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November 19, 2024

Bankruptcy Court Approves EFH Emergence from Chapter 11

By Tom Kleckner

The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware has approved a reorganization plan that will take Energy Future Holdings’ competitive businesses out of Chapter 11 after two years.

In a statement posted on its website Friday, Dallas-based EFH said the bankruptcy judge approved Texas Competitive Energy Holdings’ tax-free spinoff of generator Luminant, electric retailer TXU Energy and supporting business services. The Wall Street Journal reported that the companies will be taken over by senior lenders, including affiliates of Apollo Global Management, Brookfield Asset Management and Oaktree Capital Management.

Luminant Sign_Lamar Plant - Energy Future Holdings - Chapter 11
Luminant Sign outside their Lamar Plant Source: Energy Future Holdings

EFH said the “Reorganized TCEH,” as it will be known in the short term, has already received “a majority of the key regulatory approvals required for emergence,” in addition to the bankruptcy court’s approval. EFH expects a final approval, related to Luminant’s mining operations, from the Railroad Commission of Texas in September.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Sontchi said the plan “was the best possible deal” for EFH to emerge from bankruptcy.

The bankruptcy court’s approval doesn’t apply to EFH’s regulated transmission and distribution provider, Oncor. NextEra Energy has reached an agreement to buy for $18.4 billion the 80% share of Oncor currently owned by EFH and Energy Future Intermediate Holdings, another of EFH’s several holding companies. (See NextEra Reaches Deal for Oncor.)

Energy Future Holdings chapter 11
Map of Luminant Plants Source: Luminant

A confirmation hearing on the Oncor assets’ emergence from bankruptcy is scheduled to begin Dec. 1.

EFH, then known as TXU Corp., was acquired in 2007 by private equity firms KKR & Co., TPG Capital LP and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners through a $45 billion leveraged buyout. Low gas prices have bedeviled EFH ever since, forcing the holding company to file for bankruptcy protection in April 2014.

Federal Briefs

Lawyers representing EPA last week argued that multimillion-dollar boiler upgrades in 2007 and 2010 at Ameren Missouri’s Rush Island facilities south of St. Louis should have required a permit and review process under the Clean Air Act.

epasourcegovIn the 1990s, Ameren decided to switch to a new, ultra-low-sulfur coal rather than install new controls. This resulted in operational problems at the plant, leading the company to make $72 million worth of upgrades, including boiler modifications and a new turbine. It also led, EPA argued, to increased electricity output and, thus, increased emissions.

James W. Beers Jr., of the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division, argued that the upgrades are new sources of pollution and should be subjected to more rigid emissions limits. He said that Ameren should install new sulfur dioxide controls at the plants. Ameren said the improvements were part of routine maintenance and should not fall under Clean Air Act standards. The company also argued that EPA cannot prove that the rise in emissions resulted from the upgrades and not from increased electricity demand.

More: St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Ginna Cited by NRC For Document Error

NRCSourceGovFederal regulators have cited R.E. Ginna nuclear plant owner Exelon for a safety violation because the station’s emergency plan contained a sentence that misused less-than symbols.

If a serious accident had occurred, the written emergency management decision flowchart could have led control room operators to mistakenly call for a mass evacuation, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The mistake proved harmless, as there was no serious accident during the two-and-a-half years the error existed in the tree-like graph, intended to support decision-making during critical incidents.

The mistake was discovered by an Exelon supervisor this spring as plant personnel prepared for an emergency drill. The commission classified the error as a low-to-moderate level violation.

More: Democrat and Chronicle

FAA Stands by its Greenlight For Proposed Wind Farm

faa(gov)The Federal Aviation Administration is standing by its previous determination that the proposed Chapman Ranch wind farm in South Texas would “not have an adverse effect on the safe and efficient use of the navigable airspace” primarily used by the U.S. Navy for training pilots out of Kingsville and Corpus Christi.

The administration’s decision, along with an agreement between the Navy and developer Apex Clean Energy, still leaves unresolved concerns that the wind farm may make the area less attractive to the military for training. The agreement allows the Navy to shut down the wind farm’s operation any time it interferes with its operations, according to John Kelley, who represents the Chapman family.

The Corpus Christi City Council, which annexed lands to assert some control over the facility’s development, responded to FAA’s decision by stripping $14 million from next year’s budget for capital improvement projects for the newly annexed land.

More: Corpus Christi Caller-Times; Corpus Christi Caller-Times

TVA Files for Uprates At Browns Ferry Plant

tvasourcetvaThe Tennessee Valley Authority has filed a request with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to allow power uprates at its Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant.

The Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League opposes the request, saying that TVA’s calculation “under-predicts the reaction of zirconium and steam that would occur in a loss-of-coolant accident.”

