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October 31, 2024

Environmental Group Files Second Challenge to NY Nuke Subsidy

By William Opalka

The New York environmental group Hudson River Sloop Clearwater sued New York regulators on Wednesday over their subsidies for upstate nuclear power plants.

new york nuclear subsidy environmental group
Manna Jo Greene | Hudson River Sloop Clearwater Inc.

Clearwater wants the court to vacate the “Tier 3” requirement included in the state’s Clean Energy Standard, which would pay zero-emission credits to three generators that that could have closed as early as next year. Critics say the program could cost ratepayers $7.6 billion over 12 years.

The suit, filed in state Supreme Court in Albany, alleges the program was illegally enacted and fails the New York Public Service Commission’s mandate to provide just and reasonable rates.

This is the second legal challenge to the ZEC program. In October, fossil fuel generators and a trade association filed suit in federal court attacking the program on the grounds that the state was interfering in FERC-regulated wholesale markets. (See Federal Suit Challenges NY Nuclear Subsidies.)

ZECs “would bring about one of the largest transfers of wealth from the ratepaying public to a single corporate entity in New York state history,” Clearwater’s suit says.

The PSC last month approved Exelon’s purchase of the James A. FitzPatrick nuclear plant from Entergy, making it the sole owner of the three nuclear power plants on Lake Ontario, all of which are eligible for ZEC payments. Exelon also is the beneficiary of a bill approved by Illinois legislators Thursday to provide similar credits to keep its Clinton and Quad Cities nuclear plants operating for another decade. (See related story, Illinois Lawmakers Clear Nuke Subsidy.)

Clearwater says the PSC rushed the subsidy through the regulatory process in 14 days after a staff report first publicly broached the subsidy. The ZEC price will be determined by the federal “social cost of carbon.”

“Tier 3 contains many deficiencies, including implementing a program beyond the legal authority of the PSC, numerous assumptions and statements not supported by any technical basis, errors of fact and legal procedural defects preventing public comment and review in violation of multiple sections of the State Administrative Procedures Act,” the suit alleges.

A PSC spokesman defended the program. “Clearwater’s opposition to nuclear energy is based on ideology, not reality, and ignores the many benefits these upstate nuclear plants provide. Our zero-emission credit plan is a cheaper, sensible way to have the existing carbon-free nuke fleet serve as a bridge to renewables as opposed to importing fracked gas and using dirty oil,” spokesman Jon Sorensen said in a statement.

“Opposing this subsidy will demonstrate to the country that nuclear power is not where our dollars need to be spent. Many of these nuclear plants are aging, leaky and dangerous,” Manna Jo Greene, Clearwater’s environmental action director, said in a statement. “Clearwater strongly supports N.Y. state’s goal of 50% renewable energy generation by 2030 but opposes the nuclear subsidy. Moving toward a fully renewable energy economy as rapidly as possible is the direction that New York should model for the nation.”

FERC OKs PJM RTEP Allocations, Denies DPL Objection

By Rory D. Sweeney

FERC last week approved PJM’s cost-responsibility assignments for its updated Regional Transmission Expansion Plan, dismissing complaints from Dayton Power and Light that one of the projects should have been allocated completely to Dominion Resources (ER16-2539).

DP&L protested PJM’s request that the costs to rebuild the Carson-Rogers Road 500-kV transmission line in Virginia (project b2744) be distributed as part of regional reliability maintenance and should instead go completely to Dominion. DP&L said PJM’s choice wasn’t the most cost-effective, as the grid operator had presented a $24 million option at its Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee meeting in May but selected a $48.5 million project proposed by Virginia Electric and Power Co. because it also resolved a local-planning criterion for Dominion.

Carson - Rogers Project Map | dayton power and light ferc, pjm RTEP allocations
Carson – Rogers Project Map | PJM

Additionally, DP&L argued the reliability violation came from an outdated load growth forecast and that “updated forecasts suggest that there may be no regional reliability violation.”

“Dayton Power contends that there appears to be a disconnect in PJM’s planning process such that a generation interconnection study, using one set of assumptions, may permit the interconnection of a generator without charging the generator for network service upgrades, while an RTEP study, using a different set of assumptions may find that there are network service upgrades that are needed with that generator interconnecting,” FERC summarized in its ruling.

PJM responded that DP&L was missing the point of the filing and should have raised any concerns it had at the May TEAC meeting. The RTO said the filing is for FERC to determine if PJM’s decisions conform with FERC’s approved methods, not whether individual allocations are accurate.

