MISO and PJM’s targeted market efficiency project portfolio has dipped from seven projects to five.
The latest project to drop off is the Marysville-Tangy 345-kV upgrade in central Ohio, which was supposed to deliver $122 million in benefits at a “minimal” cost. PJM and MISO staff have since learned that the line’s emergency rating will be increased by the end of this year, eliminating the need for a congestion-relieving fix.
The Klondike-Purdue 138-kV project in north-central Indiana was also scrapped this fall after RTO staff discovered the congestion the project was aimed at relieving was merely outage-driven. (See MISO, PJM Move Forward on TMEPs; 6 Projects Planned.)
The five remaining projects are expected to cost $14.45 million and deliver $100 million in benefits, a 6.9:1 benefit-cost ratio. The original seven-project TMEP package was expected to cost $19 million and deliver $117 million in benefits, a 6.2:1 ratio.
During the Dec. 2 MISO-PJM Interregional Planning Stakeholder Advisory Committee conference call, PJM engineer Alex Worcester said the RTOs will continue to monitor the Marysville-Tangy project site to see if it could use future improvements.
“We’re still looking at a $100 million benefit for [less than] $15 million in this portfolio of projects,” Worcester added.
There are no recommended changes to the other five projects, MISO and PJM staff said.
WPPI Energy’s Steve Leovy said he wanted more information on how the TMEP costs and benefits were calculated. “Based on [the dropped projects], the benefit metric could have changed significantly,” Leovy said.
Leovy also said he would like the TMEP cost-benefit calculation to resemble the benefit analysis used in MISO’s Market Congestion Planning Study. Leovy said when the TMEP project creation is filed with FERC, he will recommend WPPI make a filing asking the commission to consider making MISO use the Market Congestion Planning Study’s benefit analysis for TMEPs.
MISO engineer Adam Solomon disagreed, replying, “We think having separate benefits metrics is OK.”
Ohio regulators recently provided $600 million to FirstEnergy, the state’s largest utility. Although the decision was labeled as a “distribution modernization rider,” the money seemingly came with no strings attached, meaning the utility giant need not do anything to update or improve its system of wires and transformers.
Even the chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, Asim Haque, described the decision as “undoubtedly unconventional.” His rationale for the subsidy was that FirstEnergy could not modernize its grid until it reduced its debt, which would allow it to obtain a better credit rating, which, in turn, would lead to lower financing costs for future grid investments — if they occur.
That line of thinking led to the $600 million decision, raising six questions.
First, rather than advance grid modernization in the state, has the decision actually set it back? FirstEnergy will not spend any of the money on near-term upgrades. Plus, other electricity companies will avoid investing in Ohio, as regulators are showing a preference for the incumbent utility monopolies. Innovative entrepreneurs will not risk their capital when regulators have stacked the market against them.
Second, should we reward a utility’s poor management? FirstEnergy needed to reduce its debt because its executives made bad business decisions, particularly buying up old coal-fired power plants at the very time the price of natural gas was falling, making those plants uneconomic. Rather than reduce executive bonuses or trim generous dividends to shareholders, regulators sent the tab to customers, every one of whom must pay $36 more per year to cover FirstEnergy’s mistakes. Regulators are signaling more interest in a utility’s pleas than its performance.
Third, how much will Ohioans really have to pay? Since every other utility in the state is now lining up to get the same deal regulators gave to FirstEnergy, the cost will certainly be much more than $600 million.
Fourth, doesn’t the subsidy distort regional power markets? FirstEnergy originally asked for money to cover power purchase agreements that would support the continued operation of its uneconomic (and dirty) power plants. Federal regulators objected, saying such a subsidy would distort competitive markets. To skirt those objections, the utility then asked for the subsidy to go to a different subsidiary instead. The effect, however, is the same — state regulators have provided a competitive advantage to FirstEnergy’s generators. As a result, FERC will need to decide if such a “virtual PPA” also illegally disrupts regional markets.
Fifth, is there true corporate separation between FirstEnergy’s generation and distribution subsidiaries, as required by Ohio’s deregulation law? As mentioned, FirstEnergy diverted the subsidy, directing the money away from its generation units to its distribution companies. Those subsidiaries, ironically, are doing very well financially, largely because they are monopolies that enjoy guaranteed profits. Although state law requires arms-length dealings among the utility’s subsidiaries, the subsidy came in through a different door but ended up in the same house. In effect, it is still propping up FirstEnergy’s economically challenged generation units that are not able to compete in regional power markets.
