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November 18, 2024

NARUC Panel: CPP Poised to Fall Under Trump, New Congress

By Robert Mullin

LA QUINTA, Calif. — While the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States has clouded the future of federal energy policy, one thing is clear: President Obama’s Clean Power Plan won’t figure into it.

Such was the consensus view of a panel convened last week at the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners annual conference to discuss the election’s potential impact on energy sector regulation.

“The Clean Power Plan is done — for the time being,” said Ray Gifford, past chairman of the Colorado Public Utilities Commission and formerly president of the Progress and Freedom Foundation, a now-defunct conservative think tank that advocated for reduced federal oversight of the telecommunications industry.

clean power plan trump naruc
NARUC “What’s Next” Panel Left to Right: Former Colorado Governor Bill Ritter Jr.; Adam Bender, Communications Daily; Devin Hartman, R Street Institute; Ray Gifford, Wilkinson, Barker & Knauer; Moderator Travis Kavulla, Montana PSC | © RTO Insider

Gifford said the unwinding of the CPP could be part of a broader effort by Congress “to undertake broad-based regulatory reform,” which would also include eliminating the doctrine of “net neutrality” in telecommunications regulation.

Former Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter, now director of the liberal Center for a New Energy Economy, agreed with Gifford’s assessment, though he didn’t share his enthusiasm that the change would be positive.

“Ray’s right, [the CPP] is likely to be undone,” Ritter said, adding that “it’s connected back to Congress reasserting itself.”

Not So Bleak

Still, the prospects for reducing greenhouse gas emissions aren’t so bleak, speakers said.

“The interesting thing about state work is you realize that, apart from the Clean Power Plan — markets are already driving us to a variety of different methods of decarbonization,” Ritter said, acknowledging that state public policies are driving markets “to some extent.”

But markets have their limitations and cannot “dictate the timing” of dealing with issues such as climate change in a serious way, Ritter contended.

“So, what you’re going to see is a variety of states that are going to say, ‘We’re not going to let the markets control this because we think climate change is this important thing and we need to act,’” Ritter said, referring to the ambitious renewable energy standards enacted by states such as California, Hawaii, New York, Oregon and Vermont.

“It feels to me like there’s some momentum there that’s not going to be necessarily impacted by a course direction at the federal level,” Ritter said.

Moderating the panel was Montana Public Service Commissioner and outgoing NARUC President Travis Kavulla, who asked Gifford whether newly empowered Republicans would allow states to continue to pursue policies favoring renewable resources or intervene on behalf of traditional resource industries.

“I think that’s the big question, Travis,” Gifford replied. “I think Republican orthodoxy is to let the states be laboratories of democracy. You send power back to the states; you let those decisions be made closer to point of contact with the voters and the citizens.”

States’ Impacts on RTOs

But Gifford asserted that RTOs and ISOs are “being roiled by state action underneath them,” citing New Jersey and Maryland legislators’ attempt to fund new generators for their states and efforts by New York, Ohio and Illinois to subsidize existing in-state fossil and nuclear plants. (See related story, Bill to Save Coal, Nuclear Plants Introduced in Illinois.)

“That’s a big issue for the next FERC, and how they deal with it is anybody’s guess because you’ve got a lot of strains going on in markets and you’ve got a lot of states very unhappy with what markets are yielding,” Gifford said. “By watching New York, Ohio and Illinois the next six months to a year, and watching how FERC reacts and how the administration reacts, I think says a lot about the future of these wholesale energy markets.”

Hartman | © RTO Insider
Hartman | © RTO Insider

Devin Hartman, electricity policy manager at R Street Institute, a think tank that promotes competitive electricity markets and “limited, effective government,” said his organization “doesn’t see a clear need to reform any of the core aspects” of the Federal Power Act, although clarity is needed on what forms of state intervention in the energy sector would be viewed as acceptable under the act.

A specific area of concern: the need for a clearer line between federal and state authority over policies concerning distributed energy resources.

“It’s important to keep the core principles of the Federal Power Act intact, which has been correctly interpreted by FERC to uphold competitive markets,” Hartman said.

Conservative lawmakers might turn their attention to “tackling” the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act, according to Gifford, who referred to the act as “strange, outdated law” with “a very bad track record.”

False Price Signals

“You can maybe give it credit for juicing the independent power production world,” Gifford said, but PURPA also created “false price signals.”

“It doesn’t fit with Devin’s competitive wholesale market model at all, and it has brought many states to their knees,” Gifford said. “So I’d start with, ‘Let’s erase it and start the bidding from there.’”

Ritter said the potential for grid modernization represented the “biggest difference” between a Hillary Clinton and a Trump administration on issues related to electricity.

“It’s something that you as commissioners should care a great deal about,” Ritter told the audience, referring to the deployment of microgrids, “smart grid” technologies and transmission network improvements.

Gifford | © RTO Insider
Gifford (left) and Kavulla | © RTO Insider

Ritter said he hopes grid modernization will end up as part of a broader infrastructure package under the new administration.

“But there are a lot of people that hear infrastructure and they don’t think the grid,” Ritter said.

Panelists were asked to conclude the session with a bit of advice for the incoming president and Congressional leadership.

“Pay attention to science,” Ritter said. “I really respect the attention that we need to pay to markets, but markets can’t always dictate timing.” He added that the U.S. needs to understand its “role and obligation in trying to address the very serious global problem” of climate change.

Hartman said it’s important that the country take a “long-term view” on the efficacy of environmental policies that he thinks could cause economic harm without making much of a dent in overall global emissions.

“When we see international environmental progress work well, it’s when the emissions abatement technology was cheap,” Hartman said. “That’s where a long-term innovation agenda is so important.”

Gifford wrapped up with a humorous solution.

“Appoint state commissioners to federal agencies and regulatory commissions,” he said to laughter. “Pandering to the audience, you can never go wrong.”

Clark: Trump Election to Have Limited Impact on FERC

In a separate question-and-answer session with Kavulla, former FERC Commissioner Tony Clark said it was too early to tell exactly what impact Trump’s election would have on the CPP.

