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November 14, 2024

State Briefs

Electricity Price Plunge Continues in ISO-NE

isone(isone)ISO-NE said that prices and consumption remained low throughout New England in June.

The six-state region’s average real-time, monthly wholesale power price during June was $21.24/MWh, up 8.3% from June 2015’s average price of $19.61/MWh, but lower than May’s $21.29, which held the record for the third-lowest price since 2003 for only a month.

Total energy consumption during June was at the second-lowest level of any June since 2000, likely because of continued mild weather, the RTO said. The lowest average monthly price ever is $17.20/MWh, set in March.

More: ISO-NE

CALIFORNIA

Regulator to Probe SCE Long Beach Outages

southerncaledison(socaledison)The Public Utilities Commission has opened a penalty case against Southern California Edison over a series of underground electrical fires that caused explosions and cut power to thousands of customers in Long Beach last July.

The proceeding will determine whether the utility violated any regulations and provided an adequate emergency response to the events, which left some customers without service for as many as five days and caused explosions strong enough to blow manhole covers into the air.

More: KPCC

INDIANA

NIPSCO Electric Rate Increase Approved

nipsco(nipsco)The Utility Regulatory Commission sanctioned a 6% electric base rate hike for Northern Indiana Public Service Co. last week, the first change to base rates since 2011.

NIPSCO said it needs the money to pay for higher expenses and service upgrades. The utility said a typical residential customer will pay $5.70 more per month.

The base rate agreement was previously struck by the Office of Utility Consumer Counselor, NIPSCO’s industrial customers, a coalition of eight municipalities and the United Steelworkers in February. Consumer Counselor David Stippler called the agreement “a fair resolution for NIPSCO’s residential and commercial customers.”

More: NiSource

KENTUCKY

Court Nixes Utility’s Plan to Buy Power from Biomass-Burning Facility

ecopowergeneration(ecopower) A state Court of Appeals panel has struck down ecoPower Generation’s contract to sell electricity to Kentucky Power.

The court said there was no evidence that ecoPower’s biomass-burning plant would result in an economic benefit to customers or the region. The court cited testimony that the agreement would result in an increase of up to 7% in the average monthly residential bill in the first year and a jump of up to 13% in later years.

The ruling puts the future of the plant, which would burn wood and sawdust to generate enough electricity for 30,000 homes, into doubt. Kentucky Power is reviewing the ruling before it decides whether to appeal, a spokesperson said.

More: Lexington Herald Leader

MARYLAND

Delmarva Power Requests $66.2M Rate Increase

Delmarva Power, now under Exelon ownership, is asking regulators to approve a $66.2 million electric rate base increase to pay for reliability improvements and smart grid upgrades conducted over the past four years. The increase would boost a typical monthly bill by 14.5%.

If approved by the Public Service Commission, the rate adjustment would translate to a $21.42 increase on the monthly bill of residential customers using 1 MWh, to $168.64 a month.

Delmarva said it has spent more than $330 million on improvements in the state since 2012. Its last rate-increase request was in 2013.

More: Delmarva Power

MASSACHUSETTS

Pipeline Loop Opponents Head to State Court

massmartinsuuberg(gov)
Suuberg

Opponents of a proposed natural gas pipeline loop through a state forest want to block a water-quality approval certificate issued June 30.

A coalition of environmentalists and landowners appealed the state Department of Environmental Protection’s approval of Kinder Morgan’s 4-mile Connecticut Expansion Project with the agency. The final decision would come from DEP Commissioner Martin Suuberg.

More: The Berkshire Eagle

MONTANA

Developer: Low Rates Endanger Wind Project

greycliffwind(greycliff)Developer Greycliff Wind Prime’s proposed 25-MW wind farm is unlikely to move forward following the  Public Service Commission’s decision to set its wholesale price to NorthWestern Energy at $45.49/MWh, about 16% lower than the price it says it needs to make a profit.

“It’s not a rate that works. It’s also not a rate that’s realistic,” said Steve Tyrell, a Greycliff stakeholder. Developers said they needed a price in the mid-$50s, which would have been similar to the rate for another NorthWestern renewable energy source.

Renewable energy projects are on a two-month losing streak with the PSC. The commission in June pulled the plug on guaranteed rates for small solar projects at the request of NorthWestern.

