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August 14, 2024

Against All Odds: Ratepayer Wins $4.2M Refund from AEP

By Tom Kleckner

A retired elementary school teacher goes to Washington to take on a powerful utility — and wins a $4.2 million refund.

A David and Goliath story?

“It certainly felt that way,” says Martha Peine (pronounced “piney”), a former lawyer who hadn’t practiced since 2002. “I was dealing with rules and regulations and procedures I had never been familiar with. It was just me … funding my own way against what I consider a behemoth organization, with outside and inside counsel with many years of experience.”

The “behemoth” in question is American Electric Power, owner of the nation’s largest transmission system, with a market capitalization of more than $32 billion and more than 5 million customers in 11 states.

Peine received her law degree from the University of Texas and spent seven years as a sole practitioner specializing in “consumer-type” issues, before taking down her shingle in 2002. She spent the next nine years as an elementary school teacher and lecturer for the Houston Independent School District.

Ozark Mountain Tx Fight

Several years ago, Peine found herself involved in a community effort to fight AEP subsidiary Southwestern Electric Power Co.’s plans to build a transmission line through the scenic Ozark Mountains in Northwest Arkansas. A grassroots organization, Save the Ozarks, spun up enough community support around the eccentric town of Eureka Springs, a haven for artists and retired hippies, that SWEPCO withdrew its plans in December 2014.

By then, Peine was submerged in AEP’s filings at FERC, trying to make sense of transmission formula rates, protocols and operating tariffs. Poring over the company’s annual updated filings to its formula rate under SPP’s Tariff, she uncovered and contested almost $2.5 million in improperly recovered transmission costs for charitable contributions, general advertising, economic development, lobbying, and generation and distribution regulatory cases.

martha peine, aep, ferc
Peine

So what kept Peine going in what must have appeared early on to be a quixotic quest?

“Just determination. Pure determination,” she said. “I wasn’t going to give up until someone said, ‘Go home and don’t you ever come back here again.’ I just kept putting one foot in front of the other.”

Using her forensic skills and invoices provided by AEP, Peine was able to determine whether the company’s expenses were properly accounted for under FERC regulations. She contested air travel for SWEPCO President Venita McCellon-Allen to attend legislative meetings and a luncheon honoring former Arkansas Public Service Commissioner Colette Honorable before her appointment to FERC. She also contested a tree-planting program around SWEPCO’s Turk power plant in southwest Arkansas.

‘Drilling Down’

“Drilling down to the actual invoice is something that rarely happens,” Peine said, making sure she put quotes around “reviewed” when describing her understanding of how regulators and wholesale purchasers may check the annual updates. “They look at the delta from one year to the next and ask generally about it.”

A FERC staff review after her complaint found additional improper charges in SWEPCO sister company Public Service Company of Oklahoma’s AEP’s rate structure.

On June 13, Peine and AEP reached a $4.2 million settlement agreement.

The money will be distributed as a one-time credit to utilities using AEP’s SWEPCO and PSO transmission systems (ER07-1069). “I think it was a good result, a substantial refund, and I’m happy with that,” Peine said. “I followed through, I stayed committed … I think this was a right result for ratepayers.”

Pat Costner, director of Save the Ozarks, said in a press release, “Every SWEPCO electric customer owes a debt of gratitude to this remarkable woman, who has shown us that one person can make a big difference.”

It didn’t come easy, but pro se interventions — in which intervenors represent themselves — never are. Peine said she used a template provided by Keryn Newman and Alison Haverty, who successfully challenged AEP and Allegheny Energy (now FirstEnergy) in their bid to recover $121.5 million from an abandoned PJM project. (See FERC ALJ Rejects $10 Million in PATH Transmission Project Recovery.)

“That made my job much easier,” said Peine, who followed the case closely and attended several days of FERC hearings on the matter.

Peine’s interest was piqued during her work with Save the Ozarks. She asked herself, “What’s in it monetarily for these people? How do they recover costs? What’s the motivation there?”

She spent hundreds of hours on her challenges. She familiarized herself with the protocols and SPP’s Tariff. She learned how to file preliminary and formal challenges. And she researched FERC’s eLibrary database from the comfort of her home. “Everything is filed,” Peine marveled.

Proving Standing

Before filing her challenges, Peine had to first gain standing. She said AEP “quibbled” at first: Peine and her husband have a summer home in Eureka Springs, where they will eventually move to from Houston. It took a copy of Peine’s electric bill to prove she had standing.

Peine had to prove her standing again once the commission set her challenges for hearing. Administrative Law Judge Carmen Cintron recommended the commission find that ratepayers don’t have standing under the Federal Power Act. But FERC staff, the Electricity Consumers Resource Council and others strongly objected to Cintron’s interpretation, and the commission reconfirmed Peine’s standing.

She said she became aware in August 2013 of AEP’s formula rate updates to the SPP Tariff, which it files on behalf of SWEPCO and PSO each May. Peine said she asked AEP for electronic submission of the underlying documents in the filing but was told to come up to the company’s headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, to look at them.

“If you’re having a dispute like that, you can request a FERC administrative law judge to act as a discovery master,” Peine said. “Things were resolved that way. Certain documentation I never got, but we moved forward anyway.”

When Peine’s preliminary challenge was not resolved, she filed a formal challenge in January 2014. She followed the same process in challenging AEP’s May 2014 update to the formula rate.