“NRC should seek to reduce, not increase, the risk of loss of coolant that will melt the fuel rods leading to meltdown and released radiation,” said Gary Morgan of the group’s Scottsboro-based chapter.

More: The Chattanoogan

Renewable Production Beat Records Each Month of 2016

Renewable energy production set new records each month of 2016, according to the Energy Information Administration.

The measures run through June and include utility-scale wind, solar, hydro, geothermal and biomass plants larger than 1 MW. The records were attained despite low numbers for hydro because of the drought in the West. And while most renewables have been increasing their share, hydro’s share has remained unchanged for the past 20 years.

More: Greentech Media

Tesla Wins FTC Approval To Buy SolarCity

Tesla Car (Source: Tesla)
(Source: Tesla)

The Federal Trade Commission approved Tesla Motors acquisition of the home solar installation company SolarCity, a move the car manufacturing company said would further its goal of providing a one-stop shop for solar panels, home battery storage and electric cars.

The $2.6 billion transaction, announced earlier this month, still needs other regulatory approvals, but SolarCity said it hopes the deal closes by the end of the year.

More: Reuters

Fracking Tied to Migraines, Fatigue, Study Says

A study in Environmental Health Perspectives drew a connection between living near shale gas wells and an increased rate of migraines, fatigue and sinus problems. The report, based on 7,785 randomly selected patients of a Pennsylvania health system, showed that those living closest to fracking sites were 49% to 95% more likely to show signs of chronic sinusitis, migraines and fatigue.

The senior author, Dr. Brian S. Schwartz, admitted there could be other variables and said the study was observational, not one that proved cause and effect.

However, he said, “there have now been seven or eight studies with different designs and in different populations, and while none is perfect, there is now a growing body of evidence that this industry is associated with impacts on health that are biologically plausible. Do we know the exact mechanism? No. That requires further study.”

More: The New York Times

BLM Leasing Program Draws Opposition

blmEnvironmentalists are challenging a Bureau of Land Management plan to lease more than 19,000 acres of federal land in Montana for oil and gas exploration.

WildEarth Guardians says BLM officials have failed to consider the climate damage done by fossil fuel development. The Center for Biological Diversity and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership have also filed protests on the proposed lease, which is slated for auction Oct. 18 in Billings.

The group has been aggressively challenging BLM leases in several Western states, including Wyoming, Colorado and Utah, on grounds similar to those cited by the group in Montana. BLM has leased more than 800,000 acres of federal land for oil and gas development last year alone.

More: Billings Gazette

MISO Advisory Committee Briefs

MISO has narrowed candidates for the Board of Directors to six, Nominating Committee stakeholder member Matt Brown said.

Brown told the Advisory Committee that the nominating panel interviewed 10 candidates in mid-August and selected a primary and secondary choice for each of the three open seats. The RTO started with a list of about 30 candidates.

“We’re really trying to pick individuals with the most impressive backgrounds, and not the ones that fit a mold,” Brown said.

MISO Board of Directors in Detroit (RTO Insider) advisory committee
MISO’s current board at their June meeting in Detroit © RTO Insider

Under MISO rules, the board must be made up of individuals with varying expertise. For this search, the RTO requires a person with transmission operations expertise, one with transmission planning expertise and one with experience in finance, accounting, engineering and utility regulation. Brown said the committee is also looking for candidates who have experience in technology or cybersecurity.

“It’s been a very enlightening process, and I think the search firm did a great job in locating candidates, and we had a very successful interview process,” Brown said. From a stakeholder perspective, Commissioner Weber and I are very excited about the six candidates and their caliber,” Brown said. Indiana Utility Regulatory Commissioner Angela Weber occupies the other stakeholder seat on the Nominating Committee.

Directors Judy Walsh, Michael Evans and Paul Feldman will hit MISO’s term limit when their current terms expire Dec. 31. MISO enacted a limit of three consecutive three-year terms last year. The Nominating Committee can seek a waiver to allow a fourth term if it believes it is needed “to retain [the director’s] skills or expertise, to maintain geographic or other diversity of the board, or is otherwise in the best interests of” MISO.

miso advisory committee

The board will review the committee’s six choices and make a selection by mid-September. Members will vote on the candidates between Sept. 15 and the Oct. 24 Informational Forum, at which the results will be announced.

The terms begin in January and expire at the end of 2019.

Close to Fall, MISO Stakeholder Entities Still Setting 2016 Priorities

The Resource Adequacy Subcommittee is seeking the approval of just two priorities for the year.

The RASC’s proposed priorities for 2016 are to improve the Planning Resource Auction and enhance gas-electric coordination.

RASC Chair Gary Mathis said he received scant feedback on the priorities. Mathis said he thought the timing had something to do with it. “2016 is more than half over,” he pointed out.