It’s also not a question of cheapest option, PJM said, but most cost-efficient and effective according to its engineering analysis. Although it reviewed other proposals, it explained, none of them also addressed the local criterion concerns.

Transmission lines from Dominion's Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Plant - ferc pjm rtep dayton power and light
Transmission lines from Dominion’s Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Plant | © RTO Insider

Dominion said that just because the project also solves its local issue doesn’t mean it’s not suitable for inclusion in the RTEP.

The commission said “Dayton Power has not supported its assertion that this issue was not adequately vetted within the stakeholder process. We find that while Dayton Power disputes PJM’s selection of project b2744, Dayton Power makes no assertion that the process that PJM undertook in selecting project b2744 in the PJM regional transmission plan for the purposes of cost allocation is inconsistent with Schedule 6 of the PJM Operating Agreement.”

EIM Leaders OK Governance ‘Guidance’ Proposal

By Robert Mullin

The Western Energy Imbalance Market’s governing body voted to implement procedures to ensure market participants have input into CAISO policy initiatives that affect the market.

The CAISO staff’s proposed “guidance document” sketches out how ISO staff will interact with the EIM, providing a schedule for notifying the governing body about ISO initiatives and laying out the processes by which body members and EIM participants will provide feedback on proposed policy changes.

ISO staff initiated development of the document in October in response to a recommendation by the EIM’s Transitional Committee — the West-wide stakeholder group charged with developing the market’s governance plan. That committee decided to leave it to market participants to parse out that plan into specific procedures. (See CAISO Seeks Process to Keep EIM, Governing Body in the Policy Loop.)

“The Transitional Committee envisioned a more user-friendly document, something that’s different from corporate bylaws or the charter for EIM governance,” CAISO General Counsel Dan Shonkwiler told the EIM governing body during its Nov. 30 meeting. “It may be a more accessible document for stakeholders trying to understand what you do and how to interact with you.”

eim energy imbalance market
EIM Map | CAISO

Not a Rubber Stamp

Governing body member Valerie Fong said her support for the guidance document came only “after a number of questions and comments that were addressed and are answered very specifically through” the final proposal.

“This isn’t just a rubber-stamp ‘OK,’” Fong said ahead of the vote to approve the document. “It took a lot of work on Dan’s part to consider the comments and suggestions — and the questions” submitted by EIM stakeholders.

The proposal still requires approval by the ISO board, which is expected to issue a decision on the matter during its December meeting.

Significantly, the guidance document provides solutions to the overlapping authority between the ISO board and the EIM governing body resulting from the EIM’s delegation of a portion of its authority over Federal Power Act Section 205 filings to the ISO.

The document describes how ISO staff and board members will interact with the EIM governing body to determine whether a proposed Tariff amendment affecting the EIM falls under the body’s “primary authority” — giving EIM leaders the right to effectively approve or reject an amendment.

In those instances, the ISO board — which technically retains final authority over all Tariff changes — is expected to give “great deference” to the governing body’s decisions and place those matters into a consent agenda.

The document also spells out an “advisory” — and non-voting — role for the governing body regarding policy initiatives covering general market rules that also affect the EIM.

‘Hybrid’ Initiatives

“Hybrid” initiatives — proposals that would amend multiple Tariff provisions affecting both the EIM and the ISO at-large — will get more complicated treatment. In cases when the EIM is the key driver of an initiative, primary authority will fall to the governing body. In other cases, the body could retain primary authority over just EIM-specific portions of a broader ISO initiative — a sort of line-item veto power.

EIM Governing Board members left to right: Fong, Prescott, Howe, Linvill, Schmidt | CAISO
EIM Governing Board members left to right: Fong, Prescott, Howe, Linvill, Schmidt | CAISO

The governing body will also have a voice in how any policy initiatives are designated with respect to primary authority, providing the body the right to challenge any “initial” designation made by ISO management.

In the event that the governing body objects to an initiative’s final designation, the body chair — currently Christine Schmidt — can trigger a dispute resolution process ultimately involving a joint session of the body and the ISO board.

In response to requests by current and future EIM members, the final document also clarifies that CAISO’s Department of Market Monitoring and Market Surveillance Committee should interact directly with the EIM governing body in the same manner in which both groups currently consult with the ISO board.

On Oct. 1, Arizona Public Service and Puget Sound Energy joined the EIM, which launched in November 2014 with PacifiCorp and NV Energy. Portland General Electric and Idaho Power are expected to join in 2017 and 2018 respectively. Others that have indicated an interest in joining are Mexico’s Baja California Norte, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District and Seattle City Light. (See Council OKs Seattle City Light Bid to Explore Joining EIM.)