Peine disputed the recovery of $92,511 in costs for 2013 and $2,467,024 for 2014 in her formal challenges, which were set for settlement proceedings in August 2015. The two sides exchanged and rejected offers and went through two ALJs before reaching a final agreement.

“The settlement will completely resolve all issues in the current proceeding,” said SWEPCO spokesperson Carey Sullivan, noting the agreement has yet to be approved by FERC. “The parties agree that the settlement is fair, reasonable and in the public interest.”

The settlement makes it clear that “directly assignable” AEP’s charges recovered under its formula rate after July 1 “shall mean expenses directly related to the provision of transmission services, and does not include those general, company-wide expenses that may be allocated partially to transmission.”

The parties said the settlement addresses issues “both retrospectively and prospectively,” through the ratepayer refund and by “explicitly excluding certain expenditures from recovery under the AEP formula rate.”

But while the settlement is signed, Peine says the proper recovery of rate expenses going forward is “not a resolved issue.”

“I will always wonder what mistakes there may be in the years to come,” she said. “Some [SWEPCO employees] wear so many hats and have multiple functions — public relations, lobbying and outreach to officials — it’s difficult to separate out what’s recoverable and what isn’t in a situation like that.”

Company Briefs

Germany’s Siemens and Spain’s Gamesa will merge, creating the world’s biggest wind farm builder. Siemens will pay $1.13 billion for 59% of the company, which would pass Denmark’s Vestas to become the world’s largest wind farm manufacturer by market share.

The merger combines Siemens’ strength in offshore turbines and Gamesa’s specialty in onshore wind. The companies have a combined 69 GW of installed capacity.

“The proposed merger is a sign of the strength of wind energy technology and the demand for wind expansion,” said Jeff Clark, executive director for The Wind Coalition. “These two companies are positioning themselves to participate in a more robust global marketplace where wind is becoming mainstream, and pricing among suppliers is becoming more competitive.”

More: Bloomberg; Reuters

Energy Transfer Can Back Away from Williams Merger

A Delaware Chancery Court judge has ruled that Energy Transfer Equity can back out of the planned $33 billion merger with Williams Cos. because its experts could not be sure the deal would be tax-free, a condition for closure.

Glasscock
Glasscock

Williams’ attorneys had argued that Energy Transfer was only trying to get out of the deal because of the downturn in the oil industry. But Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III ruled that he didn’t think the company’s lawyers were trying to pull a fast one when they said they could not determine whether the deal would expose investors to tax liabilities.

“Just as motive alone cannot establish criminal guilt, however, motive to avoid a deal does not demonstrate lack of a contractual right to do so,” Glasscock III said. Williams is expected to appeal the ruling.

More: The New York Times; Bloomberg

Solar Farm Proposed for Shoreham Nuclear Site

National Grid and NextEra are proposing to build New York’s largest solar farm on 350 wooded acres near the decommissioned Shoreham nuclear plant on Long Island.

The proposal was submitted in response to a Long Island Power Authority/ PSEG Long Island request for proposals for clean energy. The 72-MW project is part of the companies’ LI Solar Generation joint venture. If selected, the $100 million project would be operating by 2020.

Local officials and some conservation groups are opposed to locating the project at an undisturbed natural area.

More: CBS New York

Wolverine Commissions Alpine Power Plant

Alpine Power Plant Source: Wolverine
Alpine Power Plant Source: Wolverine

Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative last week fully commissioned the 205-MW Unit 1 at the company’s new Alpine Power Plant, a natural-gas fired peaking facility in northern Michigan.

Along with the plant’s Unit 2, which came online in May, the 410-MW plant can supply power to nearly 120,000 homes.

The plant employs two simple-cycle GE Frame 7F.05 combustion turbine generators.

More: Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative

Bankruptcy Judge Approves Peabody Retention Bonuses

PeabodyEnergy(wiki)A bankruptcy court judge in St. Louis approved Peabody Energy’s plan to pay retention bonuses to “mission critical” nonexecutives to keep them from jumping ship as the energy giant navigates through Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Judge Barry Schermer ruled in favor of the company’s request to pay as much as $3.4 million to about 40 white-collar employees at its St. Louis headquarters. The United Mine Workers of America objected, saying the company already cut $70 million in retiree health plans in an attempt to stay solvent, and the union sees this as more money leaving its members.

“Slashing the health benefits of aged and medically vulnerable retirees with extremely limited resources, while lavishly rewarding white-collar employees, is neither fair nor reasonable,” the UMWA said in filings.

More: St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Exelon to Build 200-MW Wind Farm in Ohio

Exelon announced plans to build a 200-MW wind farm in Ohio, its first in that state. According to filings, it would erect 87 turbines on 25,000 acres in four Seneca County townships, in northern Ohio.

The company has 47 wind farms in 10 states, for a total of 1,491 MW of capacity. While it is the nation’s 12th largest wind producer, wind makes up only 4% of its generation portfolio. Nuclear makes up two-thirds, but those plants have been struggling.

Ohio has only two wind farms operating; many potential wind developers have put their proposed projects on hold, citing concerns about the state’s legislature ending its renewable portfolio standard.