More: Billings Gazette

NEVADA

Peppermill Casinos Seeks to Sever Ties with NV Energy

peppermillcasino(peppermill)Reno-based Peppermill Casinos became the third hotel casino operator in recent months to notify state regulators that it intends to leave NV Energy and acquire electricity from other sources.

The move will entail a costly exit fee. Las Vegas Sands reversed its decision to leave the utility after the Public Utilities Commission determined the company would have to pay $24 million to do so.

Peppermill has invested $9.7 million in onsite geothermal generation. “We are committed to continuing that investment in responsible and renewable energy sources,” a company executive said. Wynn Resorts and MGM Resorts International have also announced their intentions to leave NV Energy.

More: Reno Gazette-Journal

NORTH CAROLINA

Duke Energy on Track To Buy Piedmont Natural Gas

Regulators completed a two-day evidentiary hearing examining Duke Energy’s $4.9 billion acquisition of Piedmont Natural Gas, moving the merger toward a decision by the Utilities Commission as early as October.

The commission’s staff supports the merger, the costs of which will be charged to shareholders, not customers, the companies said.

Under the deal, Duke will give Piedmont’s customers in the state a $10 million break on bills over two years. It also will donate $17.5 million to charity over four years and earmark $7.5 million to help low-income customers and support community job training.

More: Charlotte Business Journal

Duke Asks Fed Judge To Block Ash Testimony

Duke Energy has asked a federal judge to block the testimony of a state toxicologist in a lawsuit, filed against the utility concerning its handling of coal ash, from being made public.

The company argued that the testimony of Dr. Kenneth Rudo, of the epidemiology branch of the state Department of Health and Human Services, about his views on the toxicity of coal ash and its effect on drinking water supplies is “largely hearsay” and would prevent the company from getting a fair hearing. The lawsuit was filed by environmental organizations.

Residents have received mixed messages from state officials about the safety of their drinking water, who were told to avoid using it last month after receiving assurances that it was safe. Testimony transcripts already released by the plaintiffs show disagreement among state scientists about the advice to give residents.

More: WRAL

NORTH DAKOTA

Application for State’s Largest Wind Farm Filed

ndpublicservicecommission(gov)A Renewable Energy Systems Americas subsidiary filed an application with the Public Service Commission last week for what would be the largest wind farm in the state. Glacier Ridge Wind Farm proposed a 300-MW project with nearly 100 turbines in Barnes County.

Glacier Ridge aims to start construction in November and complete work in 2019.

More: The Bismarck Tribune

OKLAHOMA

Regulators Approve Opt-outFees for PSO Smart Meters

The Corporation Commission approved a plan allowing Public Service Company of Oklahoma to charge a $28 monthly fee to customers who opt out of installing a smart meter. The three-person commission unanimously approved the fee. Customers will also need to pay a one-time fee of $71, which will increase to $110 next year.

PSO originally requested a $28 monthly fee and one-time fees between $183 and $261. Its customers already are paying $3.11 monthly fees for smart meter installation, part of a $133 million rate case settlement the commission approved in April 2015.

Commission Chairman Bob Anthony said estimating costs is tricky because the commission is starting from scratch on the opt-out program. “We haven’t done this before; we don’t know if there’s going to be 200, 500 or 1,000 people [who] sign up for this program,” Anthony said.

More: The Oklahoman

Fire Damage to GRDA Plant Could Reach as Much as $200M

grandriverdamstation(grandriverdam)The Grand River Dam Authority says its costs could reach $200 million to recover from a July 1 fire at its main generating facility in Chouteau. Officials from the state-owned utility say the final bill will depend on the cost of rebuilding the larger of the two coal-fired units affected.

The utility believes the fire was started by a lightning strike that knocked out the unit’s cooling pumps, causing it to overheat and creating a friction fire. The fire spread to the roof of the building and caused the other coal-fired generator, Unit 1, to automatically shut down.

Assessing the damage to Unit 2 and the building that houses both units is expected to take about a month. GRDA recently completed an $86 million environmental upgrade to the 30-year-old Unit 2.

More: Tulsa World

PENNSYLVANIA

FE Subsidiary Starts Work on 5-Year Grid Improvement Plan

westpennpower(firstenergy)West Penn Power, a subsidiary of FirstEnergy, is starting work on $17 million of grid improvement projects to enhance reliability for its 720,000 customers.

The projects are part of the company’s five-year infrastructure improvement plan approved earlier this year by the Public Utility Commission.

The long-term plan calls for $88 million to be spent through 2020 on upgrades, including installing protective devices on wires and poles, rebuilding transmission lines and installing automated and remote control devices.