Sixth, should utilities get something for nothing? Ohio regulators did “not place restrictions on the use” of the subsidy and said FirstEnergy could use the funds to cover “outstanding pension obligations, reducing debt or taking other steps to reduce the long-term costs of accessing capital.” Almost as an afterthought, PUCO also said FirstEnergy could use the subsidy “to indirectly support grid modernization investments.” The operative word, of course, is “indirectly,” noting the utility need not show any connection to grid modernization efforts. Put another way, Ohioans are paying millions of dollars for something they have no guarantee of receiving.
Such questions suggest a simple subsidy prompts ripple effects that set back grid upgrades, hurt customers and distort competitive markets. The PUCO chairman has said he wants to move beyond the subsidy debate so regulators can focus on modernizing the grid. Perhaps the question he should be considering is, what are the investments and innovation needed to build a cleaner, more affordable energy system?
Dick Munson is director of Midwest Clean Energy for the Environmental Defense Fund.
CARMEL, Ind. — MISO will likely add new details to its monthly operations reports as a result of an annual review, engineer Oluwaseyi Akinbode told the Nov. 29 Market Subcommittee meeting.
Akinbode said MISO will add a market efficiency metric based on the alignment of the financial transmissions rights, day-ahead and real-time markets. (FTR shortfalls plus real-time excess congestion funds divided by FTR target credits.)
Market efficiency is expected to maintain a 12-month rolling average of at least 94%. If the rolling average falls to 92% or lower, or the monthly average falls below 87%, the issue will be flagged for review by MISO staff.
Jeff Bladen, executive director of market services, said the metric will help the Board of Directors understand the reasoning behind future proposals for market improvements. “It’s intended to be a broad indicator and not a surgical tool to identify improvements with,” he said.
WPPI Energy economist Valy Goepfrich said the new metric is difficult to understand and asked how MISO calculates FTR shortfalls.
Akinbode also said MISO will add charts depicting transfer trends between the RTO’s North and Central regions and MISO South. He asked for comments through mid-December and said MISO would respond to stakeholder suggestions in January.
Run Reason Requirement Shelved
MISO has canceled plans for a mechanism to track the reasons behind commitment decisions because of a lack of stakeholder interest.
The mechanism would have tracked information including start and stop times, run reasons and sources of commitments. A similar project was shelved in 2012. At that time, MISO’s market communication system provided the information, but it is no longer “the system of record,” the RTO said.
Constellation Energy requested the tracking mechanism in May 2016. But Bladen said MISO’s request for feedback on the possible data collection yielded only four stakeholder responses, half of them expressing low interest and the other half asking the project not be taken up.
“So, on the basis of that, we are not pursuing this item,” Bladen said. He added that stakeholders may raise the topic again using the Steering Committee’s issues introduction process.
The initiative is expected to be closed at the December Steering Committee meeting.
CARMEL, Ind. — MISO will continue its efforts to improve gas-electric coordination in 2017, revealing a plan for the year that includes more data sharing, modeling and outreach.
The top 2017 goals include disclosing generators’ hourly gas usage profiles to gas system operators and improving modeling to identify future electric transmission and pipeline expansion needs. The RTO also plans on continuing to issue market updates to stakeholders and communicate with gas industry officials and regulators.
Other tasks include creating a gas generator database and NERC studies on gas contingencies, MISO strategy adviser Scott Wright told the Resource Adequacy Subcommittee on Nov. 30.
MISO will launch a pilot project to share two or three generators’ day-ahead gas usage profiles with gas system operators. The RTO will use its day-ahead clearings to forecast hourly gas usage. Wright noted that FERC Order 787 enables sharing of nonpublic operational information with gas pipelines for “reliability and operational planning.”
Indianapolis Power and Light’s Lin Franks said the RTO has done “a fine job” so far in getting pipeline and gas resource owners to communicate, such as providing real-time pipeline restrictions and notifications.