More: Columbus Business First

Probe: No Cover-Up at Energy Northwest Nuke

An investigation commissioned by Energy Northwest’s executive board has cleared company managers of accusations that they attempted to conceal falling performance measures at the Columbia Generating Station, the company’s sole nuclear plant.

While the probe by Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman confirmed that standards at the plant have declined, it found no evidence of a deliberate cover-up by managers.

The investigation was launched after company whistleblowers raised the allegations in regional media.

More: The Seattle Times

Westar Issues $350M In ‘Green Bonds’

Westar Energy last week issued $350 million in “green bonds” to finance renewable energy projects in Kansas.

Most of the funds will go to constructing the Western Plains Wind Farm, a 280-MW facility that the company has said would go online in 2017.

The Climate Bonds Initiative says the green bond market has grown from $2.6 billion in 2012 to $41.8 billion last year. Green bonds are like conventional fixed-income bonds, except they are marketed to investors who want to target projects that promote climate or other environmentally sustainability projects.

More: The Topeka Capital-Journal

AEP Names Kip Fox President of ETT

Kip Fox © RTO Insider
Kip Fox © RTO Insider

Kip Fox, American Electric Power’s director of transmission asset strategy and grid development since 2013, was named president of Electric Transmission Texas last week. Fox will report to Wade Smith, AEP’s senior vice president of grid development.

Fox joined AEP in 2008 as senior manager in the RTO regulatory department, where he was responsible for coordinating and consensus building with SPP and ERCOT. Electric Transmission Texas, which is jointly owned by subsidiaries of AEP and Berkshire Hathaway Energy, was formed in 2007 to construct, own and operate transmission facilities as a regulated utility in ERCOT.

Fox replaces Calvin Crowder, who left for GridLiance in May.

More: American Electric Power

Xcel Planning 345-kV Line Across Texas-NM Border

Xcel Energy said last week it is seeking regulatory approval in Texas and New Mexico for a 240-mile, 345-kV transmission line between the states. The company said the $400 million project will meet the region’s significant increase in electricity demand.

The line would connect the TUCO substation in Abernathy, Texas, to the China Draw substation in Eddy County, N.M. Xcel hopes to complete the project by 2020.

David Hudson, president of Xcel subsidiary Southwestern Public Service, said the project “ensures power can move freely into one of the nation’s most prolific oil- and gas-producing regions, which also happens to be rich in agricultural and mining resources and renewable energy prospects as well.”

More: Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

SunEdison CEO Resigns; Replaced by Restructuring Expert

Chatila
Chatila

Ahmad Chatila, CEO of bankrupt solar energy developer SunEdison, has resigned and will be replaced by John Dubel, who has served as the company’s chief restructuring officer since April 29.

Chatila, 49, notified the company June 16 of his decision to resign after seven years as CEO. He won’t receive any severance, in accordance with his current employment agreement.

Dubel, 57, most recently was CEO of Financial Guaranty Insurance Co., and prior to that he was a partner in hedge fund Gradient Partners. He also heads Dubel & Associates, a restructuring and turnaround services provider he founded in 1999.

More: St. Louis Business Journal

Exelon: Not Enough Funds To Restore Nuke Sites

Exelon says it is hundreds of millions of dollars short of the funds it needs to restore the Clinton and Quad Cities nuclear plant sites after the generators are taken offline in the coming years.

Exelon said in a June 2 Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it might have to put up an additional $790 million for cleanup. Federal rules require nuclear operators to maintain a fund for eventual reclamation. The company announced last month it would shutter Clinton next June and Quad Cities in 2018 after failing to win subsidies from the Illinois General Assembly. (See Exelon to Close Quad Cities, Clinton Nuclear Plants.)

Federal rules also allow operators up to 60 years to clean up nuclear generator sites. Exelon has not said how long it will take to complete the work.

More: Crain’s Chicago Business

Calif. Utilities Lead US in Renewable Sales

Three California utilities top the rankings for renewable power as a share of total sales, according to a report released Tuesday by Ceres, a nonprofit organization that seeks to encourage companies and investors to act on climate change.

The report said Sempra Energy (parent of San Diego Electric & Gas), Pacific Gas and Electric and Edison International (Southern California Edison) topped its ranking of the 30 largest electric utility holding companies, each with renewables representing more than 23% of sales — more than double the median of 10.2%. Consolidated Edison, American Electric Power and Florida Power & Light were at the bottom of the list with less than 1%.

More: 2016 Benchmarking Utility Clean Energy

Rejection of BLM Fracking Rule to Save Drillers Millions, Industry Says

By Rory D. Sweeney

A Wyoming federal judge’s ruling last week striking down the Obama administration’s regulations on fracking on federal lands will save operators about $113,000 per well, according to an industry-sponsored analysis.

The study, which was performed by John Dunham & Associates at the request of the Western Energy Alliance, found that the regulations by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management would have added at least $403 million annually to well development costs.

The regulations would have affected several thousand wells each year on federal and Indian lands, either as new drilling or maintenance of existing wells. The majority of the lands are in western states and the Gulf of Mexico.

Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, North Dakota and the Ute Indian Tribe challenged the regulations in a case that was combined with a separate suit by WEA and the Independent Petroleum Association of America.

The regulations, which were to take effect in June 2015, were stayed pending the outcome of the case.