More: FirstEnergy

RHODE ISLAND

Community Boos, Lambasts Governor over Gas Plant

RIgovraimondo(gov)
Raimondo

Gov. Gina Raimondo offered little comfort to residents opposed to a 1,000-MW natural gas plant in Burrillville, where she said at a community meeting that gas-fired generators are needed to bridge the gap until clean generation is built at a larger scale.

“I’m for green energy and moving as fast as we possibly can from fossil fuels and towards cleaner sources of energy,” she said. “But I’m also for keeping energy prices as low as possible for the people of Rhode Island.” Raimondo has previously said that the $700 million plant proposed by Invenergy would create jobs and moderate electricity prices.

“What I need to do as governor is balance the interests of all the people,” she said. “In the near term, natural gas is a piece of that puzzle.” This final comment drew boos from those in attendance. Raimondo then had to fend off criticism from speakers.

More: Providence Journal

SPP Sets New Record for Peak Load — Twice

As expected, SPP’s first summer since the Integrated System joined its system last year has resulted in a new record for peak load, as well as the RTO’s first two peaks above 50,000 MW.

SPP load and wind - record peak load

The RTO recorded a peak load of 50,083 MW at 4:35 p.m. July 20, surpassing that record the next day at 4:47 p.m. with 50,622 MW. The previous record of 48,323 MW was set in June.

The record peaks were not a surprise, given the addition of the Integrated System’s 5,000 MW of added peak demand and the oppressive heat wave in the Great Plains. Bruce Rew, SPP’s vice president of operations, told the Regional State Committee last week the RTO will “likely continue to see increases in peak numbers, primarily driven by the addition of new members.”

– Tom Kleckner

Company Briefs

stantonstation(greatriver)Great River Energy will retire its Stanton Station power plant by May 2017, saying the central North Dakota plant is no longer economic given current low prices. The 189-MW coal-fired plant began generating power in 1966 and has a staff of 65 people.

“It became clear that retiring the plant was in the best interest of our member cooperatives,” CEO David Saggau said. The company will develop plans over the next nine months to decommission the plant, he said.

Stanton has been generating electricity on a limited basis since March, firing up only 65 to 75% of the time when market prices made it economical.

More: The Bismarck Tribune

Empire Launches EV Initiative With Joplin Charging Station

empiredistrict(empire)Empire District Electric unveiled an on-campus charging station for electric vehicles at Missouri Southern State University. The station is open to the public at no charge.

The station is part of Empire’s “Evolve” campaign, in which the company has committed to spending 5% of its annual vehicle fleet budget on EVs. The company is also offering rebates ranging from $750 to $2,000 to customers who purchase an EV.

Promoting EV use makes sense as the energy industry transitions to renewable resources, Empire CEO Brad Beecher said. He noted that SPP gets 15% of its electricity annually from renewables, particularly wind. “Any time that you’re driving an electric car and it’s been charged, at least partially, with renewable resources, it is not just less emissions, it is no emissions,” Beecher said.

More: The Joplin Globe

Lawsuit Seeks $30M from Chesapeake, SandRidge

chesapeakeenergy(chesapeake)Chisholm Partners and 16 oil and gas investors filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Kansas seeking $30 million in damages from Chesapeake Energy and SandRidge Energy under the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Chisholm says it sold oil and gas leasehold interests to Chesapeake at prices that were “artificially depressed” because of a conspiracy alleged in a federal criminal indictment of Chesapeake CEO Aubrey McClendon. The sale of the leases produced $10 million less than they would have absent a conspiracy, the suit said.

McClendon was indicted March 1 on charges he led a scheme to coordinate bidding for oil and gas interests with another active bidder, which the lawsuit claims was SandRidge. He died a day later when the vehicle he was driving smashed into a bridge embankment in northeast Oklahoma City.

More: The Kansas City Star

Enel Expanding Wind Farm in Oklahoma

Enel Green Power North America began construction last week on the 64-MW Chisholm View Wind Project II wind farm in north-central Oklahoma.

The project is expected to be completed late this year at a cost of $90 million. Construction on the 235-MW Chisholm View I was completed in 2013.

More: Enid News & Eagle

Entergy Puts 22 Guards on Leave to Probe Fire Records

palisadesnuclear(palisadespower)Entergy, operator of the Palisades nuclear station in Michigan, has placed 22 security guards at the plant on leave while it investigates allegations that fire inspection records were falsified.