AC Chair Audrey Penner said stakeholders will begin earlier on 2017 priorities, starting with a strategic planning session at the end of September. She added that the groups would work to streamline the new priorities planning process in its second year.

“This is our first kick at the can, and we’ll get better year after year,” Penner said.

Meanwhile, Planning Advisory Committee Chair Bob McKee submitted five priorities nearly identical to the AC’s own priorities approved in May. (See “Committee Endorses 5 Final Priorities,” MISO Advisory Committee Briefs.)

“There was not a lot of conversation, but no concerns have been raised,” McKee said of the AC’s priority-setting.

Penner said the PAC and RASC’s 2016 priorities would be up for AC approval at the September meeting.

— Amanda Durish Cook

SoCal Gas Restrictions Unlikely to Impede Winter Grid Operations

By Robert Mullin

Southern California’s winter grid operations are unlikely to be compromised by natural gas pipeline restrictions stemming from the shutdown of Aliso Canyon, even in the event of a once-in-a-decade cold snap, according to an interagency assessment released Monday.

Still, tight gas supplies could leave the region vulnerable to load shedding during a significant grid contingency — such as the loss of transmission import capability or unexpected outages at outside generators serving the region, the report says.

The Southern California Gas (SoCalGas) storage facility north of Los Angeles was closed after a leak released massive amounts of methane between October and February, prompting the company to impose daily balancing requirements on its customers in order to ensure reliable gas delivery to gas-fired generators during the summer’s peak season for electricity demand. (See CAISO Seeks Rapid Response to SoCal Gas Restrictions.)

california aliso canyon natural gas winter grid operations
Graph plots out CAISO’s utilization rates of gas-fired generation in the Los Angeles Basion over the course of 2015.

The report was produced by technical staff from CAISO, the California Public Utilities Commission, the California Energy Commission (CEC), Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) and SoCalGas — the owner and operator of the region’s pipeline system.

Cold Day Design Standard

The region’s one-in-10-year “cold day design standard” would require SoCalGas to send out 5.2 Bcfd on its system, the report shows. However, without the ability to withdraw from Aliso Canyon, the company is limited to a maximum sendout capacity of 4.7 Bcfd, assuming there are no other storage or pipeline outages and a full utilization of receipt point and storage withdrawals.

Gas supplied to electric generation could be curtailed if the region’s total demand exceeds 4.5 Bcfd under a scenario in which generators utilize 100% of their gas receipts or 4.2 Bcfd under 85% utilization, the report said, indicating the importance for generators to tightly balance their schedules with their gas burns.

Nevertheless, the region’s electricity grid is expected to operate reliably “so long as the total SoCalGas supportable gas delivery and supply is greater than 4.1 Bcfd under normal pre-contingency conditions and 4.2 Bcfd to support N-1 contingency conditions” — such as the loss of a key generating unit or transmission line serving a load pocket.

While the report finds that the area affected by the gas restrictions should have sufficient transmission and electricity supply from outside resources during winter, it acknowledges that neighboring balancing areas may have to provide emergency assistance “depending on the magnitude and timing of gas curtailments.”

The report offers another caveat: “If supportable SoCalGas supply falls below 4.1 Bcfd during peak winter gas demand conditions, it may be necessary to withdraw from Aliso Canyon to avoid electric load interruption.”

Recent history suggests that gas should be available despite a lack of injections into the facility for almost a year.

“Because of the effectiveness of the Aliso Canyon summer action plan, as of the time of this report, no gas has been withdrawn from Aliso Canyon to maintain electric reliability,” the report notes.

15 Bcf in Storage

The facility still contains about 15 Bcf of working gas in storage, unchanged from the volume that the PUC last January ordered be left in the facility to cover summer needs.

Summer has seen CAISO manage two heat-driven conservation alerts without having to tap that supply, and the grid’s gas needs are sure to drop significantly during winter. Last year, the ISO utilized less than half as much gas-fired generation in the Los Angeles Basin during winter than in summer.

LADWP, which operates its own balancing area, passed through its summer peak season without the benefit of its 287-kV Mead‐Victorville Line 1, which is slated to return to service by winter. The additional transmission capacity should provide 5,010 MW of winter import capability, compared with a forecast peak load of 4,309 MW. The upshot: The utility could meet its reliability requirements without relying on any of the basin’s local gas-fired generation, absent the loss of any of its four synchronous condensers needed for voltage regulation and support.

The interagency assessment was accompanied by a winter action plan developed to reduce the potential for gas curtailments large enough to interrupt Southern California’s electric service. Among the measures is a recommendation that CAISO impose a generator gas burn ceiling for very cold days.

“Effectively, it curtails some of the electric generation load in advance and increases the probability that SoCalGas will not have to curtail further,” the plan says.