“We know that the new administration has indicated that they’re going to look to pull it back in some way,” he said, adding that states will likely have “more time and flexibility” to deal with the changes that would come with the plan.

Clark doesn’t see significant post-election implications for FERC as an agency.

“You tend to not see huge swings out of FERC” after elections, he said. “You’ll have a little more of a bully pulpit, maybe, on some of the reliability issues where reliability and environmental regulations come up.

“But any new group of commissioners brings a [bit of a] different perspective,” Clark said.

‘Unraveling Consensus’

NARUC general session audience | © RTO Insider
NARUC general session audience | © RTO Insider

Clark said he thinks there’s been “an unraveling of the regulatory consensus” during the 16 years he’s worked as a utility regulator. He said regulators at one time focused on answering the question of what are the most safe, reliable and affordable forms of energy to serve ratepayers.

Now the questions are myriad.

“In some cases it’s things like, ‘How do I preserve these generation jobs in my state?’” said Clark, who agreed to join law firm Wilkinson Barker Knauer after four years on FERC and 12 years on the North Dakota Public Service Commission.

“How do I preserve my tax base? How do my utilities plan for a carbon-constrained future? How do they reduce their carbon footprint?”

naruc clean power plan
Clark | © RTO Insider

Clark hedged on a question about whether electricity regulation has become more partisan.

“Maybe in some way,” Clark said. “I think so much of environmental politics has come into the job that utility commissioners do.”

Still, Clark said that utility commissions are relatively insulated from politics compared with other federal and state agencies.

Speaking of his time at FERC, Clark noted, “We often said there is no Democrat or Republican way to keep the lights on, and I think that consciously trying to keep politics at bay and out of the regulatory commission was something that was very important for the long-term integrity of the agency.”

NYISO Board Denies Generators’ Appeal on Capacity Cap

The NYISO Board of Directors on Tuesday upheld the Management Committee’s vote to cap capacity payments in the constrained Lower Hudson Valley and New York City zones.

nyiso board of directors capacity payments cap

Zone Map | NYISO

The board’s Nov. 15 order rejected an appeal by the Independent Power Producers of New York. The association sought to overturn the Management Committee’s Oct. 25 vote, which the ISO said was needed to protect consumers from higher prices. (See Generators Appeal Lower NY Capacity Cap.)

The rule change was in response to FERC’s Oct. 17 order allowing Castleton Commodities International’s 1,242-MW Roseton 1 generator to supply 511 MW of its capacity to ISO-NE beginning next June for the 2017/18 delivery year.

The board’s written decision rejecting IPPNY’s appeal has not yet been posted on NYISO’s website.

– William Opalka

NARUC Panelists Discuss Impact of Rate Design on EV Adoption

By Robert Mullin

LA QUINTA, Calif. — California has about 230,000 electric vehicles on the road, representing almost half of the EVs in the U.S.

Mississippi has about 260.

Peterman | © RTO Insider NARUC electric vehicles ev
Peterman | © RTO Insider

California Public Utilities Commissioner Carla Peterman sees zero difference between the two numbers.

“Now, granted, [there are] three zeros of difference,” she said, eliciting laughter during a panel discussion on EV rate design at the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners’ annual conference last week. “But I really see zero difference.”

Despite the current disparity between the two states, Peterman explained, every state commission in the country will eventually face the same challenges related to greater adoption of EVs.

Although California leads the nation in EVs, their penetration still represents less than 1% of the state’s passenger fleet. But that is expected to change. Bloomberg New Energy Finance forecasts that the total unsubsidized cost of owning an EV will likely fall below that of a gas-powered car by the mid-2020s.

“You need to be thinking about how these vehicles interconnect” with the grid, Peterman said.

Key Questions

Peterman said there are several key questions commissions must ask themselves: How do EVs impact my system? What type of load do they add? Are the vehicles charging at times that make sense?

California’s thinking about EVs has evolved over time, from focusing on how to reduce the negative impact of EVs on the grid to exploring ways in which the vehicles can actually support the state’s objectives, Peterman said.

The state’s investor-owned utilities (IOUs) were once prohibited from becoming too deeply involved in EV charging based on concerns about anti-competitiveness, Peterman explained. But with this summer’s passage of Senate Bill 32,  which requires the state to reduce its emissions to 40% below 1990 levels by 2030, vehicle electrification is now a “principal goal” for utilities.

To facilitate this new role for the IOUs, the CPUC has been accepting applications to create pilot programs for developing an EV charging infrastructure. The proposals have resulted in a variety of models.

One proposal would have San Diego Gas & Electric owning the charging infrastructure and rolling it into the company’s rate base as a capital expenditure. Another would have Southern California Edison investing in the “make-ready” — the infrastructure from the meter to the charger, which would be treated as an operating expense and also rolled into rates.

In approving an EV infrastructure model, state commissions need to consider the benefits for all ratepayers, not just EV drivers, Peterman said. California set out the benefits in statute, including some not easy to quantify, such as a more reliable grid, improved air quality, greenhouse gas reductions and the creation of better-paying jobs.

She added that commissions should also guard against anti-competitive behavior, allowing EV flexibility to choose charging equipment.

EV-Specific Tariffs

Peterman also suggested adopting specific tariffs for EV drivers.

“You want to encourage charging at times when power is plentiful,” she said, adding that California sees EVs as a way to absorb excess electricity produced by solar installations during the day.

“That electricity is so low cost, especially compared with oil, why not have an opportunity for your vehicles to run on that?” Peterman said.

Saari | © RTO Insider - NARUC electric vehicles ev
Saari | © RTO Insider

With a contested proceeding on EV infrastructure currently before his agency, Michigan Public Service Commissioner Norm Saari had to remain tightlipped on his views about how to allocate those costs. But he also laid out a not-too-distant future in which all commissioners would confront the EV issue.

EVs “are now driving in the fast lane,” he said, citing the performance figures for the latest Tesla Motors models.

He added that in some states, EVs are also eligible to travel in the high-occupancy vehicle lane.

“EVs are not just the noble [experiment] they were a decade ago,” Saari said.