While the breakdown between oil and gas wells was unclear because federal statistics don’t separate them, U.S. Energy Information Administration data show that the average cost to develop a natural gas well has been steadily rising to more than $600/foot as of 2007, which is the most recent information the agency provides. EIA reported the average total well cost at nearly $4 million.

blm, fracking
Fossil fuel production on federal and Indian lands, FY 2014 Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration based on U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Natural Resources Revenue.

In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Scott Skavdahl explicitly avoided the question of whether or not the regulations are necessary and instead focused entirely on BLM’s authority to enact them (Case Nos. 2:15-CV-043-SWS, 2:15-CV-041-SWS).

Dismissing the agency’s arguments that it has jurisdiction through several tangential regulations, Skavdahl searched for specific delineation of authority from Congress. He found that the Safe Drinking Water Act requires EPA to adopt requirements for state programs to prevent underground injection from threatening drinking water sources.

He also cited the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which expressly excluded federal oversight of fracking that doesn’t involve diesel fuel.

Skavdahl rejected BLM’s argument that the generalized authority the agency cited would supersede the more specific SWDA and EPACT.

“Given Congress’ enactment of the [Energy Policy] Act of 2005, to nonetheless conclude that Congress implicitly delegated BLM authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing lacks common sense,” he wrote. “Congress’ inability or unwillingness to pass a law desired by the executive branch does not default authority to the executive branch to act independently, regardless of whether hydraulic fracturing is good or bad for the environment.”

The administration filed an appeal on Friday. “We believe that we have a strong argument to make about the important role that the federal government can play in ensuring that hydraulic fracturing that’s done on public land doesn’t threaten the drinking water of the people who live in the area,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said during a press briefing on Wednesday.

In Northeast, Fleet Turnover to Natural Gas is Unabated

By William Opalka

NEW YORK — Whether the view is from PJM, which sits atop the Utica and Marcellus shale gas formations, or ISO-NE, at the “end of the pipeline,” the so-called “dash to gas” shows no sign of abating, speakers said Friday at the Energy Bar Association Northeast Chapter’s 2016 Annual Meeting.

“There’s a fairly high degree of confidence in the market that gas prices will be consistently low for a fairly long time,” said Vince Duane, senior vice president and general counsel at PJM. Of 36,000 MW of PJM generation that has retired in the last two decades, about 30,000 MW of the units replacing them are natural gas, he said.

eba, natural gas
Duane © RTO Insider

Duane said that while the energy industry has “done a very poor job of forecasting prices and deploying capital” in the past, “the markets are [now] giving such an overwhelming signal” to choose gas.

In response to calls by FirstEnergy, American Electric Power and Exelon for subsidies to keep coal and nuclear plants operating, Duane co-authored a recent PJM study that counseled against such interventions. (See PJM Study Defends Markets, Warns State Policies can Harm Competition.)

“I do take issue with the idea that the entire nuclear fleet is at risk across the board. There’s always been well-run nukes … and the well-located ones are doing well,” he said, calling the predicted demise “hyperbole.”

Duane said markets have responded to environmental regulations in unexpected ways. EPA’s Mercury and Air Toxics Standards rule “is kind of a national experiment in that it’s imposing costs on every coal plant, whether it’s in an organized market or a regulated market,” Duane said.

“I thought I was going to write [that] the unregulated markets were ruthlessly efficient and regulated markets [were] holding onto that invested capital longer. We cut it every which way: the age of the resource; the size of the resource; the heat rate efficiency. And every time, we came up with no statistical difference … as both are doing a comparable job of pushing out the inefficient coal resources.”

Even where gas supplies are distant, market signals still point toward that fuel source.

eba, natural gas
Flynn © RTO Insider

“We are having more gas units come in through our capacity auctions, but we haven’t really had any gas infrastructure built,” said Kevin Flynn, senior regulatory counsel at ISO-NE.

Natural gas provides about half the energy in New England now, up from about 15% in 2000.

And as policymakers mandate more renewable energy resources, their integration requires more quick-start resources, usually natural gas, to maintain system balance, he added.

Because inadequate gas supplies exist during winter cold snaps, ISO-NE added its Pay-for-Performance program to incentivize generators when they’re needed most. It starts in 2018.

More than 3,000 MW of gas-fired generation has cleared in the last two Forward Capacity Auctions. “What we found in FCA 10 is that all gas resources that cleared are dual-fuel, as that’s the way the market is responding to Pay-for-Performance,” Flynn said. (See FERC Accepts ISO-NE Auction Results.)

The region has lost most of its coal fleet, and much of its nuclear generation is at risk. Vermont Yankee closed at the end of 2014, and Pilgrim in Massachusetts will leave the market in 2019.

eba, natural gas
Patka © RTO Insider

Two nuclear units in New York are at risk, as the James A. FitzPatrick plant is set to close in the spring, and the R.E. Ginna plant could follow at the end of its reliability support services agreement, also early next year.

From 2010 to 2016, 11,665 MW of generation was built to replace aging or retiring units, representing about a quarter of the state’s total capacity of 39,000 MW, NYISO Assistant General Counsel Carl Patka said.

“We’re seeing a greater amount of deactivation notices, especially in western New York. Not a great surprise to see some of the older coal units” retiring, he said.

The retirements will make it a challenge for NYISO, which has a reserve margin of 20%, to maintain its reliability.

“Longer term, that’s something to keep an eye on,” he said. (See NYISO: FitzPatrick Closure will not Harm Reliability.)