The plan also recommends that:

  • The PUC require that SoCalGas implement a demand response program that rewards large natural gas consumers for reducing demand when requested;
  • SoCalGas maintain requirements that non-core gas customers tightly balance their schedules with actual use and develop a similar provision for core customers;
  • The CEC and PUC investigate what “affiliate impediments” would prevent SoCalGas parent company Sempra Energy from buying LNG from its own Costa Azul LNG facility in Mexico and delivering it into the Southern California gas system; and
  • The CEC identify and solicit additional sources of gas supply, including more in-state production.

The California agencies are seeking comments on the winter action plan, the subject of an Aug. 26 public workshop.

Hydro Owner Wants in on New York Nuke Subsidy

By William Opalka

A hydropower owner is seeking rehearing of New York’s Clean Energy Standard, which limited the state’s new zero-emission credits (ZECs) to nuclear generators (15-E-0302).

Ampersand1 (Ampersand) - Ampersand Hydro New York Clean Energy Standard
Source: Ampersand Energy Resources

In a petition filed Aug. 23, Ampersand Hydro said it was arbitrarily excluded from the New York Public Service Commission’s “discriminatory” Aug. 1 order. The filing appears to be the first in what is anticipated to be numerous challenges to the commission’s order.

Ampersand said the PSC erred by “arbitrarily and capriciously failing to develop an implementation plan that permits small hydro generation resources to also be treated as a zero-emission facility and unjustly and unreasonably discriminat[ed] in providing nuclear generation facilities a significant competitive advantage over competing generation resources, including small hydro generation.”

Ampersand says small hydropower should enjoy the same treatment as nuclear under the standard: 12-year contracts with a subsidy of $17.48/MWh for the first two years with adjustments every two years thereafter.

The commission order calculated the subsidy based on EPA’s social cost of carbon, minus revenue paid to the state under the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.

The PSC said the payments were justified because nuclear plants are unprofitable in a low natural gas price environment and New York’s clean energy goals are at risk if the plants close. Ampersand said it is subject to the same market and clean energy dynamics. (See New York Adopts Clean Energy Standard, Nuclear Subsidy.)

Ampersand2-(Ampersand) Ampersand Hydro New York Clean Energy Standard
Source: Ampersand Energy Resources

“The CES order explicitly recognized that an important generation resource with zero emissions, small hydro generation resources, may be not able to survive in the competitive wholesale energy market in New York and therefore might be forced to retire,” the company wrote. “Significantly, however, the CES order failed to provide any discussion of why generation resources that no party challenges are zero-emission, renewable resources should be denied ZECs. Instead, the CES order merely deferred any action in favor of additional studies.”

Ampersand specializes in acquiring and rehabilitating small hydropower stations. The Boston-based company controls 12 small merchant hydro stations in New York totaling 18.7 MW with an expected annual production in excess of 70,000 MWh.

Proposal to Revisit PJM Capacity Model Receives Tepid Response

By Rory D. Sweeney and Rich Heidorn Jr.

WILMINGTON, Del. — A stakeholder group calling for a comprehensive review of PJM’s capacity market won support from consumer advocates and state regulators last week, but industrial consumers and generators were cool to the idea.

The one point no one disputed at Thursday’s Markets and Reliability Committee meeting: Winning consensus on rules to replace the Reliability Pricing Model is a long shot.

“We might have a very low probability of coming to consensus on this process,” acknowledged American Municipal Power’s Ed Tatum, who introduced the proposal. “But it’s not zero.”

The proposed problem statement seeks a structure that will be more “resilient” to unforeseen shocks, such as state-subsidized generation.

The framework for the capacity market is the result of a FERC-brokered settlement in 2007. But there have been numerous rule changes since then, including most recently the introduction of Capacity Performance, which increased penalties and rewards for performance.

Delaware Municipal Electric Corp., Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, the PJM Public Power Coalition, the Public Power Association of New Jersey, Dominion Virginia Power and retailer Direct Energy have signed on as co-sponsors of AMP’s initiative. (See Co-ops, Munis Call for Reset of PJM Capacity Model.)

Direct Energy’s Jeff Whitehead said changes to the capacity constructs are “already happening,” citing the stakeholder initiatives created to address concerns over CP. In addition to task forces addressing seasonal capacity and mitigating generators’ risk of nonperformance, there are ongoing debates over calculating CP penalties, generator ramp rates and treatment of external assets.

To those who don’t support the problem statement, he asked, “Where do you want these debates [to occur] if not here?”

Additional Supporters

The coalition picked up support at the meeting from Dan Griffiths, executive director of the Consumer Advocates of PJM States; John Farber of the Delaware Public Service Commission staff; and Greg Pakela of DTE Energy Trading.

Farber said ad hoc reactions to CP, such as the seasonal capacity initiative, have created uncertainty. “That uncertainty only creates risk, and risk creates cost,” he said. “The worst position for PJM is to do nothing.”