Saari pointed to the multitude of federal programs promoting the adoption of EVs, which includes the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) mileage standards for auto manufacturers, tax incentives and the Obama administration’s recently announced effort to create 48 EV charging corridors throughout the country. (See White House Announces Nationwide EV Charging Network.)

“Regulators, the private sector and utilities have some critical decisions to make on where the EV world is going to be taking us,” Saari said.

California, Oregon Cited

NARUC electric vehicles ev
Jenks | © RTO Insider

He lauded the work that regulators in states such as California and Oregon have already done to anticipate the adoption of EVs and said EV forums among state regulators are a critical way to share best practices.

“I would encourage other state regulators, if you haven’t put together the subject matter experts to plan out the programs, now’s the time to really look at doing that,” Saari said.

Bob Jenks, executive director of the Citizens’ Utility Board of Oregon, expressed surprise that policymakers are looking at his state’s cost recovery provisions for EV infrastructure as a model for the rest of the country.

Those provisions require the state commission to condition a utility’s recovery on whether an EV-related project is within the utility’s service territory; is prudent as determined by the commission; is reasonably expected to be used; is expected to stimulate innovation, competition and customer choice; and is expected to support the utility’s system.

“As somebody who was in the room when we negotiated that piece of legislation, I can tell you that the last thing we thought we were doing was setting some sort of national standard for ratemaking associated with EVs,” Jenks said. “All we were trying to do, quite frankly, was get a deal — with the legislative clock ticking during a short legislative session — that we had to have [done] that afternoon.”

Jenks said the EV section of the deal was almost eliminated at the last minute.

The cost recovery provisions, Jenks explained, are not specific to EV infrastructure but apply to any investment made by the state’s utilities.

That last consideration — supporting the utility’s system — could be key for Oregon utilities seeking to gain approval for EV infrastructure projects. Jenks cited a Pacific Northwest National Laboratory study that concluded widespread adoption of EVs could help the region integrate all of its wind.

Time-of-Use Rates

For that reason, Jenks cautioned against imposing time-of-use rates for EV drivers.

“I don’t know that time-of-use rates are the best way to deal with wind variability,” he said.

Jenks also said states should avoid using rate design to lead their EV policies.

“I think where we need to go is direct load control by the utility,” Jenks said. “There has to be a program to compensate customers for it, but I don’t know what that is.”

“We will design these [programs] down the road and these will evolve,” he said.

PJM, MISO Go Quiet on Pseudo-Ties; Reach Interface Pricing Accord

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — Tim Horger, manager of interregional coordination at PJM, said last week that MISO and PJM have agreed not to publicly talk about the issue of pseudo-tie congestion double-counting until a FERC complaint on the issue is resolved.

Horger | © RTO Insider - pjm miso pseudo-ties
Horger | © RTO Insider

Some stakeholders were frustrated with the gag order curbing work on fixing the double-counting, reasoning that if the RTOs used ongoing litigation as a silencing factor, then it could be argued that even capacity could not be discussed.

Tilton Energy, the owner of a 180-MW natural gas generator in Eastern Illinois, filed the complaint in August, arguing that MISO is violating its Tariff by assessing congestion and scheduling fees on Tilton’s pseudo-tie transactions that have already been assessed by PJM (EL16-108).

“At least as early as February 2016, MISO and PJM have been aware of, and discussed at JCM [Joint and Common Market] meetings, the potential that generation pseudo-tied from MISO to PJM may be assessed duplicative congestion costs when market-to-market constraints bind simultaneously in both markets,” Tilton said. “While the JCM stakeholder process grinds on, generators pseudo-tied from MISO to PJM — such as Tilton — are suffering charges for congestion and scheduling fees by both RTOs.”

MISO asked FERC to dismiss the complaint on Sept. 26, insisting the charges are consistent with its Tariff and that Tilton has failed to show the Tariff is unjust and unreasonable. Horger said the “proceeding potentially could affect how the pseudo-ties are treated.”

Interface Pricing

While mum on the double-counting issue, the two RTOs said they plan to pursue what they call a collaborative approach for interface pricing in time for the beginning of the 2017 financial transmission rights planning year beginning June 1. The approach relies on PJM’s existing 10-bus definition for the common interface definition. It also allows the RTOs’ market entitlement-based limits — calculated using firm flow entitlement estimates in the day-ahead and FTR markets — to be modified as needed to reflect a transaction’s impact on a constraint. MISO had been backing a centroid-to-centroid approach. (See “No Consensus on Interface Pricing,” MISO/PJM Joint and Common Market Meeting Briefs.)

Beibei Li of MISO’s market evaluation and design team said MISO and PJM officials have been holding regular conferences to discuss how the RTOs should handle post-implementation standards, monitoring and metrics.

Horger said MISO and PJM’s efforts to revise pseudo-tie processes are being done in “parallel,” even though PJM recently failed to elevate any pseudo-tie rule changes for stakeholder consideration. PJM staff had developed one improvement package, while three PJM stakeholders each submitted their own; all were rejected. (See “Underperformance Changes Would Weaken CP, Says PJM, Monitor,” No End in Sight for PJM Capacity Market Changes.)

MISO, meanwhile, is readying a filing to amend its Tariff and Business Practices Manual and create a new agreement requirement between all parties involved in the creation of a new pseudo-tie. The updated requirements will tighten transmission service obligations and subject new pseudo-ties to system impact studies. (See MISO Readies Updated Pseudo-Tie Rules.) MISO and PJM currently have 31 pseudo-ties totaling 2,100 MW.

Freeze Date Future in Buckets?

PJM and MISO are contemplating a three-step “bucket” approach to replace the current 2004 freeze date reference point used to determine firm rights on flowgates in the allocation process based on flows before current markets were instituted.

Horger said MISO and PJM are looking at dividing flowgate allocations into separate tranches. The first would be for active designated network resources predating the current April 1, 2004, freeze date and historic transmission service requests. A second tranche would be for active designated network resources and transmission service requests after 2004. The third tranche would allow for entitlements to be granted for limited market-based transfers within the RTO balancing authority.