Monitor’s State of the Market Report Seeks Changes to MISO ELMP

By Amanda Durish Cook

DETROIT — MISO’s Independent Market Monitor added eight new recommendations in its 2015 State of the Market Report.

The 124-page report concluded that MISO’s energy and ancillary markets “generally performed competitively” last year.

Monitor David Patton outlined the recommendations, four of which involve resource adequacy and planning, before the Markets Committee of the Board of Directors on Wednesday:

Energy Pricing and Transmission Congestion

  1. Disable price setting by offline resources in extended locational marginal pricing (ELMP) and expand the share of online generators eligible to set prices to include those with start times of one hour or less and minimum run times of two hours or less, regardless of whether they are scheduled in the day-ahead market.

MISO has proposed increasing the share of online peaking resources able to set prices to 14% from the current 2% in ELMP Phase II, which would eliminate $4.4 million in revenue sufficiency guarantee (RSG) payments. Patton said the RTO should permit pricing by 90% of online peaking resources, which he said would eliminate $20 million in RSG payments.

The Monitor said offline resources should only set prices when they are economic and can be started quickly to address a shortage — a threshold it said was met by less than 10% of the offline resources that currently set prices. “Accordingly, we conclude that ELMP’s offline pricing is inefficiently changing prices during shortage conditions and recommend that MISO disable the offline pricing logic as quickly as possible,” the report says.

Board member Paul Feldman said the negligible benefits of ELMP were “disappointing.” (See “‘Modest’ Price Impacts as Extended LMP Enters Phase 2,” MISO Market Subcommittee Briefs.)

Jeff Bladen, executive director of MISO market services, said ELMP Phase I was “designed to be conservative” and that MISO is analyzing the Monitor’s recommendation.

  1. Increase use of temperature-adjusted and short-term emergency ratings for transmission facilities.

Guarantee Payment Eligibility Rules and Cost Allocation

  1. Begin modeling the voltage and local reliability requirement in the day-ahead market.

Improve Dispatch Efficiency and Real-Time Market Operations

  1. Address “poor” dispatch performance and state estimator model errors in real-time operations by improving tools and procedures.

Resource Adequacy and Planning

  1. Implement firm capacity delivery procedures with PJM instead of using pseudo-tied resources.

The Monitor said a firm capacity approach with PJM “would guarantee the delivery of the energy from MISO capacity resources to PJM, while maintaining the efficiency and reliability of MISO’s dispatch.”

In its quarterly report for spring 2016, Patton said 100 new market-to-market flowgates were created between March and June when MISO pseudo-tied 22 resources to PJM territory. Congestion on the new constraints totaled $22 million for the quarter, a six-fold increase over the first quarter.

Patton said the M2M process doesn’t have an efficient enough response for pseudo-ties positioned farther from the seam.

The next batch of pseudo-tied resources to be committed outside of MISO will occur in June 2017.

“We expect higher congestion as this process unfolds. We hope PJM gets tired of these high prices … and bearing the cost of MISO congestion. It’s certainly bad for the Eastern Interconnect,” Patton said.

However, PJM has said it will not consider firm capacity delivery as an alternative to continue pseudo-ties, he said.

MISO CEO John Bear said the RTO is discussing the issue with PJM but doesn’t expect a resolution until the middle of 2017.

“I’d encourage both parties to go back to the beginning,” board member Michael Curran said. “Untying this knot could be more difficult than going back to the beginning and saying, ‘how did we get here?’”

  1. Improve the modeling of transmission constraints in the Planning Resource Auction.
  2. Improve the physical withholding mitigation measures for the PRA by addressing uneconomic retirements and recognizing affiliates.

The report says falling capacity margins will leave MISO more vulnerable to physical withholding and cites Tariff provisions that it says prevent the RTO from addressing it. “First, the physical withholding thresholds are applied on a market participant basis, rather than a company basis. This would allow a large supplier to create multiple market participants to effectively circumvent the mitigation. Second, it is not clear [that] retiring a unit that is clearly economic to continue operating would be considered physical withholding and subject to MISO’s mitigation measures.”

  1. Improve modeling of the limit on transfers between MISO South and Midwest regions in the PRA.

MISO’s recent settlement with SPP and other parties allows the RTO to transfer as much as 2,500 MW from MISO South to Midwest. But in the most recent PRA, MISO set a limit of only 874 MW.

The Monitor said the transfer limit in the PRA should equal the total transfer limit minus a derating factor that represents the probability that MISO neighbors will request a derating because of an emergency. “This recommendation would have had a substantial effect on the clearing prices in most of the Midwest zones in the most recent PRA for planning year 2016/17,” it said.

Incentives for New Investment Lacking

Curran said the board would schedule a conference call with MISO and the Monitor for a more in-depth conversation on the remaining recommendations.

Patton said long-run price signals continue to discourage new investment, with net revenues declining in 2015. The Monitor noted the $27/MWh average electricity price was 32% lower than in 2014. Natural gas prices fell 50% for the year to their lowest levels since MISO launched its energy markets in 2005.

Milder weather in 2015 caused average load levels to fall 2% from 2014. The peak load of 120 GW, set in July, was well below the forecast peak of 127.3 GW.