MISO IMM Sees Deliberate Over-Forecasting by Wind Operators

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — Some wind generators appear to be deliberately over-forecasting their output to inflate their revenues, according to MISO Independent Market Monitor David Patton, who called for rule changes to discourage gaming.

Patton said wind units on average produced 146 MW less than their MISO dispatch instructions in 2015 and 2016 (excluding economic curtailments and manual redispatch), a higher deviation than any other resource class in the RTO.

miso imm demap payments wind resources
| Potomac Economics

Patton told the Market Subcommittee on Nov. 29 that much of the problem lies with MISO’s day-ahead margin assurance payment (DAMAP), which guarantees day-ahead profit when real-time dispatch is less than the day-ahead schedule. MISO uses wind operators’ forecasts to determine their dispatch level.

Two-thirds of MISO’s $7.5 million in DAMAP payments to wind resources in 2015 and 2016 was because of over-forecasting and only $2.5 million was spent on curtailment, Patton said. “Most of our wind DAMAP payments are unjustified,” he said.

Patton: Eliminate DAMAP for Wind

Patton said the DAMAP should be eliminated for wind resources once MISO adopts five-minute settlements. He reasons that because wind is a fast-ramping resource, operators will want to be paid in real-time prices rather than collecting DAMAP.

Patton also called for a change in rules that encourage wind generators to err on the high side in their forecasts to ensure they receive a dispatch signal that does not limit their output. Wind resources producing above their dispatch signal can be subject to excess energy penalties, but MISO settlement rules are less punitive for wind resources that fall below their forecast output.

Patton recommended wind suppliers be incentivized to submit accurate forecasts by giving them more “headroom” and relaxing excessive energy charges when the system is unconstrained. He also suggested MISO automate its validation of market participant forecasts.

“If we balance these objectives well, the wind suppliers will be happy, the grid operators will be happy and those that have to contribute to the DAMAP payments will be happy,” Patton said.

Over-forecasting leads to supply-demand imbalances, he said, with MISO deploying regulating reserves and under-utilization of the grid as the RTO dispatches the system to make room for the over-forecasted energy.

‘Sustained Biases’

Patton said that although larger wind producers generally have lower forecasting errors than smaller ones, “a number of large and small wind suppliers exhibit large sustained forecast biases.” Patton said over-forecasting is more prevalent in summer, when energy prices are higher.

He said wind operators might be violating their obligation to provide accurate information to MISO. He noted that FERC is similarly concerned about evidence of over-forecasting.

Patton also said more research is needed to put a price on how much the over-forecasting costs MISO and that he may offer more definitive solutions in his 2016 State of the Market Report.

MISO Responds

Jeff Bladen, executive director of market services, said MISO staff will work with the Monitor on potential fixes. “We aren’t seeing broad-based market manipulation for sure, but we may have a market inefficiency that we want to close up as soon as practical. Certainly there’s work in front of us to assess and get advice,” Bladen said.

DTE Energy’s Nick Griffin said he would like to see MISO and the Monitor provide similar deviation averages for other asset classes. But he said he could support removing forecasting capability from wind units if gaming is discovered.

“Wind resources are in a difficult position because they face different challenges than other resources,” Patton said. “They have to manage something that’s fundamentally different than other resources. When we suggest that wind resources should be treated differently, it’s because they have a challenge that other asset owners do not have to face.”

Illinois Lawmakers Clear Nuke Subsidy

By Rory D. Sweeney and Rich Heidorn Jr.

Illinois legislators on Thursday approved a bill to keep Exelon’s Clinton and Quad Cities nuclear plants operating for another decade.

The “Future Energy Jobs Bill” was approved by the state Senate by a 32-18 vote, an hour after clearing the House 63-38 on the last day of the legislature’s session for the year (SB 2814). The product of two years of negotiations, it was sent to be signed by Gov. Bruce Rauner, who issued a statement in support.

clinton, exelon, illinois, nuclear power
Exelon’s Clinton Nuclear Plant | Exelon

The bill “shows that when all parties are willing to negotiate in good faith, we can find agreement and move our state forward,” Rauner said.

The bill provides Exelon with $235 million in ratepayer-funded zero-emission credits annually for 10 years of continued operation.

Exelon said Commonwealth Edison ratepayers are likely to see increases averaging about 25 cents/month during the life of the plan, but critics have said the increase could exceed $4. Ameren customers are likely to see increases of 12 cents/month on average, the Associated Press reported.