“The bottom line is that we cannot tolerate employees stating they completed a task when they didn’t, and we are obligated to fully investigate any such instances,” Palisades spokeswoman Val Gent said.

Palisades has had other workforce problems in the past, when the Nuclear Regulatory Commission determined that workers were laboring under a “chilled work environment” after some guards claimed they were fired for pointing out safety issues.

More: The Herald-Palladium

NM Company Seeks to Extend Pipeline into Mexico

newmexicogas(newmexicogas)New Mexico Gas said last week it will seek a presidential permit to extend a natural gas pipeline into Mexico, New Mexico’s first such connection across the border. Construction on the $5 million project is expected to be completed within a year.

The project involves extending the company’s existing pipeline in Santa Teresa about 5 miles to the border, as well as widening it to allow more capacity. Additional facilities in Mexico will also need to be built. The project will be funded at shareholder expense, according to a company spokesperson.

More: Albuquerque Journal

ISO-NE Approves Northern Pass Tx Line

northernpass(northernpass)ISO-NE has determined that the Northern Pass transmission project can reliably interconnect with the regional electric grid.

The grid operator approved the project’s application, saying Northern Pass will not have a significant adverse effect on the reliability or operating characteristics of the regional grid and its participants.

Northern Pass, a proposed HVDC line that would carry 1,090 MW of Canadian hydroelectric power to New Hampshire, is still under review by the state’s Site Evaluation Committee.

More: ISO-NE

PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Preview

Below is a summary of the issues scheduled to be brought to a vote at the Markets and Reliability and Members committees Thursday. Each item is listed by agenda number, description and projected time of discussion, followed by a summary of the issue and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.

RTO Insider will be in Wilmington, Del., covering the discussions and votes. See next Tuesday’s newsletter for a full report.

Markets and Reliability Committee

PJM Manuals (9:10-9:40)

Members will be asked to endorse the following manual changes:

A. Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations for the Day-Ahead Scheduling Reserve. Adds language excluding resources from the day-ahead scheduling reserve process that cannot reliably fulfill obligations in real time.

B. Manual 14C: Generation and Transmission Interconnection Facility Construction. Changes are to support the inclusion of Order 1000 processes. Since the first reading, the new tie line section has been removed.

C. Manual 20: PJM Resource Adequacy Analysis. Updates are the result of a periodic review.

D. Manual 29: Billing. Clarifications and updates are the result of a regular review.

3. Underperformance Risk Management Sr. Task Force (URMSTF) Charter (9:40-9:55)

The charter reflects two issue charges: The group will seek to develop ways that Capacity Performance resources can manage their risk during performance assessment hours. It also will look to better align the requirements for internal and external resources. (See “Charter for Underperformance Risk Management Senior Task Force Presented,” PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Briefs.)

4. Auction-specific Bilateral Transactions (9:55-10:10)

Proposed changes ensure the physicality of an auction-specific bilateral transaction. (See “Members OK Clarifications to Preserve ‘Physicality’ of Auction-specific Bilateral Transactions,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

5. FERC Order 825 (10:10-10:40)

Members will be asked to approve a problem statement and issue charge related to the recent FERC Order 825, which requires RTOs to align their settlement and dispatch intervals and implement shortage pricing during any shortage period. (See “Members Prepped for Problem Statement on Settlement Intervals, Shortage Pricing,” PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committee Briefs.)

6. Non-Performance Assessment Charge Rate

David “Scarp” Scarpignato, on behalf of Calpine and the Independent Market Monitor, will present a problem statement and issue charge related to the calculation of the CP nonperformance charge rate. The problem statement maintains that the performance assessment hour number used in the charge rate does not reflect the expected number of PAHs as intended. The issue would be worked in special Market Implementation Committee sessions with the aim of bringing proposals to the MRC for implementation in the 2017 Base Residual Auction for delivery year 2020/21.

Members Committee

Consent Agenda (1:20-1:25)

Members will be asked to approve operating agreement and Tariff language giving more flexibility to the parameter-limited schedule exception process. (See “More Flexible PLS Process Approved,” PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Briefs.)

FERC Rejects Enforcement Action in Connecticut PURPA Dispute

By William Opalka

For the second time in seven months, FERC declined on Thursday to intervene in a renewable energy developer’s claims against Connecticut regulators (EL16-69).