Pakela said PJM needs to prepare for the future, predicting it’s “a matter of time” before states find a way to subsidize in-state generation that passes muster at FERC. Such efforts may increase as states seek to meet their emission targets under EPA’s Clean Power Plan, he said.

But Susan Bruce, who represents the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition, said although her group “has never been a big fan of capacity markets,” it wasn’t eager to open up the issue again.

“The devil we know may be better than the devil we don’t,” she said.

Stakeholders representing generators were particularly wary. “While I encourage you to look at other market designs, I’ll challenge you to find one that’s better,” Dynegy’s Jason Cox said. Models used by MISO and CAISO, he said, are “vastly inferior.”

He also questioned the premise of the initiative, asking “How can you design a construct to deal with issues you don’t even know about yet?”

Nothing in it for Supply?

Neal Fitch of NRG Energy and Tom Hyzinski of Talen Energy said it was unclear to them what the “problem” is and questioned Tatum on the scope of the proposed inquiry.

“Soup to nuts within resource adequacy?” Fitch asked.

Yes, responded Tatum.

Based on input from stakeholders, Tatum revised the proposed issue charge before the meeting to narrow its scope. The revised charge says it will limit its discussion of shortage pricing and the energy and ancillary services markets “to those that would be necessitated by any recommended changes to the capacity construct.”

“We don’t want to take on the world here,” Tatum said.

“You’re assuming that you’ll come up with something that will be bulletproof?” Hyzinski asked Tatum.

“No,” Tatum responded. “I think there might be something more resilient. I don’t know if there is or not.”

Mike Borgatti of Gabel Associates called it “a pocketbook issue.”

“Suppliers don’t want to be paid less. Load doesn’t want to pay more,” he said. “I struggle to explain to my clients on the supply side of the house what the opportunity is” pursuing the discussion.

Whitehead acknowledged his company’s interests, saying the current uncertainty is undermining competitive retailers’ business model. Predictable prices based on market fundamentals, he said, “allows us to contract forward and sleep at night.”

Tatum and Steve Lieberman of ODEC said their employers are caught in the middle as load-serving entities that also own generation. This issue “hits us on both sides,” Lieberman said.

Tatum said AMP likes the opportunity provided by markets to build its own generation or seek cheaper options offered by others. “If we can get supply for less than building our own, that’s a good thing,” he said.

PJM, Monitor Weigh In

PJM officials and Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring were silent during the 70-minute discussion, until a stakeholder asked for their positions.

“There’s no harm in discussing things,” Bowring said. “I actually think CP is pretty robust and a pretty good design. It can always be improved.”

“If the intent is to replace the capacity market with a bilateral approach,” he added after the meeting, “I think that is a bad idea.”

PJM CFO and MRC Chair Suzanne Daugherty responded: “PJM believes in the stakeholder process. If the stakeholders support [the initiative], we do also.”

Facilitator Sought

A vote on the problem statement could come as soon as next month’s MRC meeting. PJM stakeholders rarely reject problem statements, which require only majority support to proceed. Winning approval for Tariff changes, however, would take a two-thirds sector-weighted vote.

If the problem statement moves forward, Bruce suggested, the discussions should be moderated by a facilitator independent of market participants and PJM. Other stakeholders supported Bruce’s request.

“I’m guessing that we’re not all looking for the capacity market to do the same thing,” she said. “It’s beyond ‘missing money’ at this point.”

CAISO Proposes Broadening LSE Definition

By Robert Mullin

CAISO is proposing to amend its Tariff to expand the definition of a “load-serving entity” to include any organization granted authority to serve its own electricity needs.

The Tariff currently recognizes as LSEs only those entities that sell electricity or serve load to end users, a description that covers utilities, federal power marketing agencies and community choice aggregators. A special exception was made for the State Water Project (SWP), a California agency that directly engages the wholesale market to cover its own energy requirements.

CAISO Load-serving entity
CAISO is seeking to expand the definition of an LSE to accomodate San Francisco’s Bay Area Rapid Transport agency. Source: Bart

The ISO is seeking a broader definition to accommodate the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART), which, like the SWP, serves its own load but does not meet the standard definition of an LSE.

“We’ll see what other entities will participate under this definition, but we’re not sure there are any at this point,” Perry Servedio, senior market design and regulatory developer at CAISO, said during an Aug. 23 stakeholder call to discuss the proposal.

At the end of the year, BART’s transmission contract rights on the Pacific Gas and Electric network, which predate the existence of the ISO, will expire. Those rights will convert to CAISO service, leaving the agency exposed to congestion charges.

For a recognized LSE facing a similar circumstance, CAISO provides a remedy: The LSE can cover its exposure by seeking an allocation of congestion revenue rights (CRRs) in the initial round of the ISO’s annual allocation process. The ISO treats the expiring contract rights as if they were expiring annual CRRs.