It caps price increases for all business classes at 1.3% over 2015 rates, Exelon said.

“This forward-looking energy policy levels the playing field and values all carbon-free energy equally, positions Illinois as a national leader in advancing clean energy and will provide a major boost to the Illinois economy,” Exelon CEO Chris Crane said in a statement.

The bill also requires “hundreds of millions of dollars” in energy efficiency spending, which has garnered environmentalist support, the AP reported.

Critics have called the bill a corporate bailout under the guise of maintaining reliability in a state that produces much more energy than it needs.

Exelon's Quad Cities Nuclear Plant | Exelon
Exelon’s Quad Cities Nuclear Plant | Exelon

Governor’s Reservations

The bill has gone through several iterations in the Democrat-controlled legislature and almost failed until Rauner, a Republican, joined the negotiation to pare down the cost. He initially offered his support then removed it after seeing language he didn’t like, according to Crain’s Chicago Business.

Rauner’s statement said the bill’s cost was reduced by exempting new renewable energy projects from prevailing wage rules and “eliminating billions of dollars in special interest” funding.

Dynegy, which saw proposed subsidies for its coal plants in southern Illinois cut in the final version of the bill, told Crain’s that it would sue to overturn the law.

Exelon said the bill, which will take effect June 1, will save 4,200 direct and indirect jobs, including 900 workers at Quad Cities and 700 at Clinton. The company threatened in May to shut down the money-losing plants if they did not receive state aid. (See Bill to Save Coal, Nuclear Plants Introduced in Illinois.)

Reaction

Among those hailing the bill’s approval were the Nuclear Energy Institute, the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition, which represents the wind, solar and energy efficiency industries, and the Environmental Defense Fund, which called it “the most significant clean energy economic development package in the state’s history.”

The EDF said the legislation “will fix Illinois’ broken renewable portfolio standard and significantly expand the state’s successful energy efficiency programs.”

The Alliance for Solar Choice said it was pleased that the final bill reinstated net metering and removed proposed demand charges that would have discouraged rooftop solar.

The bill increases the RPS target to 35% by 2030, up from the current 25% by 2025.

“Prior to this agreement, Illinois was meeting the criteria of its less-audacious RPS goals by investing in clean energy projects being built by neighboring states,” the Alliance said. “Illinois was not only sending money to help grow the economies of other states, but it was also missing out on countless clean energy jobs and economic growth in-state.”

The group said it will press policymakers to ensure there’s a full stakeholder process before state regulators when the bill’s 5% net metering cap is reached “to guarantee a fair valuation of the benefits of rooftop solar.”

AARP Illinois called on Rauner to veto what it called the largest rate increase in “our nation’s history.”

“The bill just passed by the legislature will send monthly consumer bills through the roof for the next 25 years, will impose massive cuts to low-income energy assistance programs and even though it will supposedly save the jobs at the nuclear plants, down the road it will cost Illinois an additional 44,000 jobs,” said AARP Illinois Director Bob Gallo.

FERC Rejects $400,000 Fuel Bill from Dominion

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC rejected Dominion Resources’ request to recover almost $400,000 in uncompensated costs incurred when it ran four dual-fuel units on fuel oil rather than cheaper natural gas in June.

dominion fuel bill ferc rejects
| Matcor

The commission’s Nov. 30 order said Dominion’s Virginia Electric and Power Co. is not entitled to recover the additional costs because it only submitted to PJM cost-based offers for natural gas operations at its five combustion turbines in Ladysmith, Va. (EL16-109).

The units, totaling 783 MW, primarily operate with natural gas but can also run on fuel oil. They did not clear in the day-ahead market for June 25, and after the rebidding period, VEPCO learned of a pipeline constraint that left the Ladysmith units unable to operate on natural gas.

At 11 a.m. on June 25, PJM ordered the utility to operate four of the units beginning at noon for reliability reasons. The company said it notified PJM of its need to operate on more expensive fuel oil and PJM reiterated its dispatch order. VEPCO said it operated three units for 10 hours and one for 11 hours, spending $387,588 more on fuel than it was paid for.

The company said the commission’s June 2015 ruling that PJM’s Tariff and Operating Agreement were unjust and unreasonable because they did not permit day-ahead offers that vary by hour or allow market sellers to update their offers in real time supported its request for relief. (See Duke, ODEC Denied ‘Stranded’ Gas Compensation.)

| Matcor For plant photo: Ladysmith Power Station | Dominion
Ladysmith Power Station | Dominion

The commission disagreed, saying the company’s “inability to recover its fuel oil costs for the Ladysmith units resulted from its own business decisions regarding which cost-based offers to submit and is not the result of the offer limitations that the commission addressed in the offer flexibility proceeding.”

