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November 5, 2024

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.

Ill. Nuke Bailout Progresses; Exelon Reports Deal with Gov.

By Rory D. Sweeney, Ted Caddell and Amanda Durish Cook

Illinois officials moved closer to a deal to save Exelon’s Clinton and Quad Cities nuclear plants as legislation cleared a House committee and the company reportedly reached agreement with Gov. Bruce Rauner on changes to reduce the bill’s cost.

The House Energy Committee voted 10-1 on Tuesday to send the bill — which would provide Exelon $235 million a year in subsidies for 13 years — to the House floor (SB 2814). Overnight negotiations with Rauner’s office have secured his approval as well, Crain’s Chicago Business reported.

illinois nuclear power Exelon
Illinois Statehouse | Illinois Asset Building Group

“While there is still a lot of work to be done, we are pleased to have an understanding with the governor’s office and continue to work with the four leaders and their professional staffs, as well as other stakeholders and the bill’s more than 200 other supporters, to move this bill forward,” Exelon spokesman Paul Adams said Wednesday. “With today’s progress, we are all one step closer to saving thousands of jobs in Illinois.”

The negotiations with Rauner’s office resulted in a statewide cap on rate increases, removing ratepayer funding for two microgrids and a reduction in funding for solar development, Crain’s said. Subsidies for Dynegy coal plants in southern Illinois and a proposed “grid impact rate” — which would have based power bills on peak use instead of overall usage — had already been removed from the bill that cleared the House committee, the Quad-City Times reported.

Dynegy spokesman David Onufer said the company has withdrawn its support as a result of the elimination of aid for generation in the southern part of the state.

“Leaving out this provision leaves behind Illinois residents and communities in central and southern Illinois. The bill now only helps the few and does not protect the downstate jobs and the economy,” Onufer said. “The flawed downstate energy market doesn’t allow plants to recover costs. Nearly 20% of downstate Illinois’ generating capacity has already been retired or mothballed this year.”

Exelon threatened in May to shut down the money-losing Clinton and Quad Cities nuclear plants if the state didn’t provide subsidies, such as the emissions credits proposed in the new bill. (See Bill to Save Coal, Nuclear Plants Introduced in Illinois.)

A variety of organizations, such as the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, the Illinois attorney general’s office and AARP Illinois, have criticized the proposal for raising customers’ bill too much. They were hoping to find alternative economic tools to keep the nuclear facilities open, the Times reported.

Several environmental groups, including the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition, the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, are supportive of renewable energy incentives in the bill. The Citizens Utility Board also supports it. It’s unclear, however, whether the changes negotiated with Rauner will cause the bill to lose support.

Lawmakers representing the regions home to the generating plants are also supportive. Republican State Rep. Bill Mitchell had been concerned the bill had become too big to remain stable and was pleased Rauner got involved.

“It’s always been my concern that the bill gets so big, it collapses, just like a gaming bill usually does,” he told Illinois Public Media. “They get so big, they collapse under their own weight. The alternative to have no bill is not good for the state of Illinois.”

Lawmakers have little time to complete their work as the legislature’s current “veto” session is due to end Thursday.

ERCOT Tops 15,000 MW in Wind Generation

Less than two weeks after setting a wind generation record for grid operators, ERCOT became the first to exceed 15,000 MW when its system generated 15,033 MW of wind energy on Nov. 27.

ercot wind generation
Roscoe Wind Farm | Wikimedia

ERCOT set its latest record at 12:35 p.m., when wind energy represented about 45% of the system’s total demand. The Texas grid operator said more than 8,800 MW came from facilities in West and North Texas, nearly 3,800 MW came from South Texas and about 2,300 MW came from the Panhandle.

Wind generation accounted for 11.7% of ERCOT’s energy production in 2015 but has provided 14.7% in 2016.

ERCOT said it recorded high wind outputs throughout the day, with just more than 10,000 MW at night into the noon hour. Its previous record of 14,122 MW came on Nov. 17.