The commission declined to begin an enforcement action under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act on behalf of Allco Finance and its unit Windham Solar. The petitioners said the Connecticut Public Utilities Regulatory Authority and state law violated PURPA’s mandatory purchase obligation.

Unadilla-Solar-Project-(Allco-Renewable-Energy) - ferc, purpa, allco finance

The company owns 26 small solar generating facilities whose energy and capacity it offered to sell to Eversource Energy for 30 years at the utility’s forecasted avoided costs. The developer sold the renewable energy credits separately to Eversource, in a one-year agreement approved by PURA, its petition states.

However, Allco and Windham allege that they are being required by Connecticut to either offer a bundled product that includes the RECs or sell energy under short-term contracts, in violation of PURPA.

“The commission has stated that the states have the authority to determine who owns RECs in the initial instance and how they are transferred and has explained that the automatic transfer of RECs within a sale of power at wholesale must find its authority in state law, not PURPA,” FERC wrote.

FERC rejected a similar petition for PURPA enforcement in January that involved the state’s procurement of wind energy from a proposed project in Maine. (See Court Next Stop for Developer, FERC Says.)

MISO Planning Advisory Committee Briefs

MISO has settled on a probability weighting for the futures analysis in its 2017 Transmission Expansion Plan, with existing trends given 31% consideration, policy regulations given 43% and accelerated alternative technologies receiving 26%.

The RTO relied on stakeholder feedback to tweak the weighting and used an average of weighting that each sector recommended. MISO had originally proposed using a 30% weighting for existing trends, 40% for policy regulations and 30% for accelerated alternative technologies. (See “MTEP 17 Futures Process Enters Stakeholder Inspection,” MISO Planning Advisory Committee Briefs.)

MISO’s J.T. Smith said stakeholder feedback played a major role in developing the final weightings, and stakeholders said the process has gone well.

The RTO also released its refinements to the MTEP 17 futures siting methodology, vowing to represent zonal resource adequacy requirements and solar and expanded wind zones and develop distributed generation siting methodology. It will consider National Ambient Air Quality Standards nonattainment areas in the siting process.

miso planning advisory committee
MISO’s Tiers 1-3 would allow the RTO to add 50 GW of wind beyond that already enabled by multi-value transmission projects. Tier 4 would allow for an additional 30 GW. Map Source: MISO

MISO will share final MTEP 17 capacity forecasts and siting locations at the September Planning Advisory Committee meeting and is urging participants to submit comments in early August.

With a number of plant shutdowns looming in the next five to 15 years, MISO is also looking to improve its generation retirement sensitivities beginning with MTEP 17. The RTO is proposing to consider age-based retirements of coal, oil and gas units in the five-year MTEP reliability assessment. The study will identify necessary projects that will require lead times of more than five years and low-cost upgrades that can be implemented in advance of retirements, said Neil Shah, a seams administration adviser at MISO. The analysis would assume a lifespan of 65 years for coal plants and 55 years for oil- and gas-fired facilities, but would not assume any for nuclear stations.

The proposal received substantial inquiry and criticism from participants, who said it could be redundant and presumptuous. Among the concerns were questions about whether this planning was addressed in existing protocols and how MISO chose specific parameters, such as the plant lifespans. The plan also doesn’t currently address non-transmission alternatives to avoid engaging system support resources.

MISO contends the study could eliminate the need for an SSR agreement for most generation retirements. Staff is requesting stakeholder input on the study enhancements by Aug. 3.

The RTO is also requesting that feedback on the MTEP 17 scope be submitted by September. A summary of the feedback will be presented at the October Planning Advisory Committee meeting and the project’s scope will be adjusted by the end of the year. Beyond core studies to maintain reliability of the system, which are required by FERC and NERC, the MTEP includes targeted studies to optimize market efficiency. Participants may make requests for the targets of those studies; however, not all of them may be able to be accommodated. All feedback should be sent to Adam Solomon.

Meanwhile, a first draft of MTEP 16 is set to be released for external review by MISO on Aug. 8, with stakeholder review and comments expected to roll in by Aug. 22. The draft has been circulating within MISO since July 22. A second draft is slated for release on Sept. 19, with PAC review on Sept. 28 and a vote on Oct. 19. The timeline is aimed for approval at the Dec. 8 Board of Directors meeting.