FERC also rejected the company’s request to make it whole through a waiver of PJM’s rules, saying it would cause harm to load, which “would be assessed unanticipated additional charges inconsistent with the current PJM Tariff and Operating Agreement on file and without adequate prior notice.”

“Granting waiver here would send the wrong signal to market sellers, namely, that a resource can submit an offer that PJM uses to dispatch the resource, and then seek to increase that offer after-the-fact to receive additional compensation,” FERC said.

PJM’s proposed Tariff revisions to increase offer flexibility, filed in August, is pending before the commission (ER16-372-002).

UPDATE: CAISO Monitor Proposes End to Revenue Rights Auction

By Robert Mullin

A new report from CAISO’s internal Market Monitor contends that the ISO’s program for auctioning off congestion revenue rights (CRRs) suffers from inherent design flaws that have allowed speculators to reap enormous gains at the expense of outmatched ratepayers.

Adding to previous calls to reform or eliminate the auction process, the Department of Market Monitoring report spells out flaws in the current system and suggests a possible alternative. (See CAISO Monitor Seeks Congestion Revenue Rights Auction Reforms.)

Skeptics say the Monitor’s conclusions are ill-considered and that more analysis is necessary before the ISO takes any steps to alter the CRR auction process.

The Monitor, headed by Eric Hildebrandt, said that California ratepayers lost $520 million in 2012-2015 through a market that pays $1 to CRR holders for every 45 cents in revenues received from auctions.

congestion revenue rights crr caiso
Congestion revenue rights (CRR) auction revenues have significantly lagged payments to CRR holders since the system was put in place nearly five years ago. | CAISO

“This consistent underpricing of CRRs calls into question a fundamental assumption of the CRR auction design that competition will drive auction prices to equal the CRR’s expected value,” the Monitor said. “It is unlikely that rules similar to the CRR auction design would emerge in many competitive markets that are not designed by a regulatory process.”

‘No Clear Rationale’

The Monitor contends that there is “no clear rationale” for the ISO to provide a market for price swaps, echoing criticism voiced by PJM Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring and others. (See Role, Value of Financial Trading Debated by OPSI Panel.)

CAISO’s Monitor says the main beneficiaries of the current system are “purely financial entities” sophisticated enough to identify which CRRs are likely underpriced at auction but stand to pay off handsomely because of a disconnect between how the CRRs are packaged at auction and how they’re compensated at settlement.

To illustrate that disconnection, the Monitor first explicates its view on what exactly a CRR does and doesn’t represent.

“A CRR is not a day-ahead market transmission right,” the Monitor said. “All day-ahead market bidders have access to the transmission system regardless of whether or not they hold a CRR.”

CRRs are not needed to ship power between nodes because the ISO’s centrally cleared LMP market is linked to its transmission operation, meaning that market participants are not responsible for moving power from one location to another.

Rather, a CRR purchased at auction should be understood as a forward contract that allows an auction participant to hedge financial exposure to — or speculate on — day-ahead price differences between two locations, the Monitor explained. The demand for such hedging stems not from the ISO’s own market but from forward power contracting occurring outside the market.

“A supplier may sell a forward power contract at a location different than its generator’s location,” the Monitor said. “When this occurs, the day-ahead price on which the forward contract settles will be different than the day-ahead price the generator receives for selling power into the day-ahead market.”

The differing settlement locations expose the supplier to possible price discrepancies not accounted for in the forward power contract. So it’s the CRR auction that provides for acquiring forward contracts for differences to hedge price differentials between two points.

The problem with this setup?

“Unlike most other forward contract markets, the CRR auction allows participants to take positions without a counterparty offering to take the opposite position,” the Monitor said.

Instead, transmission ratepayers become unwilling counterparties to the CRR contracts because they’re on the hook to provide payment when auction revenues come up short of CRR payouts.

Ratepayers Outgunned

To avoid that outcome, those ratepayers would have to enter the auctions to buy the contracts themselves. This is problematic for a couple reasons, the Monitor points out.

First, the load-serving entities that effectively act on behalf of ratepayers in ISO markets may obtain CRRs to hedge risk, but they are explicitly barred from financial speculation in any transactions. In any case, LSEs would lack the incentive to manage ratepayers’ CRR forward contracts in the auction because they can pass on CRR costs to those ratepayers.