The first bucket would get first consideration for flowgate needs; excess allocations will be returned to the owner of the flowgate. Horger said the proposal showed consistency from the old approach to the new one, with new designated network resources joining the post-2004 bucket.

ITC Holdings’ Ray Kershaw observed that the three-step allocation method would result in “winners and losers.”

“There’s going to be winners and losers in any change, but we’re trying to minimize those impacts,” Horger replied. “I think we all agree that this needs to be updated. The system is planned a lot different than it was in 2004.”

The two RTOs will develop a straw proposal that will be unveiled at the next JCM meeting on Feb. 28 at PJM’s Conference and Training Center. MISO’s Ron Arness admitted that the RTOs have yet to develop many of the proposal’s particulars. “We don’t have the details … the purpose was to start thinking about these complicated topics,” Arness told stakeholders. Arness said freeze date concerns could be voiced through MISO’s Seams Management Working Group.

Horger also said it’s unlikely that an alternative will be implemented by the targeted June deadline.

FERC OKs Information Security, FOIA Rules

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC on Thursday gave final approval to a rule updating its processes for the handling of Critical Energy Infrastructure Information (CEII), a measure to protect the grid from terrorist attacks (RM16-15, RM15-25-001).

The rule (Order 833) is intended to comply with the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act. Although the bill mainly dealt with highway funding, Congress added the CEII provisions (Section 215A of the Federal Power Act) following controversy over the agency’s security procedures.

The order establishes rules for designating information as CEII; prohibits unauthorized disclosure of CEII; and sets penalties for FERC employees who knowingly and willfully make unauthorized disclosures. FERC said the final rule “largely adopts” the proposals in its June Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. (See FERC Proposes Protections on CEII.)

In response to concerns raised by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, FERC clarified that its rule “does not limit the discretion of other federal agencies to protect sensitive information in their custody” but provides a way for agencies to consult with the commission’s CEII coordinator.

“We believe this change strikes a reasonable balance by recognizing other federal agencies’ discretion to protect their information, while adhering to the statutory framework that limits CEII designation authority to the commission and” the Department of Energy, FERC said.

The commission also said it would make a change to clarify it has delegated to the General Counsel authority to decide appeals of CEII designations.

Penalties

The rules include sanctions for unauthorized disclosures of CEII by commission staff and a requirement to refer improper disclosures by commissioners to the Energy Department’s Inspector General. FERC commissioners and staff could face dismissal and criminal prosecution for improper disclosures.

The commission said it has already instituted requirements that former employees and commissioners certify that they are not unlawfully removing records from the agency and acknowledge potential criminal penalties for doing so.

The FAST Act’s CEII provisions were both a vindication and a rebuke of former FERC Chairman Jon Wellinghoff’s controversial campaign to raise awareness of the grid’s vulnerability to sabotage.

Wellinghoff | FERC - critical energy infrastructure information foia ferc
Wellinghoff | FERC

The sanctions for unauthorized release of CEII stemmed from Wellinghoff publicly discussing a confidential FERC analysis on the grid’s vulnerability to physical attacks. But the bill also included measures to protect the grid from terrorist attacks and natural disasters, giving the secretary of energy emergency powers and creating a Strategic Transformer Reserve. (See Transportation Bill Includes Grid Security Measures.)

Sharing, NERC Information

The rule requires recipients of CEII outside of FERC to sign nondisclosure agreements. FERC said it will continue to “balance the requestor’s need for the information against the sensitivity of the information.”

“The commission has utilized this balancing approach effectively in response to Critical Energy Infrastructure Information requests for almost 15 years.”

Order 833 also implements the commission’s June order giving FERC access to NERC’s transmission availability data system, generating availability data system and protection system misoperations databases. (See FERC to Look over NERC’s Shoulders on Reliability.)

The commission said it will treat information downloaded from NERC databases as nonpublic. It will evaluate whether it should be designated as CEII in response to a request for the information or if the commission determines such information should be disclosed.

FOIA Improvement Act

In a separate order, FERC also approved a final rule implementing the requirements of the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 (RM17-5).

The law requires federal agencies to:

  • Allow a minimum 90-day period for Freedom of Information Act requesters to file an administrative appeal — up from 45 days.
  • Include in any FOIA denial letter a notice that the requester may seek dispute resolution services from the Office of Government Information Services in the National Archives and Records Administration.
  • Provide requested information unless “the agency reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm an interest protected by an exemption” or “disclosure is prohibited by law.”
  • Make reasonable efforts to segregate and release nonexempt material by redacting protected information in documents.
  • Release records 25 years or older that would otherwise be subject to the deliberative process exemption.
  • Make information that has been requested and disclosed three times publicly accessible in an electronic format.

Environmentalists Debate the ‘Nuclear Option’

By Robert Mullin

LA QUINTA, Calif. — The future of U.S. nuclear energy policy was the subject of a spirited Oxford-style debate at the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners conference last week.

The resolution under debate: Retaining all U.S. nuclear capacity is essential to maintaining reliable, cost-effective, environmentally responsible service.

The event kicked off with an audience poll showing 48 respondents in favor of the resolution, six opposed and three neutral.

Cavanagh | © RTO Insider - nuclear power naruc
Cavanagh | © RTO Insider

“Perfectly mirroring the population at large,” joked Ralph Cavanagh, co-director of the energy program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, which opposes construction of new nuclear plants.

Cavanagh then addressed the audience, largely consisting of state utility commissioners.

“I’m going to point out to you that you’ve been rejecting that resolution with your feet for the last 40 years,” he said. “You’ve been right to do it, and you should continue to do it.”

Retaining all nuclear capacity is just one of many options available for ensuring a low-emission, cost-effective, reliable supply of power, Cavanagh contended.

“The nuclear option should compete with other low-carbon options and not be declared the winner in advance,” he said.

Cavanagh’s opponent was Michael Shellenberger, president of the pro-nuclear, climate change advocacy group Environmental Progress, who said the loss of nuclear power impedes decarbonization by increasing the role of coal and gas-fired generation.

Checkered History

Cavanagh reviewed the history of nuclear power development in the Pacific Northwest — specifically the Washington Public Power Supply System debacle in the early 1980s. WPPSS defaulted on $2.25 billion in bonds after more than $20 billion was spent to construct plants eventually deemed unnecessary for the region.