As of the second quarter of this year, MISO reports there are 633 active MTEP projects totaling $11.1 billion. Another 130 projects valued at $1.9 billion are under construction, while 11 MTEP-approved projects, at $200 million, have been withdrawn. By the end of 2016, MISO expects another $2.5 billion worth of projects to be operational.

Duff-Coleman Selection Moves into the Evaluation Phase

MISO staff is conducting a tariff-required completeness check of developer proposals for the Duff-Coleman transmission project, the RTO’s first Order 1000 competitive solicitation. The identities of the bidders will be released by Aug. 19. Project selection is expected by Dec. 30.

Competitive Transmission Protocol Modifications

MISO is requesting feedback on proposed modifications to Business Practices Manual 20 and 27 and a draft joint functional control agreement.

The BPM 20 modifications would adjust status reporting requirements for market-efficiency and multi-value projects and create variance analysis requirements. MISO Transmission Owners and Wisconsin Electric submitted comments during a previous request for feedback. The BPM 27 modifications would change timing and deadlines for various steps in the RFP process.

The agreement ensures that MISO retains functional control of transmission infrastructure if a portion of the transmission owners decide to leave MISO. All comments or questions are requested by Aug. 3 and should be sent to TDQS@misoenergy.org.

Merchant HVDC Task Team Proposed

The Interconnection Process Task Force is proposing the development of a task team to develop HVDC interconnection procedures. The Merchant HVDC Task Team would meet at least monthly from August through December and report on its activities at PAC meetings.

MISO Tries to Please FERC with Second Attempt at Queue Reform

In another bid to win FERC approval for its  interconnection queue reform, MISO plans to cut an initial milestone payment by $1,000/MW of new capacity and assess subsequent milestone payments based on a percentage of upgrade costs.

The revised M2 milestone would become a flat charge of $4,000/MW of new capacity instead of the proposed $5,000/MW. The M3 and M4 milestones will be redefined as 10% and 20% of upgrade cost, respectively.

MISO said it will define the upgrade cost the same way it does in the initial payment section of its generation interconnection agreement, which includes network upgrades, distribution/generator upgrades and TOs’ interconnection facilities and system protection facilities.

MISO said the revised milestone payments will be applied toward the GIA initial payment. It also said it will settle any over- or underpayment after it completes a final facility study.

The RTO plans on posting Tariff redline changes for stakeholder review on July 29 and wants to file the revised queue process at the end of October for a Jan. 1 effective date.

If the new batch of adjustments is accepted by FERC, MISO plans on transitioning completely to the new queue beginning with projects that enter next August.

In March, FERC rejected MISO’s proposed changes, calling the revised milestone payments a barrier to entry and rebuffing the RTO’s explanation that the current project backlog was due to “speculative” projects. (See MISO Queue Changes on Hold Pending Technical Conference.)

So far in 2016, MISO has received 105 new queue requests representing a possible 16.9 GW, and the RTO reports that 12 projects worth 1.9 GW have newly signed interconnection agreements.

MISO is also proposing to move two study deadlines four months ahead under Business Practices Manual 15, which governs generator interconnection. Under the changes, MISO’s annual interim deliverability and energy resource interconnection service studies would be completed by Oct. 31 instead of the current June 15.

“We did not meet [the current deadline] this year, and we did not meet it last year,” said Tim Aliff, MISO’s director of resource interconnection and planning.

— Amanda Durish Cook & Rory D. Sweeney

Electric Industry Lobbies, Waits on CFTC Private Rights Ruling

By Tom Kleckner

RAPID CITY, S.D. — The electric industry has done its part in building opposition to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s proposal to allow private rights of action on energy market transactions, which would make RTOs and their market participants potential targets for lawsuits outside the FERC process.

It flooded CFTC with comments against the proposal. It worked with the Senate Appropriations Committee to file legislative language ensuring the current regulatory framework remains in place. (See Congress May Order CFTC to Back Down on Private Rights.)

And now it waits.

“I believe we as an industry have done everything we can do, through the legislative process and FERC and comments,” Mike Ross, SPP’s senior vice president of governmental affairs and public relations, told the Strategic Planning Committee on July 14. “When the ruling is, we don’t know. August, September, October, we don’t know. It could be today.

“My sense is they won’t leave us hanging too long — but this is Washington.”

electric industry, cftc
Ross © RTO Insider

Ross, a former six-term Democratic representative from Arkansas’ 4th Congressional District, said the committee’s bill could be in the expected year-end omnibus bill, which he said would solve the RTOs’ problem. In the meantime, all he and others in the industry can do is try and discern where the three CFTC commissioners stand.