Gas-fired generation increased its share of total output from 17% to 23% over the year. Gas-fired resources were central to price-setting, “setting the system marginal price in 76% of intervals and locational prices somewhere in MISO in 95% of intervals,” the report said.

miso, david patton, state of the market
Patton © RTO Insider

Patton said the spring 2016 quarter was competitive, attributable in part to continued low natural gas prices. The average cost of energy was $21.50/MWh, about 20% lower than in spring 2015.

Board member Thomas Rainwater asked how much MISO’s market would have to value carbon to incentivize continued operation of nuclear units. Patton said if carbon was valued at $20/short ton, nuclear resources would be closer to recovering costs. Patton also said expansion of wind generation is not the most cost-effective means to reduce carbon but is currently economic because of subsidies.

Board members expressed concern that the Monitor’s report included capacity margin values for the summer that differed from the RTO’s projected 18.2% summer reserve margin.

The Monitor’s base case scenario predicted a 20.5% margin because Patton said the 1,000-MW North-South transfer limit is too “pessimistic.” For its margin, MISO assumes 1,203 MW of capacity in MISO South cannot be accessed because of the North-South transfer limit. However, in the Monitor’s one-year-in-10 scenario, in a high-temperature, high-load forecast, the reserve margin falls to 11.6%.

Board members questioned the disparate reserve margins and asked why the board wasn’t presented with them during MISO’s summer readiness presentation. (See “MISO Prepped for Summer Demand,” MISO Markets Committee of the Board of Directors Briefs.)

“If MISO doesn’t see the world in the same way, our numbers may not match,” Patton said, reminding the board that the Monitor is independent of MISO.

Board members asked that Patton display his results alongside MISO’s in future summer readiness presentations. MISO and the Monitor agreed.

MISO’s Shawn McFarlane also delivered the RTO’s quarterly report during the meeting:

  • Average load for the spring was 86.3 GW, 2.7% lower than last spring.
  • Natural gas prices averaged $1.87/MMBtu, a 34.2% decline relative to spring 2015.
  • Total forced and planned generation outages accounted for 23.8% of market capacity: Planned outages averaged 23.6 GW, an 18% drop from spring 2015; forced outages averaged 19.3 GW, up 5.5%.
  • Average wind generation increased to 5.6 GW, 4.5% higher than last spring. Wind production was 4,934 GWh in April, setting a new monthly record.

FERC Taking Second Look at Cost Allocation for 2 PJM Projects

By Suzanne Herel

FERC is taking another look at its April orders approving the cost allocations for a stability fix for New Jersey’s Artificial Island nuclear complex and an upgrade of the Bergen-Linden Corridor.

The commission issued orders June 21 granting rehearing — a technical step to allow it more than 30 days to reconsider complaints that PJM’s use of the solution-based distribution factor (DFAX) cost allocation method is inappropriate for the two projects (EL15-95, ER15-2563 and ER15-2562, et al.).

ferc, pjm, cost allocationIn the case of the Artificial Island project, the public service commissions in Maryland and Delaware, along with some transmission owners, complained that the customers they represent will bear the brunt of the cost of the fix while receiving a small percentage of load savings.

Similarly, Consolidated Edison and Linden VFT disputed the fairness of the Bergen-Lindon Corridor upgrade cost allocation.

Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur dissented from both orders, saying the DFAX method was inappropriate for the two projects. (See FERC Upholds Cost Allocation for Artificial Island, Bergen-Linden Projects.)

“We know this is only one step in the process of continuing to fight the current proposal, but we are encouraged by the opportunity to again make the case to FERC that the current cost allocation scheme is both unjust and unreasonable,” Delaware Gov. Jack Markell said in a statement.

Earlier this month, Delaware lawmakers passed a resolution that would block easements needed for the Artificial Island project. (See Del. Lawmakers Try to Block Artificial Island Plan; Project Still on Track.)

Federal Briefs

TransCanada last week filed a formal arbitration request under the North American Free Trade Agreement, seeking $15 billion in damages for President Obama’s rejection of its Keystone XL Pipeline project.

NAFTA’s arbitration rules allow companies to challenge government decisions before international panels. TransCanada had filed a notice of intent in January and tried to negotiate a settlement with the U.S. government.

The company said it is seeking to recover its costs, calling Obama’s decision “symbolic and based merely on the desire to make the U.S. appear strong on climate change, even though the State Department had itself concluded that denial would have no significant impact on the environment.”

More: Reuters; OilPrice.com

ETRACOM Fined $2.5M; Will Seek Federal Court Review

CAISO - FERC Office of Enforcement - New Melones Dam - US Bureau of Reclamation - ETRACOMETRACOM and its principal trader Michael Rosenberg said they will seek a de novo review in federal court of FERC’s June 17 order fining them $2.5 million and demanding repayment of $315,000 in unjust profits (IN16-2).

The commission concluded the company submitted uneconomic virtual supply transactions at the New Melones intertie at the CAISO border to affect power prices and benefit its congestion revenue rights in 2011. The commission ordered the company and Rosenberg to pay the fines within 60 days. Chairman Norman Bay, who headed the Office of Enforcement during part of the commission’s investigation, did not participate in the order.

ETRACOM insists it used a legitimate bidding strategy at New Melones based on hydro conditions. In a press release, it said FERC’s order was “the result of an unfair and arbitrary process, wrong on the merits and largely rubber stamps the views of its Enforcement staff.” It said it “is confident that a neutral decision maker will decide it committed no wrongdoing.”