Since U.S. nuclear output peaked in 1990, the inflation-adjusted price of electricity has only fallen — as have emissions and consumption, Cavanagh said. There are 99 reactors online today, versus 112 then.

And the reactors still in service are getting old — averaging 36 years.

“Life extension past 40 is certainly possible, but it often requires significant investment and refurbishment,” Cavanagh said. “Energy efficiency projects are meanwhile continuing, and wind and solar are putting pressure on giant baseload units as they gain market share.”

While Cavanagh didn’t advocate for full-scale nuclear retirements, he said the financial viability of U.S. nuclear plants should be examined on a case-by-case basis.

One example of a plant requiring retirement, he said, is California’s Diablo Canyon, whose relicensing would have required Pacific Gas and Electric to invest 10 cents/kWh in refurbishments.

“That almost certainly puts the plant out of the money in the zero-carbon inventory we’re trying to build,” Cavanagh said. “A plant of that cost, that size, that inflexibility … becomes a liability, not an asset, in the continuing energy transition.”

‘Pre-Emptive’ Retirements

Shellenberger countered that the “pre-emptive” retirement of nuclear plants has resulted in a decline in clean energy’s share of total global output, despite the increase in renewable resources.

Shellenberger | © RTO Insider - nuclear power naruc
Shellenberger | © RTO Insider

In California, power plant emissions have declined less than the national average since 2000, with that effect being especially pronounced since the passage of state climate legislation in 2006, Shellenberger said.

“People don’t like nuclear very much — they’re afraid of it,” Shellenberger said. “It’s a little bit more popular than coal, but I don’t think people fear coal in the same way as nuclear. They don’t think that they’re going to have to evacuate or that they’re going to get cancer” from a coal plant.

This belief persists despite the fact that a study published by the British medical journal The Lancet showed that nuclear is the safest way to generate power, Shellenberger said. “There’s really no debate about nuclear safety among people who study public health,” he said.

Shellenberger said that nuclear’s unpopularity translates into solar getting 140 times more in subsidies than nuclear generation, according to a 2013 U.S. Energy Information Administration report. Wind gets 17 times as much.

“I used to think that maybe environmentalists were naive in thinking that you can power the world on solar or wind,” Shellenberger said. “They’re not. When you actually read the documents, every time, they are pushing fossil fuel plants instead of nuclear because [Cavanagh] and the NRDC and Sierra Club know full well that you can’t power hospitals and cities and societies on intermittent sources of power that generate electricity just 20 or 30% of the time.”

Energy Efficiency not a Resource?

Shellenberger also derided claims that energy efficiency programs can be considered a resource and that they are responsible for flat electricity consumption in California in recent decades.

“Why didn’t it go up like the rest of the country?” Shellenberger asked. “Because we lost all of our manufacturing jobs due to high electricity prices and because we don’t need as much heating and cooling.”

Shellenberger “is painting a pretty dour picture of the global power sector, and in some ways he’s right,” Cavanagh responded. “And I’m here to cheer him up.”

Cavanagh said two things can change dramatically for the sector.

“One is just how fast these small-scale, fast-acquisition resources [such as solar and wind] can grow, and how quickly they can change a picture — national and international — that looks relatively dour right now,” Cavanagh said. “And the other is the contribution of energy efficiency, which [Shellenberger] says is not a resource.”

On the subject of subsidies, Cavanagh said, “When a nuclear power proponent complains about renewable energy subsidies, I have to say I feel like I’m being lectured on temperance from a barstool.”

Shellenberger countered that nuclear power received about 10 years of subsidies. On the question of speed of scalability, he pointed to a recent report appearing in the journal Science that showed that the fastest increases in the growth of carbon-free electricity have occurred during the scale-up of national nuclear programs.

“When you take [a nuclear power plant] offline, you’re giving a lease on life, not just to natural gas, but to coal,” Shellenberger said.

The debate concluded with a second audience poll on the original resolution. The result this time: 66 in favor and 22 against — a 75% majority for the pro-nuclear side, down from 84% at the beginning of the session.

Based on Oxford rules, Cavanagh could claim a debate win. But the argument over nuclear energy’s role will undoubtedly persist.

Overheard at NARUC Annual Meeting 2016

LA QUINTA, Calif. — Hundreds of state regulators, utility officials and other stakeholders traveled to the California desert last week for the 128th Annual Meeting of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners.

Among the topics were new generation technologies, the impact of the 2016 elections and the priorities for incoming NARUC President Robert Powelson. NARUC also approved its first manual on ratemaking for distributed energy resources and resolutions defending its authority against federal intrusion.

Here’s some of what we heard.

Rooftop vs. Utility-Scale Solar Battles not a Concern for Industry

naruc annual meeting
Florio (L) and Hoskins | © RTO Insider

At a breakfast presentation sponsored by the Solar Energy Industries Association, Georgia Public Service Commissioner Tim Echols asked about what he called “infighting” between the utility-scale and rooftop solar proponents. “They’re splintering organizations and it’s almost like if your state can’t do distributed generation, you’re not doing true solar,” Echols said. “Is this splintering within the solar community … helpful to the cause?”

“I think it’s a sign of a maturing industry. Everybody’s in competition with everyone else,” responded California Public Utilities Commissioner Mike Florio, who said he had seen the price of grid-scale solar drop from 15 cents/kWh to as low 4 cents since he joined the commission in 2011.

Former Maryland Public Service Commissioner Anne Hoskins, now chief policy officer for rooftop installer Sunrun, saw the two as meeting different needs rather than being in direct competition.

Rooftop solar is “taking advantage of the built infrastructure,” she said. “You’re not having to take up other land. You’re not having to deal with wetlands or any of those other kinds of challenges.”

Rooftop solar also is attractive to those wanting to power electric vehicles or to have a backup power source other than a gas generator.

Community solar, on the other hand, provides an option for renters and others for whom rooftop solar isn’t an option.