Second, participation in CRR auctions as a speculator requires knowledge of power flow analysis, finance and transmission/generation outages and operations, as well as meeting collateral requirements to engage in the market. In short, ratepayers would be outmatched by the companies that employ electrical engineers and other experts to transact in the highly complex market.

The most fundamental problem with the ISO’s CRR market, the Monitor contends, is its financial structure and lack of a consistent definition for a particular set of CRRs. Although CRRs are auctioned as “a bundle of forward contracts on specific transmission constraints,” they are not settled as the same bundle at day-ahead market prices. That’s because the day-ahead market network model that forms the basis for settlement cannot be known when the auction is run. New transmission constraints can be introduced after the auction,” effectively making the CRR a different product when bought than when it is settled.

“A CRR will only be consistently defined if the bundle in the auction is the same as the implied bundle from the day-ahead market price differences,” the Monitor said. “When the transmission models are different in the auction and day-ahead market, the bundles will not be the same.”

Proposal

As an alternative to the CRR auction, the Monitor proposes a bilateral or exchange market for forward contracts-for-difference for pairs of ISO nodes — otherwise known as locational basis price swaps. The swap buyer would pay the seller a price in the forward market and in return be paid the spot price difference between the two locations.

A key difference from the current CRR market: Price swaps would be traded between willing counterparties. And unlike the inconsistently defined CRR contract, the swap would be consistently defined in both the forward and day-ahead market.

‘Robust’ Analysis Needed

Gary Ackerman, executive director of the Western Power Trading Forum (WPTF), said his organization “strongly” disagrees with the Monitor’s call for ending CRR auctions.

“The CRR platform is a market,” Ackerman said. “Buyers and sellers value risk and opportunity differently. Scrapping it is a FERC question and seems like a radical step when indeed the CAISO makes the rules.”

Ackerman pointed out that FERC requires organized wholesale power markets to provide instruments that allow participants to hedge risk.

“This isn’t about who is getting what money or under-collecting the transmission revenue requirement,” Ackerman said. “It’s about [providing] market value for relieving congestion.”

Carrie Bentley with Resero Consulting, which frequently works on behalf of the WPTF, elaborated on the group’s position.

“If the CAISO had more transparency surrounding the transmission system — and in particular how the CAISO represents the transmission system in both the CRR model and the day-ahead market model — participants would have information at the time of the auction about the expected day-ahead market and any differences between the day-ahead market and the CRR market,” Bentley said.

Increased transparency could incentivize bidders to offer a higher value for CRRs in the auctions, Bentley said, noting that recent improvements in the ISO’s transmission outage reporting might account for the reason that CRR auction revenues exceeded payouts during the third quarter of this year.

Both Ackerman and Bentley dismissed the Monitor’s proposal for a new bilateral market for price swaps.

“There cannot be an effective market without buyers and sellers fluidly engaging in commerce, and there does not appear to be buyer interest in long-term power and power basis hedging,” Ackerman said.

Bentley said the CRR auction process is “invaluable” because it allows market participants to adjust their CRR positions “to get just the right hedge” based on portfolios and risks.

“Because the grid is so complex, achieving this fine tuning of one’s CRR holdings would be nearly impossible if participants had to trade bilaterally,” Bentley said.

Bentley also contends that market participants have not been provided with “robust analyses” on the precise cause for the revenue shortfalls in the auctions.

“It seems to make more sense that [the Monitor] could perform further analysis — or make such analysis public if they have already performed it — and then parties could consider how the CAISO could converge the day-ahead and CRR markets and models as a first step — before jumping to the conclusion the auction simply isn’t useful,” Bentley said.

MISO Granted Winter Waiver on Offer Cap

FERC has granted MISO a waiver of its $1,000/MWh offer cap for winter, providing the RTO relief before the commission’s pre-Thanksgiving order that doubled the hard offer cap for all grid operators takes effect.

FERC’s Nov. 17 ruling setting the offer cap for day-ahead and real-time markets to $2,000/MWh in all RTOs and ISOs won’t take effect until 75 days after publication in the Federal Register (RM16-5). (See New FERC Rule Will Double RTO Offer Caps.)

Thus the commission on Nov. 29 granted MISO’s request that resources with incremental energy costs above the current $1,000/MWh offer cap be allowed to recover costs effective Dec. 1 (ER16-2685). FERC approved similar MISO requests for the winters of 2014/15 and 2015/16.