The ISO has more than 17,000 MW of installed wind capacity, which is expected to top 19,000 MW by the end of 2016.

– Tom Kleckner

FERC OKs One-Year Extension for CAISO’s Aliso Canyon Gas Rules

By Robert Mullin

FERC approved CAISO’s plan to extend the temporary Tariff provisions the ISO implemented last June in response to natural gas pipeline restrictions stemming from last year’s closure of the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility.

The measures — which are intended to reduce the potential for blackouts through improved gas-electric coordination — now remain effective until Nov. 30, 2017, a year after the original sunset date.

“We find that continuation of the interim measures for an additional year should improve scheduling coordinators’ ability to manage their gas procurement and enhance their ability to recover gas procurement costs, while also providing CAISO with flexible tools to maintain reliability and avoid adverse market outcomes related to the limited operability of Aliso Canyon,” the commission wrote in its Nov. 28 decision (ER17-110).

ferc enhancement measures aliso canyon
With no timetable set for the reopening of the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility, CAISO sought to extend for another year interim market measures designed to deal with gas supply restrictions this past summer. | California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services

In a separate ruling Nov. 21, the commission also approved the ISO’s request to make permanent three other related “bidding enhancement measures” approved by FERC on June 1 that also would have expired Nov. 30. (See below.)

No Timetable for Return

The ISO sought expedited approval to extend the Alison Canyon measures to head off concerns about potential natural gas shortages during the coming winter, a second peak season for Southern California gas consumption because of increased residential heating. (See CAISO Seeks to Extend Aliso Canyon Gas Rules Through Winter.)

While Aliso Canyon owner Southern California Gas has been testing the storage facility for leaks, the California Public Utilities Commission has not yet set a timetable for reopening the facility. State regulators have instead signaled that they expect utilities to implement winter-specific measures for electricity consumers that would mirror the state’s successful summer response to constrained gas supplies. (See Sandoval: Nuke Shutdown, Auto-DR Aided Aliso Canyon Response.)

For its part, CAISO is preparing for the facility to remain out of service for most of 2017.

The commission’s decision enables the ISO to extend provisions that provide scheduling coordinators with two-day ahead advisory schedules and allow gas-fired generating units to incorporate more timely fuel prices into their market offers. It also continues use of an after-the-fact cost recovery mechanism for generators that includes pipeline penalties and is based on same-day gas prices rather than day-ahead gas indices.

The ISO will also retain its authority to override its “dynamic competitive path” assessment when it determines that the transmission path is no longer competitive in the face of a gas constraint, as well as to suspend virtual bidding to prevent market manipulation.

The commission also approved CAISO’s request to refine a provision that allows the ISO to enforce a market constraint that limits the minimum and maximum amount of gas that can be burned by generators in the affected area during periods of restricted supply. The refinement will set a limit on the maximum burn only, given that generators this summer demonstrated they could regulate their minimum burns simply by lowering the price of their bids into the real-time electricity market.

‘Objective Standard’ Rejected

FERC rejected a request by the Western Power Trading Forum (WPTF) to require CAISO to establish standards for deeming when a constrained transmission path has become uncompetitive or suspending convergence bidding. Reprising a statement from its decision authorizing the original Aliso Canyon measures, the commission said “the impact of the natural gas constraint on the assessment of competitive paths can only be assessed based on actual system conditions once the constraint is in place.”

Requiring CAISO “to develop objective standards for when and how these measures may be implemented is not feasible,” the commission concluded.

However, the commission did agree to a WPTF request that the ISO be required to publish a market notice for any revisions made to generator gas adders — rather than just during instances when the adder is increased.

The commission also said it agreed with market participants who filed comments contending that the interim measures should not become substitutes for permanent market reforms that could become necessary in the future.