But that process is not available to BART.

As an interim measure, CAISO last month filed with FERC to seek another temporary exception to the definition in order to enable BART to participate in this fall’s 2017 CRR allocation (ER16-2327).

By expanding the definition, the ISO hopes to eliminate the need for one-off exceptions. The revised Tariff would categorize BART and SWP as LSEs “granted authority pursuant to California state or local law, regulation or franchise to serve their own load.”

The amended language sent up red flags for some stakeholders, who worried that any California entity granted such authority would qualify as an LSE and therefore be required to procure adequate reserves to support their load.

Ernie Hahn, senior resource manager with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, said his agency is concerned about what the change would mean upon expiration of its transmission contract rights with Southern California Edison.

“This came out of the blue and we’re a little distressed by it,” he said. “We don’t understand what the [resource adequacy] implications will be.”

“Our intent is not to require entities to do this,” said Brad Cooper, CAISO senior manager of market design and regulatory policy. “To the extent that there’s an arrangement like yours, you’re not considered an LSE.”

But David Zlotlow, CAISO senior counsel, confirmed that the district would face the requirement once its contract expires.

“I object to the change because you haven’t given us enough time to prepare for the [resource adequacy] requirement,” Hahn said. He encouraged the ISO to make an “incremental change” to the definition, similar to the SWP exception.

“When I read this, it suggests to me that entities serving load behind the meter will get captured by this,” said Steven Kelly, director of policy at the Independent Energy Producers Association.

“A day or two ago, in anticipation of this call, we had that same thought,” Zlotlow said. “There might be a word or two to add to this definition.”

“Do storage devices or pumped storage qualify as LSEs because they serve their own load?” asked Mark Smith, vice president at Calpine.

“No, because they’re not serving end users, they’re just sending back to the grid,” Zlotlow replied.

Jan Strack of San Diego Gas & Electric said the change raises questions about what entities are affected, and how.

“I think you need to be sort of thoughtful about how wide this net gets thrown,” Strack said.

“We definitely want to hear from you if we’re missing something with this definition — or if we need to tighten it up,” Servedio said.

Stakeholder comments on the proposal are due Sept. 2. ISO staff plan to submit the changes for board approval in October.

PJM Markets and Reliability Committee Briefs

WILMINGTON, Del. — PJM officials have gained support for a new method of releasing excess capacity, but told the Markets and Reliability Committee on Thursday they were not sure the plan is ripe for a stakeholder vote.

The RTO procured 10,017 MW of new capacity commitments in the Capacity Performance transition auction for delivery year 2017/18. PJM’s Jeff Bastian told the MRC the capacity would likely clear at $0 in February’s third incremental auction under current rules — a price PJM and stakeholders agree would ignore the reliability benefits of retaining the capacity.

Direct Energy and NextEra Energy — which had proposed their own formulas last month — said they supported PJM’s proposal, under which the RTO would retain more capacity at lower prices but release more at a higher price. The plan would release excess capacity on an upward sloping trajectory, ranging from 0 MW at $10.74/MW-day to all 10,017 MW being available at $144/MW-day.

Proposed-Sell-Back-Price-of-New-Commitment-MW-PJM-web markets and reliability committee

The PJM Industrial Customer Coalition also said Thursday it supports the change.

Direct Energy’s Jeff Whitehead said PJM should bring the issue to a vote at the Market Implementation Committee next month. He said he plans to introduce a problem statement to consider capacity releases for future years.

Whitehead said it is very difficult to quantify the additional reliability value of the excess capacity. “We could end up in analysis paralysis,” he said in pushing for an MIC vote. “We’ve been discussing this for a while.”

Gabel Associates’ Mike Borgatti, representing NextEra, said the PJM proposal has “evolved” and that although it differs from NextEra’s proposal, “we’re comfortable with this.”

But other stakeholders expressed reservations, and PJM’s Chantal Hendrzak, the MIC chair, said, “I don’t know that we’re quite ready” for a September MIC vote.

PJM, which must file its plans for releasing the capacity with FERC by November, first outlined its plan before the MIC earlier this month. (See “Proposal Would Set Higher Prices for Capacity Released in 3rd I.A. for 2017/18,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

In the third incremental auction for the 2016/17 delivery year, PJM offered 4,818 MW at $0/MW-day but cleared 4,556 MW at an average price of $4.79/MW-day, Bastian said.

Using the same formula for 2017/18, Bastian said, the excess “could well clear at zero.”

Calpine’s David “Scarp” Scarpignato asked if the sale could be isolated from other transactions during settlement to identify the impact on costs. Bastian said a simulation might be possible, but he wouldn’t commit to it.

Jeffrey Levine of ENGIE asked if PJM would consider a stepped offer curve instead of the straight-line slope the RTO proposed.