More: FERC: Market Flaws Irrelevant to Case

White House: Coal Program Costs Taxpayers Billions

coalmining(wiki)A White House study of federal coal leases concluded that the U.S. government is probably losing $3 billion of revenue a year because of permissive rules and loose oversight.

“Companies have employed several tactics to lower the selling price of coal without losing revenue,” according to the report by the White House Council of Economic Advisors. Mining companies sell coal to affiliates at low prices or levy penalties from utilities that reject deliveries. In those instances, the government doesn’t receive its share. “The program has been structured in a way that misaligns incentives going back decades,” the report states.

The U.S. is supposed to collect a 12.5% royalty on coal mined from federal land but is actually receiving closer to 5%, according to the report.

More: Reuters

Cantwell Urges FERC Vigilance in West

Cantwell
Cantwell

Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) is urging FERC to take special actions to make sure an expected natural gas shortage on the West Coast doesn’t lead to market manipulation.

In a letter to FERC Chairman Norman Bay, Cantwell said the Aliso Canyon leak could lead to increased electricity and gas prices and enable companies to “engage in Enron-like tactics.”

“Westerners still remember 2000-2001,” Cantwell wrote. “History must not be allowed to repeat itself.”

More: Morning Consult

FEMA Gives High Marks After Cooper Nuke Test

fema-brandThe Federal Emergency Management Agency said officials who participated in a recent test for Nebraska’s Cooper Nuclear Station are ready to work together in the event of a disaster at the plant.

The test, conducted June 14, probed how well Missouri and Nebraska agencies, organizations and the utility itself would react to a crisis involving Cooper, which is owned and operated by the Nebraska Public Power District. The exercise is a biennial requirement that measures adequacy of state and local radiological emergency readiness and response plans.

“It was a very productive event,” said Chuck Gregg, a senior planner with FEMA. “There’s a lot of good things that came out of this.”

More: St. Joseph News-Press

Germany Passes Measure Limiting Shallow Fracking

The lower house of Germany’s legislature passed a measure that will ban fracking in clay formations and issue more stringent rules governing fracking in deeper formations.

The legislation bans fracking in clay formations, which normally lie between 1,000 and 2,500 meters deep. The ban would be reviewed in 2021. Energy companies, however, say exploring the country’s shale gas reserves would guard against the country growing more dependent on natural gas imports, which mostly come from Russia.

Lawmakers have been mulling an amendment that would allow shale fracking under 3,000 meters and had asked companies to hold off on their projects until they finalized the details. They moved quickly to pass the ban, however, after a report that companies were growing impatient and moving ahead. Fracking is deeply unpopular among the German populace.

More: Reuters; Bloomberg

NRC Denies Request to Up Vermont Yankee Security

new englandThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission ruled that the operators of the shuttered Vermont Yankee are permitted to shrink the plant’s emergency operations, denying a request from Vermont officials that Entergy reinstate the same standards used when the plant was operating.

Entergy retired the plant in December 2014. Since then, it has reduced personnel at the emergency operations center and successfully lobbied NRC to erase the standard 10-mile emergency planning zone.

The commission said the state didn’t provide evidence to support its arguments that the reduced emergency plan failed to account for all credible emergency scenarios and posed an increased risk to the health and safety of citizens.

More: VTDigger.org

FERC: Redesign Overlapping Pipeline Routes in Ohio

FERC told the developers of two competing Appalachian natural gas pipelines that they have to redesign an overlapping 13-mile section of their routes in Ohio before it can consider approving them.

The Rover and Leach XPress pipeline projects, planned by Energy Transfer Partners and Columbia Pipeline Group respectively, “are proposed in exactly the same location” with construction planned for “the same calendar year.”

FERC said it wants a response from the companies within 10 days of the June 21 letter. The Rover pipeline is planned to run 700 miles through West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan, while Columbia’s Leach Xpress is to run 130 miles from West Virginia, through Pennsylvania and into Ohio.

More: Natural Gas Intelligence

Overheard at the EBA Northeast Annual Meeting

NEW YORK — Scott Weiner, the New York Public Service Commission’s deputy for markets and innovation, discussed the state’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative.

Weiner © RTO Insider, eba
Weiner © RTO Insider

“REV distinguishes itself not by its specific proposals but by its comprehensiveness. If you take a look at the specific components of REV, most, if not all, are being tested or applied somewhere else in North America. What we’ve tried to do is pull them all together at one time in a holistically, comprehensively approach to reform.”

eba
Stroup © RTO Insider

Kerry Stroup, manager of state legislative and regulatory affairs for PJM, discussed the challenges of introducing any systemwide programs to the RTO, which operates in 13 states and D.C.

“Innovation is something that happens in a different way in a multi-jurisdictional entity like PJM as opposed to a single unit like New York or Ontario. … PJM is a market maker and doesn’t implement policy. So that can be a challenge at times because those state retail regulatory frameworks range from vertically integrated utilities to hybrid models to entire fully restructured retail markets.”

eba
Fraser © RTO Insider

Peter Fraser, vice president of industry operations and performance for the Ontario Energy Board, said previous market models are inadequate to address customer preferences for cleaner energy and the increased integration of newer technologies.