“We find that the Tariff revisions proposed here are appropriate for mitigating the risks resulting from the limited operability of Aliso Canyon but expect CAISO to honor its commitment to consider other types of longer-term market enhancements,” the commission said. It encouraged the ISO to begin a stakeholder process to address the potential need for additional measures dealing with exceptional — or out-of-market — dispatches related to the facility’s closure.

Nov. 21 Ruling

In a separate ruling Nov. 21, the commission approved the ISO’s request to make permanent three “bidding enhancement measures” approved by FERC on June 1 to address summer gas supply concerns (ER16-2445). (See FERC Approves CAISO’s Aliso Canyon Response Plan Ahead of Summer.)

The Tariff revisions allow scheduling coordinators to rebid commitment costs in the real-time market if they were not committed in the day-ahead market or residual unit commitment process; ensure that the ISO’s short-term unit commitment process does not commit resources that did not submit bids into the real-time market unless they were scheduled or committed in the day-ahead market or had a real-time must-offer obligation; and allow scheduling coordinators to seek after-the-fact recovery of unrecovered commitment costs that exceed the commitment cost bid cap as a result of actual fuel procurement costs.

CAISO told FERC that the Tariff provisions were developed independently of the concern over Aliso Canyon as part of a stakeholder effort approved by the ISO’s Board of Governors in March 2016.

Although the changes were not intended to be temporary, the ISO said it included them in the package of interim revisions accepted in the June 1 order because it believed they would help it manage the transmission system and market operations during the summer.

The commission said the Tariff revisions “should provide more accurate prices in the real-time market and help avoid the inefficient dispatch of resources in the real-time market based upon bids that may not reflect current fuel prices.”

Monitor Seeks Sunset

The ISO’s internal Department of Market Monitoring told FERC the language permitting the real-time rebidding of commitment costs should only be extended until the end of summer 2017 pending a review of how limitations on rebidding commitment costs could be directly enforced through the ISO’s market software. The Monitor said it opposed continued reliance on non-automated, after-the-fact monitoring and enforcement to protect against the potential for excessive bid cost recovery payments.

The commission rejected the Monitor’s request to sunset the real-time rebidding rules but ordered CAISO to submit an informational report by Oct. 1, 2017, “detailing its assessment of the effectiveness of the rebidding process and its efforts to automate the monitoring and enforcement process.”

FERC OKs Duke, Constellation Settlements

FERC approved a settlement over Constellation Power Source Generation’s reactive service payments that was initially opposed by PJM’s Independent Market Monitor (ER16-746, EL16-57).

The Nov. 21 order requires Constellation to file a revised reactive service revenue requirement no later than Jan. 16, 2017, and to make refunds if the resulting requirement for Constellation’s units in the Baltimore Gas and Electric zone is less than $1.24 million per year.

constellation settlements duke energy ferc
Constellation’s Gould Street generator is one of the resources providing reactive power in PJM’s BGE zone. | Creative Commons – DeanLaw

The Monitor initially asked FERC to add a list of conditions to the settlement, including updated power factor tests and eliminating the recovery of heating losses. The Monitor said the commission should end the practice of allowing cost of service rates for reactive capability and said if the practice is not discontinued the costs eligible for recovery should include only fixed costs incurred solely for providing reactive service.

On Oct. 4, the Monitor withdrew its opposition to the settlement, “because the settlement ‘establishes no principles and no precedent with respect to any issue in this proceeding’” and because Constellation must make a new filing.

The settlement resulted from a review ordered by FERC in May, when the commission reduced Constellation’s reactive payments by almost $225,000 to reflect the retirements of three generators. (See “Constellation’s Reactive Payments Cut Due to Retirements,” FERC Rulings in Brief.)

Duke Energy ROE Reduced

FERC on Nov. 21 approved an uncontested settlement reducing Duke Energy’s return on equity for transmission to 10%, down from 10.2% (Duke Energy Carolinas) and 10.8% (Duke Energy Progress) (EL16-29, EL16-30).