But she cautioned the RTO against involving itself in fuel contracts between gas suppliers and generators and said MISO’s gas role should be limited to providing operational data transparency and not influencing new products or rules.
“None of these contracts are exactly alike,” Franks said. “Managing our fuel supply is our obligation, not MISO’s. We’ve got to be very careful here that MISO doesn’t insert itself in our ability to manage our fuel supply. It is our job to ensure adequate supply to our generation. This one seems to be ripe for a fight on jurisdiction.”
Wright said the main thrust behind the coordination is fuel assurance. “By no means [are we] thinking that we’re going to get in between a generator and its pipeline. It’s, ‘Are there ways to unlock efficiencies in the gas coordination market?’”
Wright said he didn’t understand stakeholder concerns that gas was being treated differently than coal in terms of fuel assurance. “Why gas and not coal? I find it befuddling the references to the coal pile,” Wright said. “Gas is different. All of these pipelines are FERC-regulated. Coal is off by itself.”
MISO houses about 200 gas-fired generators and more than 30 pipelines. Gas resources, which currently comprise 42% of its generation fleet, will rise to 50% in the coming years, according to the RTO.
In October, gas was 12.8% of the dispatched generation fuel mix in MISO’s Central Region, versus 5.4% of the mix in MISO North and 63.4% of that in MISO South.
“The outlook of gas is it will grow, and in some ways MISO is catching up. There’s going to be a lot of gas demand growth in MISO North and Central,” predicted Wright.
Gas Generators Ready for Winter
Gas system operators reported a “high level” of winter preparedness in The RTO’s third winter generator fuel survey. MISO Electric Gas Operations Coordinator Mark Thomas said 174 gas-fired facilities (representing 63,600 MW, 87% of the RTO’s gas-fired capacity), participated in the survey.
The survey reported connections to more than 30 gas systems in the footprint, with approximately 46,550 MW, or 65% of MISO gas capacity, connected directly to intrastate and interstate pipelines. About 70% of MISO North/Central gas capacity is connected to just five pipelines through direct connect or local distribution companies. MISO found 40% of gas-fired capacity (28,900 MW) had firm transportation and/or dual-fuel capability. “Though an increase from the previous survey, questions remain as MISO expects gas reliance to grow,” the RTO said.
The RTO also found that 42% of responding capacity (30,850 MW) subscribes to no-notice services and 37% of capacity (27,340 MW) has access to firm or interruptible storage.
However, Thomas said 11% of responding generators said they did not have a detailed weatherization plan, including insulation, wind breaks and equipment shelters. He said it was “surprising” that so many did not have a plan in place and wondered whether the question was worded clearly enough.
The third quarter was a good one for the RTO Insider Top 30, as companies reported a 4% increase in revenues over a year earlier and a 22% increase in net income.
Six companies — Avangrid, Calpine, CenterPoint Energy, DTE Energy, Exelon and Great Plains Energy — reported at least a 10% increase in year-over-year revenue. Centerpoint and Entergy rebounded from losses a year earlier.
American Electric Power, which wrote down the value of its Ohio merchant generation by $2.3 billion, was the only company to report a loss for the quarter. (See related story, AEP Ohio Rate Plan Excludes Merchant Generation.)
Consolidated Edison, Pinnacle West Capital, NextEra Energy, FirstEnergy, Entergy, Public Service Enterprise Group and NRG Energy all reported drops in revenue.
NRG reported a six-fold increase in net income despite a nearly 11% drop in revenue, thanks largely to a $266 million gain on sale of assets in the third quarter. Excluding the sale, and $263 million of impairments in the third quarter of 2015, net income declined $203 million because of lower energy margins and increased debt costs, the company said. (See NRG Continues to Pare Down Businesses, Affirms Guidance.)
Sempra Energy and Avangrid each saw profits more than double over 2015.