Champley | © RTO Insider
Champley | © RTO Insider

“I don’t see it as a competitor to [rooftop] solar at all. I see it as a way to expand access to solar,” she said. “There’s really room for all of it. We have a tremendous climate challenge.”

Former Hawaii Public Utilities Commissioner Mike Champley said it is “a huge debate” in his island state, where he said DERs collectively represent the biggest source of generation.

“The way it’s pitched is utility-scale is solar of the 19th century and rooftop is the solar of the 21st century. There’s some people who believe the future is a distributed-centric world,” he said. “My opinion [based on] my 40 years in this business is that portfolios [of various resource types] will be the appropriate thing.”

M&A: Is Bigger Better?

A session on utility mergers touched on recent trends and looked into the future.

Dan Ford, managing director of Barclays, said the impact of the 2016 presidential election was unclear. Changes in tax policy, he said, “could change the economics of combinations pretty dramatically.”

naruc annual meeting
Participating in a panel discussion on utility mergers were from left: Dan Ford, managing director, Barclays; Hawaii Public Utilities Commissioner Thomas Gorak; Connecticut Consumer Counsel Elin Katz; and Richard McMahon Jr., vice president of energy supply and finance, Edison Electric Institute. | © RTO Insider

“We don’t know how much of the campaign rhetoric turns into actual policy,” he said, adding that the biggest change for utilities thus far has been the rising cost of capital. “The yield curve has noticeably steepened since the election,” signaling expectations of higher inflation.

“I think that in all likelihood the election will have the effect of migrating us back from what we’ve seen the last several years — which is acquisitions for cash, for growth by large companies and small companies — to more of a merger of equals regime.”

Those mergers are designed to reduce costs to “create headroom” for more money to invest.

“I think there is a great deal of efficiency that can still be wrung out of this industry, as capital intensive as they are.”

Connecticut Consumer Counsel Elin Katz said she didn’t expect mergers slowing down absent a “dramatic change in tax policy or major shift in the market.”

Richard McMahon Jr., vice president of energy supply and finance for the Edison Electric Institute, agreed. “There’s still 44 investor-owned utilities … and hundreds and hundreds of munis and co-ops. The concentration isn’t an issue like it might be in some other industries.”

As for whether mergers are good for consumers, Katz said it depends.

“It really depends where you start and it depends where you end up. The devil you know is your own local utility. … If you start with a company that’s financially weak or in a disadvantageous position and perhaps remote management has not gotten along so great with the regulators or with the legislators or you’ve had some a checkered history with respect to storm response and people are fed up with that then, yeah, I think there’s potential for benefits. But on the flip side we always worry about the loss of local control.”

 naruc annual meeting
Phillips | © RTO Insider

Ford said the typical utility merger in the last two decades has outperformed expectations “both in terms of actual achieved efficiencies on behalf of customers — and because of regulation that gets recaptured in the future.”

“So you shouldn’t think a merger as the last time you get a bite at the apple from a regulatory standpoint. You always get a bite at the apple.”

“You may get another bite at the apple, but it’s still the same apple,” responded Katz. “You can’t unwind a merger. Obviously you’re going to have to live with it for a long time.”

D.C. Public Service Commissioner Willie Phillips asked questions as moderator. But he was reticent when asked about the on-again, off-again Exelon-Pepco merger, which consumed D.C. regulators for months. Phillips said he couldn’t say much because there are still challenges pending to the deal. (See Exelon Closes Pepco Merger Following OK from DC PSC.)

“There was lots of zigs and zags,” he said. “And I’m not going to go farther than that.”

Powelson Replaces Kavulla as President

Powelson (L) and Kavulla at the installation luncheon | © RTO Insider
Powelson (L) and Kavulla at the installation luncheon | © RTO Insider

Powelson, a Pennsylvania Public Utility Commissioner, was elected to replace Montana’s Travis Kavulla as NARUC president.

Connecticut Public Utility Regulatory Authority Commissioner John Betkoski III moved up to first vice president and Commissioner Ellen Nowak, chair of the Wisconsin Public Service Commission, was elected second vice president. Confirmed to the board of directors were Margaret E. Curran of Rhode Island, Mark Vannoy of Maine and Nick Wagner of Iowa.

In his remarks to the conference, Powelson said his one-year term would focus on “infrastructure, innovation and investment.”

He lamented that the U.S. spends less than 2% of GDP on the electric grid and other “modern day infrastructure investment,” far below the spending of India and China.

“We’re not going to cut it spending less than 2%,” he said. “And I think that we as an association have a key role to play in driving that agenda.”

On the subject of innovation, he noted that one of the resolutions approved at the meeting was one encouraging state regulators to consider whether utilities should be able to earn a rate of return on cloud computing services and pay for them out of their capital budgets.

The resolution says that although commercial cloud computing services can provide increased reliability, flexibility and security, utilities may be unwilling to use them because they don’t earn a rate of return on software-as-a-service expenses. In contrast, they can capitalize spending on hardware and “on-premise” software.

Members also approved resolutions asserting state authority over DERs and calling for an extension of the nuclear production tax credit and changes in the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act’s mandatory purchase rules.

Nuclear Production Tax Credit

NARUC called for an extension of the federal income tax credit of 1.8 cents/kWh for power produced by advanced nuclear reactors. The credit, included in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, is limited to the first 6,000 MW of capacity placed in service on or before Dec. 31, 2020. Only four advanced nuclear reactors totaling 4,400 MW currently under construction — Georgia Power’s Vogtle Units 3 and 4 and South Carolina Electric & Gas’ V.C. Summer Plant Units 2 and 3 — are expected to be completed in time to qualify.

The resolution urges Congress to pass legislation extending the in-service date for the credits and to expand the eligibility to public power entities and consumer-owned electric cooperatives that own shares of advanced nuclear units but do not pay federal income taxes.

naruc annual meeting
Editor-in-Chief Rich Heidorn Jr. | © RTO Insider

PURPA

NARUC approved a resolution asserting that state commissions should have control over decisions on mandatory purchases and avoided cost determinations under PURPA and that the law’s goal of promoting qualifying facility development “must be balanced with the states’ interest in just and reasonable rates.”