The settlement also terminates the amortization of Duke Energy Carolinas’ expenses on the aborted GridSouth RTO effective Dec. 31, 2015, caps common equity ratios and a sets a moratorium on changes in the ROE and equity cap through Dec. 31, 2019.

– Rich Heidorn Jr.

Connecticut Advances Small-Scale Renewables Contracts

By William Opalka

Connecticut has selected 25 small clean energy and energy efficiency projects totaling 402 MW to negotiate power purchase agreements with the state’s two electric distribution companies.

The Class I projects, all less than 20 MW each, responded to a request for proposals earlier this year. They will negotiate PPAs with Eversource Energy and United Illuminating as part of Connecticut’s legislative mandate to decarbonize its electric generation resources.

Wind Turbine | CTEWD - Get Into Energy CT
Wind Turbine | CTEWD – Get Into Energy CT

“The response to the RFP for small-scale clean energy projects was robust and competitive — giving us the welcome challenge of carefully considering more than 100 projects and evaluating them against our established criteria,” Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Commissioner Robert Klee said in a statement Nov. 28.

Included among the 25 projects are 11 totaling 170 MW within the state: nine solar, one wind and 34 MW of energy efficiency offered by Eversource, making it both a resource supplier and the EDC negotiating procurement.

“DEEP and the state Attorney General’s office will play a role in development of the efficiency contract,” DEEP spokesman Dennis Schain told RTO Insider. “Also, all contracts have to be reviewed and approved by our utility regulatory body, so there are protections for ratepayers in this project from Eversource having been selected.”

Besides the 11 Connecticut projects, seven have been selected in Vermont, two each in Maine, Massachusetts and New York, and one in New Hampshire. The projects range in size from 3.5 MW of wind in Connecticut to two solar projects of 19.99 MW in New York.

Final contracts will be submitted to the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority for approval, which is expected in early 2017.

Connecticut also is part of a separate procurement with Massachusetts and Rhode Island for large-scale projects of 20 MW or greater. The states selected seven projects totaling 460 MW for contract negotiations. However, those negotiations have been stayed by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals following a challenge by Allco Renewable Finance, a developer of small-scale renewable projects. Oral arguments in that case are scheduled for Dec. 9 (Allco Finance Limited v. Klee, 16-2946). (See Court Halts New England Clean Energy Contracts.)

FERC Declines PURPA Case

In a related matter, FERC ruled Nov. 22 against initiating an enforcement action against Connecticut regulators over Allco Finance’s claims that the state was not abiding by the mandatory purchase requirements of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (EL16-115, QF16-362, et al.).

The commission’s action means Allco and its unit Windham Solar may file their own enforcement action against the PURA “in the appropriate court,” FERC said.

Allco contends the state regulators improperly concluded that Windham is not entitled to a legally enforceable obligation at a forecasted avoided cost rate and that Eversource has no need for capacity.

It is at least the third time this year that declined to act on Allco’s PURPA claims. (See FERC Rejects Enforcement Action in Connecticut PURPA Dispute.)

Clean Energy Innovation Requires Collaboration, Researcher Says

By Rory D. Sweeney

PHILADELPHIA — The next wave of clean-energy innovation will require collaboration as well as competition, says a researcher for the Near Zero energy policy advocacy group.

Speaking at a lecture series sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania’s Kleinman Center for Energy Policy last week, Dan Sanchez, a postdoctoral scholar at the Carnegie Institution for Science, said sharing intellectual property and allowing open access to research data are catalysts necessary for growth in the clean energy industry.

clean energy innovation
Researcher Dan Sanchez discussing his conclusions for developing effective clean-energy policy. | © RTO Insider

“There’s actually some really strong empirical work that shows that connectivity between the private sector and the public sector really does improve innovation outcomes and really does improve the chances that publicly funded research results in commercially successful products,” he said.

Sanchez focused his argument on two initiatives, one an institutional effort and the other creating a roadmap for successful implementation of technology. The technological initiative focused on developments in bio-energy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS).