Company
Market Cap ($ billions)
Revenue Q3 2016 ($ billions)
% change vs. 2015
Net income Q3 2016 ($ millions)
% change vs. 2015
NextEra Energy
54.15
4.81
-3.01
789.00
-10.54
Duke Energy
51.05
6.82
5.21
1181.00
26.31
Dominion Resources
46.57
3.13
5.42
690.00
16.36
American Electric Power
31.57
4.65
4.98
(765.80)
-247.67
Exelon
30.74
9.00
21.63
526.00
-16.38
PG&E
29.59
4.81
5.71
391.00
26.13
Berkshire Hathaway Energy
NA
5.09
0.45
1047.00
18.44
Sempra Energy
26.80
2.54
2.18
622.00
150.81
Edison International
23.54
3.77
0.11
449.00
0.22
PPL
23.48
1.89
0.59
473.00
20.36
Consolidated Edison
22.95
3.42
-0.76
497.00
16.12
Public Service Enterprise Group
21.18
2.45
-8.85
327.00
-25.51
Xcel Energy
20.90
3.04
4.79
457.80
7.35
WEC Energy Group
18.90
1.71
0.81
217.30
19.07
Eversource Energy
17.19
2.04
5.51
267.20
12.36
DTE Energy
16.81
2.93
12.70
325.00
23.11
FirstEnergy
14.08
3.92
-5.00
380.00
-3.80
Entergy
13.74
3.12
-7.32
388.17
-153.69
Avangrid
12.91
1.42
35.31
109.00
101.85
Ameren
11.93
1.86
1.42
369.00
7.58
CMS Energy
11.72
1.59
6.80
186.00
25.68
CenterPoint Energy
10.00
1.89
15.89
179.00
-145.78
Alliant Energy
8.72
0.92
2.86
131.00
-28.22
Pinnacle West Capital
8.46
1.17
-2.69
263.03
2.30
Westar Energy
8.04
0.76
4.34
158.55
12.80
NiSource
7.78
0.86
5.40
27.20
-655.10
OGE Energy
6.31
0.74
3.35
183.60
65.11
Great Plains Energy
5.88
0.86
9.65
133.60
5.36
Calpine
4.54
2.36
20.89
301.00
7.89
NRG Energy
3.54
3.95
-10.87
402.00
509.09
TOTAL
$87.51
3.9%
$10,704.64
21.6%
NOTE: Net Income figures include minority interests; exclude income not available to common shareholders.
Aliso Canyon Injections by Year-end?
Sempra reported third-quarter 2016 earnings of $622 million, up from $248 million a year earlier. Its California utilities saw earnings rise by $21 million, primarily because of higher margins.
San Diego Gas & Electric won state regulators’ approval to own and operate 37.5 MW of energy storage expected to enter commercial operations in the first quarter of 2017.
The company said its Southern California Gas unit “has made significant infrastructure technology and safety enhancements” to the Aliso Canyon gas storage facility and hopes to win regulators’ approval to resume injections by the end of the year.
Avangrid Adding 2,350 MW of Wind Capacity
Avangrid, formerly Iberdrola USA, said it earned net income of $109 million versus $54 million a year ago ($76 million if the costs of the company’s merger with UIL Holdings are excluded.)
CEO James P. Torgerson credited the improvement to “solid earnings” in its networks and renewables businesses, thanks to a rate settlement in New York, higher wind production and the “extension of the useful life of certain wind assets.” The company’s networks unit includes electric and gas utilities in New York, Maine, Connecticut and Massachusetts. Its renewable unit owns 53 wind farms with 5,643 MW of capacity in 18 states.
The company said it will purchase equipment for up to 2,000 MW of additional wind generation and more than 350 MW to repower existing wind turbines by the end of the year to obtain the full value of production tax credits.
“Also, we are contracting additional power purchase agreements as we continue to manage our merchant exposure,” Torgerson said.
WESTBOROUGH, Mass. — A transmission project intended to release bottled wind resources in Maine may not be cost-effective, according to a draft report issued at the ISO-NE Planning Advisory Committee meeting last week.
The needs assessment for the Keene Road market efficiency transmission upgrades showed relatively small annual savings in energy production costs of $1.35 million to $1.38 million (2015 $) if the export limits were raised from the current 165 MW to 195 MW.
An additional increase to 225 MW would save another $100,000 to $180,000. No additional savings are realized if the limit is further raised to 255 MW. The assessment measured the four export limits for the years 2020, 2025 and 2030.
A preliminary economic study from last year estimates the project could save ISO-NE ratepayers $1.4 million to $5.7 million by allowing additional wind development in the area and displacing more expensive hydropower.
