay in the energy market. (See FERC Defends PJM Capacity Performance Model Before DC Circuit.)

“If it ever hits on days where no one is expecting it, it can cost people a heck of a lot of money,” Patton said, adding that unpredictable load is not the fault of the generator.

Spees also said performance incentives belong in the energy market, not the capacity market. However, she said there is no MISO enforcement for capacity underperformance, and she said the penalty should be “something north” of $0/MW-day.

Local Officials Appeal to FERC as Oroville Water Levels Recede

By Robert Mullin

Water levels behind the FERC-regulated Oroville Dam have continued to decline in recent days, falling to nearly 50 feet below the height of a severely damaged emergency spillway, according to the California Department of Water Resources (CDWR), the dam’s operator.

On Feb. 12, local officials ordered the evacuation of about 188,000 residents after the erosion of a hillside beneath the dam’s emergency spillway threatened to flood areas near the Northern California town of Oroville, located about 75 miles north of Sacramento. CDWR was required to use that spillway for the first time since the dam’s completion nearly 50 years ago after heavy flows out of the reservoir tore a massive hole in the concrete lining of the main spillway.

Residents have since been allowed to return to their homes but face the potential for another evacuation if weather conditions once again destabilize the ground around the dam.

Criticism for FERC, California Agency

The spillway failure has generated criticism of both CDWR and FERC for their failure to heed previous warnings by three environmental groups who — during the dam’s 2005 FERC relicensing proceeding — requested that the state pave the hillside below the emergency spillway to avoid the kind of erosion experienced earlier this month.

CDWR and the commission rejected the request, with a FERC engineer writing that the emergency spillway could safely handle 350,000 cubic feet of water per second (cfs). The flow was only 6,000 to 12,000 cfs when the spillway was damaged, according to a report from the Bay Area News Group.

Outflows are outpacing flows into the reservoir despite stormy conditions, and CDWR said it will continue to prioritize bringing the depth of the reservoir to a target level of 895 feet. The agency said Feb. 20 that it had increased outflows from 55,000 cfs to 60,000 cfs in anticipation of increased inflows from recent rains.

“As runoff flows into the reservoir, water levels will likely fluctuate but will remain within acceptable and typical depths during times of storm activity,” the agency said in a Feb. 19 incident update.

CDWR said work crews continued to place rock and cement slurry into the areas affected by erosion, as ordered by FERC in a letter Feb. 13. In addition to ordering emergency repairs, FERC also ordered the state to convene an independent board of consultants to review current conditions and risk-reduction measures and to later conduct a forensic analysis to determine the cause of the failure.

“We have people there 24/7 from our San Francisco office as well as our Washington, D.C., office working with state officials … to protect public safety,” acting Chairman Cheryl LaFleur said in remarks at the winter meeting of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners on Feb. 14.

Rainy Winter

After years of drought, the region has experienced unusually high levels of precipitation this winter, which has filled the reservoir to capacity and left the lake’s elevation at about 900 feet above sea level. Snowpack in the Sierra Nevada mountains currently stands at about 175% of normal ahead of the spring melt, which tends to peak at the beginning of April, sending additional flows into the lake.

The 770-foot-high Oroville Dam in Butte County is the tallest in the U.S. and impounds one of California’s largest manmade lakes, a key source of water for farms in the state’s Central Valley and residents in Southern California, hundreds of miles to the south.

The dam’s Edward Hyatt and Thermalito generating facilities, which have a combined 933 MW capacity, remain offline, and three 230-kV transmission line segments in the area under CAISO control have been de-energized. The ISO said it had reoptimized its dispatch system to maintain reliability while continuing to meet demand within its balancing authority area.

“The loss of the Edward Hyatt power plant at Oroville dam is handled as we do with all generator outages,” the ISO told RTO Insider. “The outage, as well as the line outages, do not threaten grid reliability.”

County Seeks FERC Help

Officials from Butte County last week urged FERC to order CDWR to immediately establish its own public safety program to relieve the county of the “severe strain” on its “limited resources” (P-2100).

The county asked that the CDWR be ordered to provide law enforcement and other personnel needed to ensure public safety in the face of threats attributable to the dam, “including not just flood hazards but also fire, crime and other emergency services.”

Those personnel “should have the capacity to organize and implement all necessary public safety measures to prevent death from a failure of the dam spillways, including the orderly evacuation of the hundreds of thousands of people from the area downstream of the dam,” the county said in its Feb. 15 filing.

The filing also called out FERC for its failure to address Butte County’s previous entreaties, including a 2009 complaint in which the county argued that CDWR was in violation of its federal license for not contributing to covering the costs of ensuring adequate public safety at the Oroville site.

The commission rebuffed that complaint, and later denied the county a rehearing, after determining that the dam was in good condition and that the county had not pointed to any direct license violations.

“Because the commission has refused to order DWR to do what DWR is legally and morally obligated to do, and what other similarly situated licensees have done, Butte County has no choice but to request the commission to exercise its authority … to order DWR to take actions to effect its obligations as a Federal Power Act licensee, to protect public health, safety and welfare,” the county said.

States Want Cyber Best Practices; Santorum Seeks ‘Warriors’

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON — A recent survey of state cybersecurity practices provided some surprising results, New Jersey Board of Public Utilities President Richard Mroz told the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners’ winter meeting last week.

Mroz | © RTO Insider

“We found most of the states actually do have a fusion center of some sort, so states are taking that seriously,” Mroz said, referring to locations at which state agencies share intelligence on security threats. “On the other hand we hear … from our colleagues that they don’t know what the best [cybersecurity] practices are — what’s working elsewhere.”