Because of the growth in renewable generation, NARUC said the mandatory purchase obligation has created unintended consequences, including generation not needed to serve loads, high-cost long-term fixed-price contracts and planning challenges because of the “unexpected and unpredictable addition” of PURPA projects.

NARUC also criticized QF developers for circumventing FERC’s small renewable criteria by disaggregating their projects into multiple smaller projects. (See related story, FERC Rejects Entergy Attempt to End PPA with Goodyear Plant.)

“A number of state regulatory commissions have recently been devoting an inordinate amount of time attempting to discern the intent and assess the impact of PURPA, the meaning of FERC regulations and the parameters of state discretion,” the resolution says.

At Congress’ urging, FERC held a technical conference in June on issues that included the mandatory purchase obligation and determination of avoided costs. (See FERC Conference Debates PURPA Costs, Purchase Obligations.)

FTC ‘Intrusion’ into State Jurisdiction

NARUC also defended its jurisdiction over DERs, saying it was concerned over the U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s June 21 workshop concerning electric utilities and anti-consumer and anti-competitive activities.

NARUC said it “opposes any attempt by the FTC, or any other federal agencies, to infringe on areas that are exclusively under state regulatory authority, because this could produce unintended consequences and would disrupt a carefully balanced set of technologies, markets and interests.”

Although FTC “acknowledged explicitly” state jurisdiction, NARUC said the commission also was critical of state rate designs, saying rate reform “may be a disguised effort by utilities to make solar [distributed generation] less desirable relative to the status quo, thereby minimizing solar DG as a competitive threat.”

NARUC called for a “partnership and dialogue” with the commission, saying the agency “can contribute meaningfully in enforcement against the business practices of non-regulated power providers, DER marketers and utilities that do not protect the interests of customers.”

DER Manual

Completing a yearlong project that attracted some controversy, NARUC released a manual intended to help state commissions in designing rates and compensation policies for DERs: “Distributed Energy Resources Rate Design and Compensation.”

NARUC’s effort led to a dust-up with SEIA, which sent the organization a letter in August raising questions about the transparency of NARUC’s effort. In response, NARUC assured the solar group that it would publish all of the comments it received. It reviewed more than 70 comments from stakeholder groups.

naruc annual meeting
Anne-Marie Cuneo, director of regulatory operations for the Nevada Public Utilities Commission (left), discussed NARUC’s manual on ratemaking for distributed energy resources with Jeff Orcutt (center), a policy analyst to Illinois Commerce Commissioner Miguel del Valle, and Christopher Villareal, director of policy for the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. | © RTO Insider

Sean Gallagher, vice president of state affairs for SEIA, pronounced the group happy with the final result, saying the manual “was significantly improved due to their willingness to be open to input from stakeholders.”

“I would have loved to have had this manual” when the Nevada Public Utilities Commission was updating its rules, said Anne-Marie Cuneo, the PUC’s director of regulatory operations, who participated in a briefing on it.

“Everyone can find something in it to dislike,” Kavulla joked. “Which means we must have done our job.”

ERCOT, SPP Set New Wind Records

ERCOT established a record for all grid operators last week when it registered a new peak for wind generation with 14,122 MW.

Thursday’s mark broke its previous high of 14,023 MW, set in February, and gave ERCOT another mark in its good-natured battle with SPP to see which grid operator produces the most wind generation.

For the time being, SPP still holds the wind-penetration mark of 49.17%, but ERCOT in October surpassed 17,000 MW of installed wind-generation capacity. Texas has another 11,273 MW of wind energy in its interconnection queue.

“Texas has done an incredible job integrating renewables,” native Texan and NYISO CEO Brad Jones said during the Texas Renewable Energy Industries Alliance’s recent GridNEXT conference. “No matter SPP’s brag, Texas still owns the record for the most renewables in the country.”

spp ercot wind generation
Texas Wind Farm | Target

ERCOT also set a new peak load record for October when total demand hit 59,848 MW on October 5. Wind accounted for 17% of the ISO’s energy needs in October.

Natural gas accounted for 36.7% of ERCOT’s energy production during the month, coal 35.7% and nuclear 10.3%, according to the ISO’s latest demand and energy report.

The Texas grid operator’s Seasonal Assessment of Resource Adequacy for October and November had projected a peak demand of 54,400 MW this fall.

SPP Surpasses 11,000 MW of Wind Generation

For its part, SPP exceeded 11,000 MW of wind generation for the first time Thursday, setting a new record of 11,305 MW and tying its wind-penetration mark of 49.17%. The new record came at 6:13 p.m.

spp ercot wind generation
| SPP

The mark broke the previous wind peak of 10,989 MW, set in April, and was the fifth such record set in 2016.

The RTO’s generation interconnection queue includes about 22,000 MW of additional wind.

– Tom Kleckner

MISO Allowed to End White Pine SSR

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO has FERC’s permission to end a system support resource agreement in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula effective Nov. 26 (ER16-2528).

The order allows a transmission reconfiguration plan from American Transmission Co. to take the place of the White Pine Electric Power SSR agreement, which has cost local ratepayers about $6 million per year.

FERC’s decision cuts off revenue to the utility’s 20-MW coal-fired unit, which had been operating under the SSR designation since mid-2014. Under ATC’s plan, the transmission network in the western Upper Peninsula will be split into two separate load pockets. (See MISO Will Use ATC Plan to End Upper Peninsula SSR.) The dual, radial-fed configuration would only be used during planned maintenance on the area’s two 138-kV transmission lines.

miso system support resource ssr white pine
Map shows ATC’s transmission system in the western Upper Peninsula. Orange circles indicate how the load pocket will be split into two radially-fed areas. White Pine Unit 1’s location circled in blue. | MISO

Some MISO stakeholders argue that the plan introduces an increased risk of consequential load loss following a subsequent contingency, but the RTO maintains the risk is within NERC standards.

The Michigan Public Service Commission noted that while White Pine Unit 1 was called on only a “handful” times during its SSR agreement, it was entitled to receive about $4.7 million in 2014-2015, $7.3 million in 2015-2016 and $6.6 million in 2016-2017. The PSC also asked FERC to take the high poverty rates of Upper Peninsula ratepayers into consideration.