“This has the look of providing a de minimis benefit, so you have to ask if it’s worth doing,” said Bob Stein of Signal Hill Consulting Group, who represents Hydro-Quebec and other power generators.
Michael Henderson, ISO-NE’s director of regional planning and coordination, said those were “questions more properly dealt with at a later date.”
The RTO has not released any estimates on the cost of the upgrades, which would be eligible for competitive bidding under FERC Order 1000.
Under the RTO’s Tariff, the cost of a market efficiency project must be less than the resulting production cost savings. “If the ISO does issue a request for proposals and no developer provides a proposal that meets this cost threshold, then no regionally funded transmission project would move forward,” ISO-NE spokeswoman Marcia Blomberg told RTO Insider on Thursday.
A final discussion of the results will be held at the December PAC. In January, the committee will discuss whether to move toward a competitive solicitation for bids from potential developers.
Eighteen years after opening retail electric and gas choice, New York regulators concluded Friday that the initiative has failed, launching a proceeding that could bar energy service companies (ESCOs) from operating in the state.
“After considerable experience with the offering of retail service to mass-market customers by ESCOs, the [New York Public Service Commission] has determined that the retail markets serving mass-market customers are not providing sufficient competition or innovation to properly serve consumers,” the commission wrote in its notice (98-M-1343). “Despite efforts to realign the retail market, customer abuses and overcharging persist, and there has been little innovation, particularly in the provision of energy efficiency and energy management services.”
The commission has attempted to revamp consumer protections in the program, including a guarantee of savings for customers not enrolled with green energy suppliers, but it has been thwarted by the courts. (See Marketers Seek Rehearing on NY Low-Income Moratorium.)
Two-Track Process
The notice sets out a two-track process, one an evidentiary process to determine “whether ESCOs should be completely prohibited from serving their current products to mass-market customers” or whether reforms could save it. Evidentiary hearings will follow written submissions from energy marketers, consumers and PSC staff on a list of 20 questions posed in the notice. Responses are due April 7, 2017.
The commission defines “mass-market” customers as residential and small commercial customers — those whose bills do not include a demand rate element.
Among the questions is whether the commission currently has authority to penalize ESCOs for abuses and whether it should revisit its decision to exempt them from Article 4 of the Public Service Law. Another asks whether ESCOs should be required to offer value-added energy efficiency and energy management services as a condition of selling gas and electricity.
The second track would include “collaborative” meetings of interested parties to develop proposals on what new practices or products “would provide sufficient real value to mass-market customers … [and] ensure just and reasonable rates.”
“For too long, [the PSC] has seen substantial overcharges and deceptive practices by the ESCO industry harming New York consumers,” the commission said in a press release. “As part of these hearings and by obtaining testimony under oath, we will give ESCOs the opportunity to explain their pricing practices and to hear from consumers who have been harmed by these practices. We will then push ahead with reforms to ensure that ESCOs provide useful, value-added, economical services to New York consumers, particularly as part of our efforts under Reforming the Energy Vision.”
ESCOs Cry Foul
ESCOs have said the state’s approach to reform has been heavy-handed and has not given them a proper chance to respond to the allegations. They have also challenged the state’s data.
“The Retail Energy Supply Association believes that a fair and impartial review of New York’s competitive energy markets will show clear and unambiguous benefits for consumers and the state’s economy,” spokesman Bryan Lee said Monday. “RESA seeks to keep the competitive markets for electricity and natural gas open to all consumers. RESA intends to actively participate in this Public Service Commission proceeding to achieve that goal. Consumers enjoy and demand choices in every aspect of their daily purchasing decisions, from car insurance and cell phone providers to doctors and vacation destinations. Any policy changes ultimately identified by the commission must preserve opportunities for choice by consumers in their energy supply decisions.”
Retail choice was phased in by utilities on different schedules, beginning with Consolidated Edison in 1998.
More than 20% of New York’s residential and small commercial customers currently receive energy from one of the approximately 200 ESCOs operating in the state. Regulators have previously cited several examples of unacceptable conduct, including companies that charged more than double or triple the rates of incumbent utilities. The commission has also cited examples of companies falsely representing themselves as local utilities.