Mroz is chairman of NARUC’s Critical Infrastructure Committee, which sent the survey last year to the 34 states that are members of the committee; 19 had responded as of January. The committee is now seeking responses from the remaining states, including those not on the panel. The results will be included in what NARUC intends as a “living” catalog of information about state regulators’ efforts on critical infrastructure resilience. The survey is also referenced in the latest edition of NARUC’s cybersecurity primer, which was released Jan. 31.

‘Retasking’ the National Guard

NARUC cybersecurity best practices
Santorum | © RTO Insider

Also speaking on the NARUC General Session panel Tuesday was former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), who expressed concern over the shortage of cybersecurity personnel and their lack of preparation for “war.”

“These are people who went to school for computer service or a whole variety of other things and they’re the people who are our quote ‘war fighters.’ They’re not trained as war fighters … and yet they’re in the middle of a battle,” said Santorum, an unsuccessful presidential candidate in 2012 and 2016.

“So they don’t take the approach of ‘How do we comprehensively deal with this problem?’ … We seem to be saying just ‘How do we defend ourselves?’ instead of ‘How do we really put a strategy together to attack the enemy to make sure they aren’t attacking us?’

“I’m not too sure we want corporations out there attacking those who might attack them, but I think we have to start thinking about innovative ways in which to deter people from coming at us,” he added.

NARUC cybersecurity best practices
Left to right: Mroz, Santorum, Monken and NARUC President Robert Powelson | © RTO Insider

In conversations with former colleagues on Capitol Hill, Santorum said, he has proposed “retasking” the National Guard for a cyberdefense role. “We need these people to be out across America to be almost like a Minute Man type of operation to be able to respond to some of these threats we have.”

‘Lanes of Effort’

Monken | © RTO Insider

Jonathon Monken, PJM’s senior director of system resiliency and strategic coordination, a West Point graduate and former director of the Illinois State Police, responded that officials need to “de-conflict … the lanes of effort” by clearly defining roles and responsibilities to determine “who’s best suited to do what.”

Monken said the electric industry also needs to improve the security of its tools.

“Recognizing the fact that our systems are interconnected. Our [information technology] configurations are very, very similar. They’re not identical. It’s not if you breach one that you get access to everybody. But it’s not like there’s that many different [energy management system] providers out there. It’s just a handful of system types and the architectures are very similar.”

LaFleur | © RTO Insider

Separately, acting FERC Chairman Cheryl LaFleur talked about the importance of collaboration between government and industry and of not relying on just meeting NERC’s standards on critical infrastructure protection.

“While mandatory standards are important, the cyber challenges are evolving so quickly, you can’t really regulate your way out of it. You can’t do a standard fast enough for some new piece of malware or ransomware that comes along,” she said. “The non-mandatory piece is becoming more and more important.”

Panel: Choices on CO2, Tech, Competition Will Shape Grid

By Wayne Barber

WASHINGTON — Choices made by customers on issues ranging from carbon dioxide to technology could rank alongside decisions made by policymakers in shaping the future of the grid, RTO officials said last week.

co2 grid innovation caucus
McCoy | Smartwires

This was a recurring theme during a Feb. 16 briefing by WIRES, the House Grid Innovation Caucus, the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) and the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI). “Unlike ever before, the electric customers are actively participating in the industry,” said Adriann McCoy, a vice president of Smart Wires, which makes advanced power flow control technology. The growing clout of end users is reflected in rooftop solar, plug-in electric vehicles and consumers’ purchasing of renewable power from alternative suppliers, she said.

“Anytime consumers start playing more actively in a market,” it brings about innovation, McCoy said.

Coal plant retirements, such as the recently announced plans to close the Navajo power plant in Arizona, will require that electricity be moved from other sources, McCoy said. The utility owners of the Navajo plant said Feb. 13 that they don’t plan to operate the facility beyond December 2019.

Speakers said people’s choice about where their power is coming from is driving the transmission system. This includes decisions favoring renewable energy and less-carbon-emitting sources.

“The planning is only slightly less complicated than the engineering” these days, said former FERC Chairman Jim Hoecker, counsel to WIRES. “It’s a challenging time, it’s a transformative time, for the electricity business.”

At the same time, a robust transmission system will save consumers billions every year in avoided power disruptions, Hoecker said. “That’s not pocket change,” he added.

Moeller | MISO

MISO Executive Vice President Clair Moeller said it is resilience and the need to move power from new low-carbon resources that is driving new transmission. “There is essentially no load growth in the nation,” he said. “My job at MISO is mostly about planning,” Moeller said. Sometimes “you get cheaper electricity from your next-door neighbor,” rather than from the generating unit in your own area, Moeller said.

Congress in 1992 said it wanted to see more electric competition, said Craig Glazer, PJM vice president for federal government policy. But even since the Energy Policy Act of 1992, lawmakers still engage in picking winners and losers, Glazer said.

The wind production tax credits and state bailouts of struggling nuclear plants can make things complicated, Glazer said. But Glazer cautioned against too much market tinkering, noting that the goal of competition was to shift risk from ratepayers to shareholders.

Ross | SPP

Innovation happens quickly, but “Congress doesn’t move very fast,” said former U.S. Rep. Mike Ross, senior vice president for government affairs at SPP. Congress needs to ensure its laws “don’t get in the way” of innovation, Ross said.

Many panelists said while the concept of regional planning is popular in the abstract, it often runs into roadblocks in the real world. For example, states are all over the board on issues like renewable mandates, Moeller said.

“States have not wanted to relinquish their regulatory authority over utility operations. This is a tremendous burden to interstate commerce,” Hoecker said.

“We want to make sure this [electric transmission issue] is front and center … that people know how important this is,” said Rep. Jerry McNerney (D-Calif.), who co-chairs the House Grid Innovation Caucus along with Rep. Bob Latta (R-Ohio).