The waiver and FERC’s new rule require that energy costs that exceed $1,000/MWh must be verified before the offer is used to set LMPs. FERC acknowledged the rule in the order granting the waiver, calling it “a long-term solution.”

| Ohio Power Siting Board
| Ohio Power Siting Board

“MISO’s experience during the polar vortex of the 2013/14 winter demonstrates that fuel costs can increase to a level such that the current $1,000/MWh offer cap prevents resources from submitting incremental energy offers that reflect their marginal production costs. If similar weather and natural gas supply conditions materialize in the 2016/17 winter, some resources could face the untenable position of being forced to offer electricity at levels below their actual cost,” the commission said.

As with MISO’s two previous waivers, the order instructs MISO’s Market Monitor to file a report within 30 days after the waiver period ends April 30 with statistics on offers above $1,000/MWh.

– Amanda Durish Cook

AEP Ohio Rate Plan Excludes Merchant Generation

By Rory D. Sweeney and Rich Heidorn Jr.

AEP Ohio proposed a new retail rate plan that would more than triple residential customers’ fixed charges and shift more costs to customers that do not purchase their power through a competitive supplier.

AEP's Cardinal Plant | Baker Concrete
AEP’s Cardinal Plant | Baker Concrete

But the company’s request for a six-year extension of its “Electric Security Plan” (ESP) lacks the controversial proposals in its last rate case to subsidize the company’s merchant generation — a plan that crumbled after FERC said it would be subject to its review. Instead, the company is hoping Ohio legislators will agree to revamp the state’s deregulation law to allow it to bring its merchant generation back into the rate base.

The utility said it expects the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to decide on its Nov. 23 request in April (16-1852-EL-SSO).

Rate Impact

The new plan, which would run through May 2024, would increase bills by $1.58/month — a 1.2% increase — for residential customers who use 1,000 kWh and haven’t changed their electricity generator from AEP Ohio’s standard service offer (SSO).

Heavier energy users would see rate cuts, the company said. Residential customers using 2,000 kWh/month would save 1.8%, small businesses with 1,000 kW peak demand and 350,000 kWh usage would save 1.3%, and industrial customers with demands of 20,000 kW or more and using at least 8 million kWh would save more than 4%, according to accompanying testimony by Andrea E. Moore, AEP Ohio’s director of regulatory services.

“The terms of the proposed ESP offer AEP Ohio customers reasonable and stable electricity rates while offering investors some measure of financial stability,” the company said in its filing.

If the extension is not approved, AEP says it will terminate the current plan before its May 2018 expiration, freeing it from its promise to build 900 MW of renewable generation.

AEP Ohio, a subsidiary of American Electric Power, had requested a 2024 expiration date when it applied in 2013 for its third and current ESP, but PUCO in 2015 approved a three-year plan.

Merchant PPAs

In that case, PUCO allowed AEP Ohio to sign power purchase agreements for all of its Ohio merchant generation.

But after FERC ruled in April that the PPAs would be reviewed under the Edgar affiliate abuse test, AEP scaled back its request, asking PUCO for agreements covering only its 440-MW share of the Ohio Valley Electric Corp. (See AEP, FirstEnergy Revise PPA Requests to Avoid FERC Review.)

AEP posted a loss of $765.8 million in the third quarter after taking a $2.3 billion impairment on its share of 2,684 MW of competitive generation in Ohio. (See AEP Turns Away from Generation to Transmission, PPAs.)

The company is currently collecting costs for its share of OVEC through a surcharge on all distribution customers. Under the new proposal, the OVEC generation would supplant power bought through the ESP’s competitive auctions. AEP would recover costs from default customers, with its price blended with that of generators clearing in the auctions.

Riders

The proposal also includes adding or modifying several other riders to customer bills, such as an “alternative energy rider” to recover expenses for renewable energy credits. It also would more than triple the residential customer charge from $5/month to $18.40 by January 2018 while reducing the share of fixed charges included in distribution energy charges.

AEP's Conesville Power Station | © Delta Whiskey, Creative Commons
AEP’s Conesville Power Station | © Delta Whiskey, Creative Commons

AEP committed in the last rate case to developing 500 MW of wind generation and 400 MW of solar generation in its stakeholder agreement. The extension proposal includes commitments to install between eight and 10 microgrids, 250 electric-vehicle charging stations and self-dimming street lighting in Franklin and 10 surrounding counties.

It would also commit AEP to installing a faster crew-dispatch system for outages and infrastructure hardening, as well as extend existing commitments to “aggressive tree trimming and vegetation-management programs” and replacing aging infrastructure.