The institutional effort focused on Mission Innovation, a 23-country commitment established in 2015 to double their annual combined public funding of clean-energy research and development from $15 billion per year to $30 billion per year by 2021.

Consistency is Key

He identified three “waves” of clean-energy investment in the past 70 years that failed to take hold permanently: nuclear energy following World War II; nuclear, renewables and energy efficiency in response to the oil crisis of the 1970s; and renewables, carbon sequestration, efficiency and grid upgrades in the 2000s.

Following each spurt of investment, there was a “dramatic retrenchment” in private funding as projects failed to deliver on their promises, he said.

“I think the lesson of the past two waves of energy innovation is that capricious funding — funding that ramps up and then ramps down very quickly — can really stall the pace of innovation,” he said. “Following World War II, the U.S. and the European Union in particular really focused on research and development of nuclear energy technologies. … We really kind of settled on standardized technology pretty quickly, and then dramatically reduced our R&D funds.”

Sanchez sees Mission Innovation having the potential to spur a fourth investment wave and says a clear, consistent path will be necessary to sustain it. That will include a centralized, independent headquarters, along with public visibility of R&D expenditures and better coordination among countries. For example, the U.S. and China have been collaborating for the past eight years on clean energy research centers, but in the past five years, no joint patents have been filed nor have any projects truly been jointly funded, Sanchez said.

“Essentially, the U.S. funded their technologies; China funded their technologies. They shared a little bit of information, but it really wasn’t joint, collaborative R&D in the way we’d really like to see,” Sanchez said.

BECCS

Sanchez focused on BECCS as a likely candidate for the next investment wave. He pointed out that just one facility in the world — an Archer Daniels Midland corn-to-ethanol plant in Decatur, Ill. — is employing the technology to sequester about 1 million tons of carbon dioxide a year, accounting for about 1/10,000th of the worldwide reductions that are estimated to be necessary.

“It’s fair to say there’s a very large gap between where we want to be and where we are right now,” he said.

Critics have said experimenting with sequestration could delay deployment of emissions technologies and even provide tacit acceptance of additional emissions. But Sanchez said that perspective misses the “market opportunity” that could be created by planning the development and deployment of the technology — essentially creating a roadmap for its successful implementation.

Next Steps

Sanchez said whether researching technologies or getting them deployed deserves more focus is the wrong question. “I think a lot of people frame this as an either/or question, but I think it’s silly … because it’s pretty obvious we really need both,” he said. “There’s not really enough time in the day to really fight those fights.”

He pointed to gasification of coal and biomass as technologies with high commercial potential because of their ability to balance carbon-reduction product costs and scale facilities. However, the necessary research will require collaboration among public and private organizations. He offered as a successful model the National Nanotechnology Initiative, which coordinates the work of 13 federal agencies and industry groups in addition to performing regulatory and public outreach.

Combining lessons learned from the BECCS and Mission Innovation initiatives, Sanchez said, could “fill the gap between our ambitions and where our technologies lie right now.”

Davis Quits Arkansas Commission for MISO South Post

By Amanda Durish Cook

Arkansas Public Service Commissioner Lamar Davis has resigned to take a newly created position as executive director of government and regulatory affairs for MISO’s South Region.

Beginning Dec. 1, Davis will serve as MISO’s main liaison with state regulators, lawmakers and governors within MISO South, the RTO said Nov. 28. Davis resigned from the PSC effective Nov. 25.

Davis is the third former state regulator to join MISO’s staff since last year, following Vice President of Government and Regulatory Affairs David Boyd, who joined the RTO in 2015 after eight years on the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, and former Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Chairman Andre Porter, who resigned to become vice president and general counsel in May. (See Former PUCO Chairman Andre Porter Joins MISO.)

“MISO is truly honored and excited to have Lamar join our team,” said Todd Hillman, vice president of MISO’s South Region. “We look forward to Lamar representing MISO South and the work we are doing to facilitate collaboration among state regulators, policymakers and stakeholders.”