“Yes,” Bastian responded. “This is a stakeholder process.”

Gary Greiner of Public Service Enterprise Group also questioned PJM’s curve. “I don’t think that ‘let’s start at $10.74 because that’s what we paid for it’ is a good strategy,” he said.

But supporters of the PJM proposal said it would be a step backward to consider different shaped curves.

“We are comfortable with the proposal as presented here today,” said Susan Bruce, an attorney representing the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition. “I am a little uncomfortable at the ideas of new curves being” proposed.

“I’m not in a position to argue curves,” said Dan Griffiths, executive director of the Consumer Advocates of the PJM States. He said the debate highlighted a bigger concern for ratepayers — PJM’s systematic over-procurement. “From way too much [capacity] we’re trying to figure out how to get back to just too much,” he said.

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring made a pitch for his proposal to not release any of the excess, suggesting any release could suppress prices.

No matter the outcome of the release, it will likely incite second-guessing, said Jason Cox of Dynegy: If the price is high, critics will ask why wasn’t more capacity offered; if it’s low, why wasn’t less offered?

“PJM’s in a really tough spot,” he said.

Revisions Proposed to Cost Development Procedures

PJM’s first read of its proposed fuel-cost policy revisions generated little discussion at the MRC.

But Bowring predicted the proposal is “very likely to be changed by FERC” because it gives PJM, rather than the Monitor, the power to approve or reject generators’ policies. That, Bowring said, would violate the RTO’s Tariff.

Bowring also said the revisions, to be contained in Manual 15, were “stretching” the definition of a market seller.

PJM says it will bring the proposal to an MRC vote in September contingent on FERC’s approval of its related Aug. 16 compliance filing on implementing hourly offers.

In response to opposition by generators, PJM earlier reduced the proposed penalties for noncompliance with the new rules. (See Heeding Stakeholders, PJM Reduces Proposed Fuel-Cost Penalties.)

PJM’s Jeff Schmitt also presented the MRC with changes resulting from a biennial review of Manual 15, which are expected to be brought to a vote in September.

Metering Standards Ready for Stakeholder Vote

After identifying gaps in understanding between staff and members on metering procedures, PJM has developed a proposal that would substantially rewrite the Manual 1 language that governs metering.

The “high level of the high-level” changes proposed focus on the definition of accuracy and how to achieve it in every metering capacity, PJM’s Ryan Nice said.

To the make the plan “palatable” to members with decades-old infrastructure, PJM is proposing a “tuned-up” grandfather clause. (See “Metering Task Force Presents Proposal to Improve Clarity,” PJM Operating Committee Briefs.)

All equipment installed after the publication of the manual would be required to be fully compliant with the new metering standard. Equipment installed earlier than 1997 would be exempt from the new requirements. Equipment installed after 1997 but before the manual’s publication would have to meet all but a few requirements.

Stakeholders will be asked to endorse the changes at the September MRC.

Manual Changes Approved

The MRC unanimously endorsed the following manual changes:

  • Manual 3A: Energy Management System Model Updates and Quality Assurance. Changes reflect administrative and modeling process updates.
  • Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations. Conforming changes, updated references and spelling and grammatical corrections are the result of a periodic review.
  • Manual 12: Balancing Operations. Administrative and conforming updates align with NERC reliability standard BAL-001-02, which went into effect July 1, and with the frequency bias calculation in BAL-003-1.
  • Manual 14D: Generator Operational Requirements. Changes include updates to the cold weather generation resource preparation section. Amends cold weather testing process effective with winter 2016/17. Generators that cleared as Capacity Performance in the current delivery year will no longer be eligible for compensation for conducting the exercise but may test and receive compensation as a self-scheduled resource. (See “PJM Plans to End Compensation for CP Units Participating in Winter Testing,” PJM Operating Committee Briefs.)
  • Manual 37: Reliability Coordination. Updates are the result of an annual review.

— Rory D. Sweeney and Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC Orders PJM TOs to Change Rules on Supplemental Projects

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

FERC ruled last week that PJM transmission owners’ procedures regarding supplemental projects are not in compliance with Order 890, directing the TOs to file revisions within 60 days (EL16-71).

FERC PJM Transmission

“As implemented, the transmission planning process governed by the PJM Operating Agreement is not providing stakeholders with the opportunity for early and meaningful input and participation in the transmission planning process, as required by Order No. 890,” the commission said.

The commission said it issued the Order to Show Cause because of testimony at a Nov. 12 technical conference. (See PJM TOs Defend Jurisdiction at FERC Conference.)

The commission cited complaints by Old Dominion Electric Cooperative and American Municipal Power concerning the TOs’ handling of supplemental projects — those not required for compliance with PJM’s reliability, operational performance or economic criteria, and not state public policy projects.