BOSTON — The New England Power Pool’s collaborative process to address climate change while preserving wholesale electricity markets won an endorsement from FERC Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur at the ISO-NE Consumer Liaison Group meeting Thursday.
LaFleur, a New England native, was referring to the Integrating Markets and Public Policy collaborative, which seeks to reconcile markets with state mandates to decarbonize the grid. (See Markets vs. Climate Goals the Subject at NECA Conference.)
Stakeholders are meeting into next year with the goal of having ISO-NE present Tariff revisions to FERC.
“I think there’s a lot in it for customers because we will still harness the power of the competitive market while also having the states address climate change [to see if] those are two things that can be reconciled,” she said.
One contentious point is that states have mandated clean energy procurements leading to subsidized out-of-market contracts that skew prices.
“What I’m worried about as we go forward is if we go without a plan and try to have it both ways: try to have a market that’s working … but then we get to a place where it’s not working and it begins to be cannibalized by the subsidized resources,” LaFleur said.
Noting the unlikelihood that the Trump administration would endorse a federal carbon tax, LaFleur said that the commission would probably look favorably on a state-based consensus that meets the regional goals along with market-based solutions.
“In my mind, Plan A is the region creates some kind of comprehensive plan that recognizes the state environmental goals and the [role of] pricing in the wholesale market and files it at FERC,” she said.
She said the two alternatives would have unappealing outcomes: The current state of affairs, with FERC acting as arbiter in the disputes between state governments, RTOs and market participants; or a de facto reregulation, as states more actively promote resource adequacy with preferences for cleaner energy sources, with out-of-favor generators then looking for their own state support.
“Pretty soon you realize the market’s pretty small and you’ve reregulated in a messy, expensive way. I don’t think that’s a good idea, particularly for a region that invented competitive markets, ISO-NE,” she added.
Adjustments Ahead
Besides an expected lessening of government activism in climate policy, LaFleur will have to adjust to being a minority member of FERC when three Republicans are expected to be nominated to FERC next year.
“[FERC commissioner] is my first government job and it’s only been for President Obama, so I’ll see what it’s like,” she said. LaFleur said the Democrats on the commission had a good working relationship with the former Republican members. “The only thing we’ve had that had a partisan feel was anything that relates to environmental rules.”
That could continue.
“One of the things everyone will be watching is where the new administration takes us in the intersection of energy and the environment,” she said.
Regardless of what the Trump administration does, LaFleur said, she’s on FERC for the duration.
“I plan to serve out my term until 2019. I don’t know what anybody else is going to do, but I know what I’m going to do,” she said.
AUSTIN, Texas — ERCOT’s Technical Advisory Committee assigned two subcommittees to consider responses to discrepancies in day-ahead market make-whole payments.
ERCOT staff said it noticed a material increase in make-whole payments in November, which it said resulted from the implementation in June of NPRR617, which eliminated the caps on the first two parts of three-part day-ahead offers. It said a review determined the increase resulted from a mismatch between start-up and minimum energy costs used by the day-ahead market’s clearing engine and those used for payments.
None of the operating days met the 2% threshold to prompt resettlements. A software code fix corrected the problem effective Nov. 16.
The ISO is evaluating additional means of monitoring settlement outcomes “to more rapidly identify implementation issues or other anomalies in the future.”
TAC Chair Adrianne Brandt assigned the issue to the Commercial Operations and Wholesale Market subcommittees for further discussion and potential policy recommendations.
Committee Vice Chairs Approved
The TAC unanimously confirmed Oncor’s Martha Henson as vice chair of the Protocol Revision Subcommittee. The committee also unanimously confirmed the re-election of TXU Energy’s John Schatz as vice chair of the Commercial Operations Subcommittee.
Revision Requests Approved, Tabled
The TAC approved three nodal protocol revision requests (NPRRs), one nodal operating guide revision (NOGRRs) and two revisions to the Settlement Metering Operating Guide (SMOGRRs).
The committee tabled a Commercial Operations Market Guide revision request (COPMGRR044), pending the COPS’ resolution of the related NPRR794. The changes relocate reporting requirements for unregistered distributed generation from the Commercial Operations Market Guide to the protocols.
NPRR773: Broadens the scope of acceptable letter of credit issuers, allowing electric cooperatives to post letters from the National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corp. with ERCOT.