“We’re changing the way electricity is priced to consumers in a number of ways, with residential rates going to a fixed monthly charge for their electric distribution rates. [We’re] studying reforms to nonresidential rates, and we issued a discussion paper this spring that recognizes the changes that are ongoing in the electric distribution market.”

eba
Dadson © RTO Insider

Aleck Dadson, vice president of consultant StrategyCorp and former COO of the Ontario Energy Board, said the board embarked on a redesign of its market in advance of REV that was influenced by regulatory changes in Europe, particularly the U.K. It included a wide deployment of smart meters and increased renewable energy penetration.

“There is a really strong emphasis on performance measurement. We established scorecards that are customer-focused, with customer service metrics, operational effectiveness, safety, reliability, public policy responsiveness,” he said. “And the board every year publishes a scorecard to compare the distribution companies, to see who’s doing well and who isn’t.”

─ William Opalka

FERC OKs SPP Bylaw Change; Orders $1.6M in Refunds

FERC on Friday approved an amendment to SPP’s bylaws clarifying that the RTO should not credit assessments for transmission service over and above the amount of members’ monthly administrative fee.

But the commission said the RTO improperly clawed back overpayments last year based on its reinterpretation of its bylaws before the rules were officially changed, ordering the RTO to pay $1.6 million in refunds (ER16-829).

SPP collects its administrative costs through a monthly assessment applied to load eligible to take network service under its Tariff (Schedule 1-A fees). Members receive a credit against the monthly assessment for fees paid for serving their load with network or point-to-point transmission service.

spp, ferc, bylaws

Between 2003 and 2015, the RTO had been making credits that sometimes exceeded the 1-A fees, with the RTO providing credits against other portions of the customers’ transmission settlement statements. The excessive credits resulted in a 1% undercollection of its administrative fees annually, forcing SPP to charge a higher administrative rate in the subsequent years.

In March 2015, SPP staff reinterpreted its bylaws and capped the credits. In December, the Board of Directors approved a revision of section 8.4 of the bylaws to clarify the new practice.

FERC approved the new crediting policy effective March 30, 2016, but denied SPP’s request for a waiver allowing the RTO to apply it retroactively.

As a result, the commission ordered SPP to provide refunds within 30 days for credits it denied last year under its new interpretation. The ruling was a victory for 13 SPP members who received credits in excess of their monthly assessments during 2014. Two members who filed protests, Kansas City Power and Light and Nebraska Public Power District, will receive the majority of the refunds, a combined $1.2 million as of December.

– Tom Kleckner

DERs, Attracting Generation the Focus in MISO Panel Discussion

By Amanda Durish Cook

DETROIT — Four industry executives and a state regulator shared their views on distributed generation, resource adequacy and aging infrastructure during a stakeholder panel at the MISO Annual Meeting last week.

Robert Gee, of Gee Strategies Group, moderated.

Melody Birmingham-Byrd of Duke Energy Indiana called distributed energy resources an “inevitability” and said her company is embracing the change with “heavy involvement” in research and projects.

However, she said designing a DER rate structure remains a concern. “We want to make sure those who can afford distributed resources aren’t doing it on the backs of those that can’t,” she said.

Teresa Mogensen, senior vice president of transmission at Xcel Energy, said the grid “is a long, long way from being dead” and will continue to play a role even with greater use of distributed generation.

miso, der
Duke Energy Indiana’s Melody Birmingham-Byrd shares concerns about aging infastructure in the MISO footprint at the annual stakeholders meeting in Detroit last week. In the photo left to right: Robert Gee, Teresa Mogensen (partially hidden by Gee), Trevor Lauer, Melody Birmingham-Byrd, Jennifer Vosburg and Sally Talberg © RTO Insider

“We do have customers that have disconnected from the grid, and if they’ve done that, more power to them,” said DTE Electric President and COO Trevor Lauer. He said his company will be aided in its transition to DER by new, younger workers: DTE Energy will turn over 50% of its workforce over the next seven years, he said.

Jennifer Vosburg, senior vice president of NRG Energy’s Gulf Coast region, said customers “aren’t waiting around: The utility of the future is here. Our concern is, can the markets keep up, can the regulation keep up, can it be integrated into the market system?”

Michigan Public Service Commission Chairman Sally Talberg said she didn’t know how soon distributed resources would permeate the grid. “I have a National Geographic from 1983 that says solar is the way of the future,” she joked.

Resource Adequacy Concerns

All of the speakers expressed concerns over MISO’s ability to attract new generation to replace retiring plants.

“Right now, it’s hard to see how an independent power producer [without] a power purchase agreement could build new generation,” Lauer said.

Vosburg said MISO hasn’t implemented anything to “trigger new investment.”

The panel also addressed the growth of natural gas and its history of price volatility.

“Who would have thought seven years ago that there would be such a fundamental change in electric generation with fracking and natural gas use?” Lauer said. “I think price volatility is going to be there, but I think the larger concern is infrastructure and gas storage.”

Talberg agreed and said pumping gas through pipelines in Michigan can be “high-risk” since some pipelines are “vintage.”

The panel generally agreed that the Clean Power Plan stay isn’t going to slow progress on emission reductions.

“Our concern is the rate and pace of carbon emission [reductions], not that we’re going down that path,” Birmingham-Byrd said. “What Duke Energy is trying to do while [we] retire coal plants is to have a more diverse generation portfolio.”