AEP’s proposal also includes a “competition incentive rider” (CIR) that would charge default customers extra for not shopping for an alternate supplier. The company said the rider would “incent shopping and recognize that there may be costs associated with providing retail electric service that are not reflected in SSO bypassable rates.”

AEP said PUCO and other parties were not able to agree on how large the rider should be but that the commission staff “has provided an initial CIR level for inclusion in this filing of $0.62/MWh.”

Although the new proposal lacks the PPAs that drew opposition, Ohio Consumers’ Counsel Bruce Weston said he has found things to dislike about it.

“AEP’s holiday wish list is too long,” he said in a statement. “AEP’s continual requests for state government to approve even more charges on Ohioans’ electric bills show why Ohio’s 2008 energy law [which allowed multiyear rate applications] should be repealed.”

Legislative Change Sought

Ohio deregulated the generation portion of its electricity rates in 1999, allowing customers to shop for their electricity suppliers.

AEP spokeswoman Melissa McHenry said the company is working with lawmakers to restructure the law so that it can reincorporate merchant generation into its rate base. McHenry said the company hopes to have a bill introduced into the legislature by the first quarter of 2017.

The company also is expected to file with PUCO by Dec. 31 a carbon-reduction plan, along with commitments on fuel diversification, grid modernization and battery utilization.

PJM Stakeholders Consider Best Way to Measure DER

By Rory D. Sweeney

PJM stakeholders are discussing the best way to measure distributed energy resources in integrating them into the grid. The debate over metering in front of or behind the customer’s load was the focus of the Market Implementation Committee’s most recent special session on the topic Nov. 22.

PJM’s Andrew Levitt outlined the differences between measuring DER performance directly at the energy resource before it offsets the customer’s load and measuring it through the main meter at the point of interconnection. The main difference, Levitt said, is whether the DER performance shows up as a reduction of the load baseline like demand response or is measured separately as an injection to the system.

pjm der load meter
| PJM

The discussion came days after FERC’s Nov. 17 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which would require RTOs to allow aggregated DERs and storage resources of 100 kW and above to participate in capacity, energy and ancillary services markets. (See FERC Rule Would Boost Energy Storage, DER.)

PJM has been working on the issue since the summer. (See “Venue for DER Discussions to Change,” PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Briefs.)

Of special concern is whether the baseline-reduction approach would work if the load is completely reduced and becomes a net injection. Levitt also posed the questions on how energy and capacity obligations would be impacted by either approach and how to ensure injections aren’t double counted.

“I think we agree that proper accounting is an important first principle here, and that really means no double counting and … tracking down every step in the accounting chain and figuring out that that comes together correctly,” Levitt said.

More Questions than Answers

FirstEnergy’s Ed Stein asked if PJM has considered how adjustments to an individual customer’s load from DER will be included in zonal load profiles. “I just know all the math we deal with today and trying to manage all of this. I just don’t want these slides to start to look like it’s very simple. It’s very difficult right now,” he said.

Dave Pratzon of GT Power Group questioned whether an energy resource behind a load meter could be considered a “front-of-meter” framework, but Levitt confirmed that many setups are wired that way.

“I acknowledge that the terminology begins to get pushed to its limits when you talk about a front-of-meter resource wired behind a load meter,” Levitt said. “Do they cancel out? Apparently they don’t. You just measure whatever comes out at the point of interconnection and you do all of the performance measurement at the point of interconnection. Submetering in a front-of-meter framework, where you put a meter directly on the resource if it’s wired behind a load meter, is not super easy. Not a lot of people think about a generator wired behind a load meter coming through PJM’s queue and selling wholesale, but in fact that does happen. An example that I’ve been mining a lot is landfill gas generators.”

Pratzon followed up, asking whether customers using that setup are claiming the entire load reduction as Reliability Pricing Model capacity or just the generation that becomes an injection beyond offsetting its load. Levitt said he would research the answer.

By the time the meeting finished, multiple stakeholders had pushed for increased visibility in how DER setups are designed. PJM officials said their plan for the group’s next meeting on Dec. 16 is to identify interests and compile design components that could be included in measurement rules.

PJM’s Dave Anders noted that the group has preliminarily agreed to focus first on DER participation in ancillary services and use the lessons gathered there to inform wider DER participation. PJM staff also suggested beginning with DR-style measurement, but stakeholders warned against limiting the group’s options.

Anders also noted other ongoing efforts to address DER needs, including interconnection-queue changes that are being investigated through the Planning Committee.