NPRR792: Aligns the nodal protocols with NERC’s definition for special protection system (SPS) and uses “remedial action scheme” and “automatic mitigation plan” in place of SPS for consistency purposes, when applicable. Also approved was the related PGRR051.
NPRR803: Removes un-codified language from NPRR439, which was approved four years ago and updated a counter-party’s available credit limit for the day-ahead market’s current day.
NOGRR162: Establishes a process for resolving real-time data discrepancies that affect ERCOT’s network security analysis. NERC Standard IRO-010-2 (Reliability Coordinator Data Specification and Collection) requires ERCOT and applicable entities to have a mutually agreeable process for resolving real-time data conflicts.
SMOGRR018: A change sponsored by the Texas Industrial Energy Consumers will allow efficient private use network configurations without jeopardizing ERCOT-polled settlement metering requirements.
SMOGRR019: Makes several changes to the Settlement Metering Operating Guide, including a requirement that nameplate photos be submitted as part of site certification package for new or replacement instrument transformers.
Stakeholders also left NOGRR164 on the table until its accompanying protocol change (NPRR792) can be taken up by the board next week. The TAC will then conduct an email vote on the NOGRR.
CARMEL, Ind. — MISO has come up with two possible responses to its Independent Market Monitor’s suggestion to apply its 50-MW physical withholding threshold to affiliated market participants collectively, rather than individually.
MISO told the Resource Adequacy Subcommittee on Nov. 30 that the withholding threshold should either use allocations based on load ratio share, or the fixed 50-MW limit should be scrapped in favor of a new threshold based on percentage of generation assets.
MISO’s Cliff Risley said the downside to the load ratio share option is that market-sensitive information could be released inadvertently through how many megawatts each affiliate is awarded. Risley also said the percentage option could result in more allowed withholding overall and weaken capacity market efficiency.
MISO and the Monitor are proposing to set withholding limits on a company basis rather than the current market participant basis, which allows affiliates to hold back 50 MW apiece without overstepping the Planning Resource Auction withholding threshold. (See “MISO Takes 1st Steps in Monitor Recommendations,” MISO Resource Adequacy Subcommittee Briefs.)
Monitor David Patton said the two alternatives remove the “common incentive” for affiliates to withhold to boost prices for a sister company, but putting the 50 MW on a pro rata basis is “more draconian” than the current market rules.
“There are cases where withholding less than 50 MW is mitigated. You’ve now made the affiliation more stringent,” Patton said. He also said he didn’t know how the percentage method could be distributed fairly.
Some stakeholders argued that FERC Order 697 already prohibits coordination among affiliates that are franchised public utilities and the withholding proposal should only apply to affiliates not covered by the rule.
Risley asked for more stakeholder feedback before Dec. 14.
Projects Without GIA Counted in OMS-MISO Survey?
MISO’s Darrin Landstrom asked stakeholders if the RTO should include resources that have yet to secure a generator interconnection agreement in the annual OMS-MISO Survey.
Currently, MISO only includes Tier 1 resources — those that have a signed generator interconnection agreement — into the survey’s regional and zonal weighted averages. The RTO is asking if it should include Tier 2 resources — projects still in the interconnection queue — into the survey totals, or create a separate survey category for them. RASC Chair Gary Mathis asked if MISO could use historical data to calculate the likelihood of projects being completed after they enter the final stage of the queue. Landstrom said the option could be explored.
Laura Rauch, MISO’s manager of resource adequacy coordination, reminded stakeholders that MISO’s ongoing effort to revise its queue rules could complicate the suggestions, as the queue’s stages and restudy periods could be changed.
Landstrom asked for input on the issue by Dec. 15.
IMM Clears Up Market Mitigation Application
The Monitor is proposing a Tariff change to make clear which resources are subject to PRA market mitigation measures.
IMM staffer Michael Chiasson said market mitigation will apply to “generation resources, including behind-the-meter generation, that are internal to or are pseudo-tied into MISO.”
Chiasson said MISO’s Tariff is currently unclear as to what resources are answerable to the Monitor; the edits would be made to Module D.
Demand resources, energy efficiency resources and external resources will be exempted from market mitigation measures, Chiasson said. He asked for stakeholder feedback by Dec. 14.