“Based on the comments received at the technical conference, it appears that some PJM transmission owners are conducting significant local transmission planning activities before the need for a supplemental project is brought to PJM for discussion in the stakeholder process,” the commission said. “In addition, certain of the PJM transmission owners appear to be identifying — and even taking steps toward developing — supplemental projects before providing any opportunity for stakeholders to participate in the development of those projects through the PJM [Regional Transmission Expansion Plan] process.”

The commission said the TOs must either propose revisions to the PJM Operating Agreement, revise their portions of the PJM Open Access Transmission Tariff or their individual Open Access Transmission Tariffs, or show cause why they should not be required to do so.

“Assuming that the PJM transmission owners file revisions to the OATT, we estimate that the commission would be able to issue our decision within approximately three months of the filing of such revisions,” FERC said.

200-kV Threshold Approved

In a separate order, the commission approved PJM’s proposal to exempt reliability upgrades on facilities below 200 kV from competitive windows under Order 1000 (ER16-1335).

PJM said such projects are almost always assigned to incumbent developers, and the change would enable its engineers to focus on problems more likely to result in a competitive greenfield project. (See “Low-Voltage Projects to be Exempted from Competitive Window Process,” MRC & Members Committee Briefs.)

The commission limited the exemption to projects within a single transmission zone, saying those involving two or more zones must be opened to a proposal window.

FERC also required PJM to clarify how it will identify transmission solutions for reliability violations on facilities below 200 kV. It said PJM must also provide it with reports on those projects for the next two planning cycles to enable the commission to monitor its implementation of the process.

MISO Informational Forum Briefs

MISO’s average load during July was 87.9 GW, 4.8 GW more than June and about the same as last year, said Shawn McFarlane, executive director of strategy and enterprise risk management, during an Aug. 23 Informational Forum.

McFarlane said July temperatures were close to normal. Load peaked at 120.7 GW on July 21 during a maximum generation warning. (See “June Energy Prices Up Across Footprint; New Emergency Pricing Encounters Snag in July,” MISO Informational Forum Briefs.)

Systemwide, MISO experienced average July prices of about $30/MWh, about $1/MWh more than last July.

Price convergence in July was the lowest it has been in a year, with a 22.5% difference between real-time and day-ahead prices. At this time last year, there was an average 14.8% divergence. Collections for day-ahead market congestion, at $80.26 million for July, were also at their highest level in a year.

miso informational forum FBI cybersecurity

Wind generation contributed 4.3% of total MISO electricity production (2,457 GWh), 661 GWh less than June’s 6% share but more than in July 2015, when wind contributed 3.3% (1,975 GWh).

Queue Reform

Stephen Kozey, senior vice president for compliance services, said MISO will make a revised generator interconnection queue reform filing by the end of October. FERC rejected MISO’s proposed queue changes in March, saying they assumed the current backlog could be blamed on “speculative” projects and failed to consider other potential factors (ER16-675). (See MISO Queue Changes on Hold Pending Technical Conference.)

Kozey also reminded stakeholders that MISO has pushed back implementation of a separate, three-year forward capacity auction for retail-choice areas to the 2018/19 planning year. He said MISO now plans to file in early November. (See MISO Delays Forward Auction Filing; Issues Draft Tariff and Business Rules.)

FBI Agent Informs Stakeholders on Cybersecurity Threats

Special Agent Michael Alford, of the FBI’s Cyber Division, said cyberterrorists, foreign governments and hacktivists most often attack critical energy infrastructure, in what he called a general cybersecurity “declassified briefing” at the Informational Forum.

Alford said hacktivists will sometimes target energy companies over proposed pipelines and development, while foreign governments conduct intrusions for espionage. He said according to the FBI, the energy grid is increasingly becoming a prime target for cyberattacks.

Spear phishing, which uses phony emails to get access to information, is the most common way to enter company networks, Alford said, citing the 2015 hack on Ukraine’s power grid. (See How a ‘Phantom Mouse’ and Weaponized Excel Files Brought Down Ukraine’s Grid.)

Alford said cyber threats can begin with a single attacker contacting an employee that they’ve performed “Internet reconnaissance” on. He told attendees to be mindful of the information shared on their social network profiles, as hackers will use the pages to gain employee information.

“If you have a LinkedIn account, that’s fine, but be aware that could be used against you,” Alford said.

He said the “end goal” of IT administrators should be to have a good log-in and password system and maintain it.

“You can throw tons of money at a system and make it secure, but that’s not always needed,” Alford said, noting that different departments at the same business need different levels of security.

Alford said utility employees shouldn’t hesitate to report cyberattack suspicions to either local law enforcement or the FBI.

“If you see something, report it, because you’re probably not the only one they’re attacking,” Alford said, adding that state-sponsored attacks often target several businesses or organizations simultaneously.

— Amanda Durish Cook