In a protest, White Pine accused MISO of a “hurried” reliability analysis that did not adequately study the possible “adverse reliability impacts” of severing the SSR agreement. The utility argued that Unit 1’s retirement would lead to more load curtailment, overloads in summer peak conditions and risk of voltage collapse. White Pine also said the SSR termination was not properly discussed in stakeholder meetings.

FERC rejected White Pine’s protest. It said it found “MISO appropriately studied and determined that the ATC transmission reconfiguration plan is a feasible alternative to the second revised White Pine SSR agreement and adequately involved stakeholders in that determination.”

Overheard at the US/Canada Energy Conference

BOSTON — Quebec hydropower already supplies about 12% of New England’s electricity and its exports are expected to grow considerably over the next decade. So there was plenty to talk about at the 24th U.S./Canada Energy Trade & Technology Conference last week.

The Massachusetts Energy Diversity Law, passed over the summer, commits the state to acquire 9,450 GWh of new large-scale hydropower contracts annually by 2027 — a 73% increase from the nearly 13,000 GWh that ISO-NE imported from Quebec in 2015.

“For the first time, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is designating large-scale hydropower, like the kind we generate in Quebec, as a source of clean energy that can help meet the objectives of the Global Warming Solutions Act,” Hydro-Quebec CEO Eric Martel said during a keynote speech. That law commits Massachusetts to a 25% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2020.

Matt Beaton, Massachusetts’ Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, said expanded imports will both reduce emissions and help maintain system reliability.

“We have always looked kindly on the import of hydroelectricity and recognize that it is one of the few resources that help us reach all three of the targets we are trying to accomplish: It’s a reliable resource, it’s affordable and it’s one that helps us meet our climate goals,” he said.

Entergy’s decision to close the 680-MW Pilgrim nuclear plant in 2019 is a major setback for the state’s climate goals, said David O’Connor, senior vice president for energy and clean technologies at ML Strategies.

“The Pilgrim nuclear plant by itself produces 85% of the [carbon-free] energy consumed in Massachusetts,” O’Connor said. “When it goes away, there’s going to be a dramatic alteration of the carbon profile in the state.”

US-Canada Energy Trade and Technology Conference

Krapels | © RTO Insider

Ed Krapels, CEO of transmission developer Anbaric, is looking at what he called the Greater Northeast — including New England, New York, Quebec and Ontario — where a massive buildout of renewable generation is needed to achieve climate reduction targets.

“For us, we look at this as a 5,000- to 10,000-MW transition, so there’s room in that for many different things. Distributed energy will be a large part of that, as well as batteries, solar microgrids, all of that will have a big impact. But we still have bulk power needs,” he said.

Anbaric is proposing stand-alone transmission development, as well as collaborations with wind generators to pair with hydropower in cross-border projects throughout New York and New England.

Marcy Reed, president of National Grid Massachusetts, joked that although she heads an electric utility, she spends most of her time talking about natural gas.

“You talk about a balanced approach. We need pretty much everything. We need renewables, we need efficiency, energy storage, natural gas; we need a full platter of solutions to get us where we ultimately need to be,” she said.

National Grid was a partner in the failed Access Northeast pipeline development, whose proposed funding mechanism was rejected by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in August. (See Eversource, National Grid Withdraw Requests to Bill for Pipeline.)

Natural gas analyst Richard Levitan said the failure of pipeline projects to overcome litigation and community opposition leaves the system vulnerable in the winter, when gas generation must compete with gas heating for fuel supplies.

ISO-NE has incentivized generators to provide dual-fuel power sources, but that fails to solve the underlying problems, he said.

“The Winter Reliability Program is chipping away at a fundamental problem of the region’s great reliance and growing reliance on natural gas,” he said. “Is it enough? Well, this winter it probably is enough, if ISO-NE’s 50-50 load forecast materializes. And that the pipeline and storage infrastructure linking us to the Marcellus region is fully available and nothing bends or breaks.”

Over the longer term, the addition of solar and wind resources presents serious challenges that are only now starting to be addressed, said Peter Rothstein, president of the Northeast Clean Energy Council.

Rothstein said the modernized grid that’s needed to enable renewable integration and two-way power flows must join the conversation along with cleaner generation.

“We can deploy a great amount of solar resources over the next five or 10 or 15 years, but we’re going to hit a wall and it’s going to become inefficient and not at all cost-effective, so we have to modernize the grid,” Rothstein added.

Election Talk

The election of Donald Trump as president creates much uncertainty, many speakers said. But they agreed that clean energy will likely lose federal support and climate issues will be confronting a hostile federal administration.

“If you look at the election, it’s easy to get discouraged because we need a lot of policy support, and it’s not going to be there,” said Joshua Paradise of Current, GE’s LED, solar, energy storage and electric vehicle business. “But as a skeptic [of conventional wisdom] as I think of what’s happened, this train [of strong support from the states and the public] has left the station. … We’re already at the tipping point.”

Jon Norman, vice president of business development for Quebec-based Brookfield Renewable, was a bit more circumspect. He said he feared climate change deniers becoming more entrenched in government under Trump.

“It’s unquestionable that the need for state action is far more urgent than it was [before the election]. And that need for action has to happen and I don’t think we can delay it until we have all the right answers [on technology]. But I’m optimistic, especially in New England because you have states with very aggressive targets and they’re taking actions to implement them.”

What appears likely is that the federal governments of the U.S. and Canada will take divergent paths on global climate initiatives. Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper was aligned with fossil fuel interests and was hostile to international climate accords, said Monica Gattinger, director of the Institute for Science, Society and Policy at the University of Ottawa.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “has taken a very balanced approach to energy. On fossil fuels, [Trudeau’s Liberal Party] is quietly supportive. They’re visibly supportive of clean renewable energy,” she said. “When it comes to the environment, from a bragging perspective, they wanted everyone to know Canada was back in Paris last year [for the 21st Conference of Parties’ climate agreement], and with a commitment to moving on a carbon tax.”

— William Opalka