Prior to his appointment to the PSC in January 2015, Davis served eight years as deputy chief of staff under former Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe. Davis was also an assistant attorney general in Arkansas’ Consumer Protection Division, taught consumer law at the William H. Bowen School of Law in Little Rock, Ark., and served as a law clerk for the Arkansas Court of Appeals.

“These roles have afforded me the opportunity to work with countless public servants to serve the people of Arkansas, which has been very rewarding,” Davis said in a PSC statement. “I now have been offered a position in the private sector that will afford me the opportunity to champion policies to help advance the goals of our beloved state and region.”

Davis received his law degree from Bowen and a bachelor’s in political science from Dillard University in New Orleans.

Loss on Water Permit a Setback for Indian Point Extension

By William Opalka

New York’s highest court ruled Monday that the Indian Point nuclear plant is subject to state coastal waters rules — a potential hurdle in Entergy’s bid to extend the plant’s operating licenses.

The unanimous Court of Appeals ruling said that Entergy must obtain a Department of State permit under the state’s Coastal Zone Management program. Indian Point Units 2 and 3 are on the banks of the Hudson River, 30 miles north of New York City.

“In sum, the Department of State’s interpretation of the exemptions in the Coastal Management Program, and its conclusion that Entergy’s application to relicense the nuclear reactors at Indian Point is subject to consistency review, are rational and must be sustained,” the court said.

New York’s CMP, adopted in 1982, includes protections for fish and wildlife while also “meeting public energy needs in an environmentally safe manner,” according to the opinion.

License Extensions

The plants were licensed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the early 1970s and are operating under extensions while the commission reviews their applications for 20-year license renewals.

Entergy applied for the license renewals in 2007 and initially conceded that its application was subject to the state review under the CMP. In 2012, however, Entergy changed its position, arguing that the plants were grandfathered.

The court disagreed, saying that relicensing applications require new permits. Nuclear power plants’ use of state waterways is listed as a regulated use.

indian point, new york, clean energy standard
Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant

“Entergy is reviewing the court’s decision to determine its next steps, which could include refiling its Coastal Zone Management application that Entergy previously withdrew pending issuance of the NRC’s final supplemental environmental impact statement,” the company said in a statement. “Notwithstanding this court decision, we continue to believe we will ultimately be successful in obtaining a CZM permit and relicensing Indian Point. The facility continues to safely operate in a manner that is fully protective of the Hudson River and in compliance with state and federal law.”

The 16-page decision overturned a previous ruling from an Appellate Division court, which sided with Entergy.

The state’s objections to Indian Point will now be considered as part of the record for federal relicensing. However, if the state eventually denies a coastal certification, the plant owner could appeal to the U.S. Department of Commerce, which could override the state’s action, according to the decision.

Entergy also has a concurrent challenge pending in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York. It sued New York in January, claiming the state’s attempts to require a CMP review intrudes on federal jurisdiction.

According to Entergy’s 2016 Form 10-K, New York is citing “nuclear safety concerns.”

That is a persistent complaint after a series of mishaps occurred in recent years at the plant.

“Indian Point is antiquated and does not belong on the Hudson River in close proximity to New York City, where it poses a threat not only to the coastal resources and uses of the river, but to millions of New Yorkers living and working in the surrounding community,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement.

Cuomo, along with several of the state’s environmental organizations, has long advocated the plant’s closure. (See Environmental Groups Press for Indian Point Shutdown.)

Cooling Towers

Entergy also has been challenging New York’s contention that closed-cycle cooling would be the “best technology available” for addressing concerns over the impact of the nuclear plants’ cooling water intakes on aquatic life.

The company has estimated that retrofitting Indian Point with cooling towers would cost more than $1.2 billion. The company proposed as an alternative the use of cylindrical wedgewire screens at an estimated cost of $250 million to $300 million.

Because of the uncertainty over whether it will succeed in relicensing, Entergy said it may enter into fewer unit-contingent forward sales contracts for output from the plants.