“We know Commissioner [J. Christopher] Giancarlo is with us,” Ross said, citing his “substantial” comments. Chairman Timothy G. Massad has been pushing the commission’s proposal, but Commissioner Sharon Y. Bowen, who voted with Massad on a draft order including the private rights of action, has been “pretty silent,” Ross said.

“It only takes two of the three,” he reminded the committee.

The issue arose when the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which Ross voted against, was passed in 2010. The bill revised the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and provided CFTC with authority to exempt RTO markets from its rules.

Six of the seven RTOs filed for exemptions, which CFTC granted in 2013. SPP filed for a “me-too” exemption in 2013, as it began to go live with its day-ahead market. The commission issued a draft order on the SPP request in May 2015, which included preamble language that said CFTC never intended to exempt other RTOs from private rights of action.

Ross said the commission notified SPP in March that it was delaying a decision on the order and opening a new docket (81 FR 30245) to consider removing the exemption for all RTOs.

“They said, ‘We’re going to put y’all’s me-too on the shelf and we’re revisiting the [exemption] for other RTOs. Whatever we do for them, we’ll do for you too,’” Ross said in recounting the conversation. “That’s when the electric industry became very engaged in the issue.”

Ross helped facilitate supportive comments made by the House of Representatives’ Committees on Energy and Commerce and Agriculture, FERC and several industry groups. A total of 43 comments were submitted, with 38 in favor — 15 by SPP members — and five opposed.

The FERC comments, provided by General Counsel Max Minzner, said “introducing a private right of action to these markets via the CEA appears inconsistent with Congressional intent and would conflict with the design” of the Federal Power Act.

“Those are pretty strong words coming from FERC to the CFTC,” Ross said. He said the comments were not unprecedented, but it is “unusual for an agency to file comments in another agency’s” docket.

The ISO/RTO Council called CFTC’s proposed amendment “unnecessary.” It said FERC and the Public Utility Commission of Texas, which regulates ERCOT, “have the necessary tools, resources and experience to maintain the integrity of ISO/RTO markets.

“The CFTC proposal would permit market participants suffering a loss in a transaction to sue an ISO or other market participants if it believed the loss arose from the gaming of rules,” the IRC said. “Permitting private action would undermine confidence in market transactions by both market participants and state electricity regulators, which would ultimately degrade consumer protections that the current oversight process affords.”

As it stands now, Ross warned the SPC, private rights of action could allow any lawyer in any RTO region to file a lawsuit with any of the more than 100 U.S. district courts, which may not have a full understanding of what constitutes a swap in energy markets.

“FERC understands this,” he said. “They make a decision, and if you don’t like the decision, then you go to court.”

With Oncor Back on the Market, Multiple Suitors Line Up

By Tom Kleckner

Interest in bankrupt Energy Future Holdings’ Texas transmission and delivery subsidiary Oncor continues to grow, even as the troubled company struggles to emerge from Chapter 11 without a massive tax bill.

NextEra Energy and Berkshire Hathaway Energy are thought to be the leading contenders for Oncor, the largest utility in Texas with 119,000 miles of lines and more than 3 million meters. Fidelity Management, Edison International and Hunt Consolidated — which saw its bid for Oncor fall apart in May — are among those whose names have also been floated in recent weeks as potential suitors.

In addition, the investor group led by Borealis Infrastructure Management and Singapore’s GIC Special Investments, which together own 19.75% of Oncor, is also interested in acquiring the whole company, according to Bloomberg.

Florida-based NextEra walked away from its proposed $4.3 billion purchase of Hawaiian Electric Industries after Hawaii’s Public Utilities Commission voted against it July 15. (See NextEra Said to be Leading Candidate for Texas’ Oncor.)

Oncor, PUC of Texas, PUCT, Hunt Consolidated, NextEra, Energy Future Holdings

According to media reports, the Hunt group and others have been working to garner support in Austin.

“It is no surprise that other parties are participating in this contest, but we are working with all stakeholders to maintain our position as a very viable option for Oncor, its employees, customers” and the Public Utility Commission of Texas, Hunt Consolidated spokesperson Jeanne Phillips said in a statement.

The Hunt group in June filed a lawsuit against the PUCT, asking the commission to reverse a March order that set conditions on its bid, including a requirement to share potential tax savings with the utility’s ratepayers. (See Hunt Reopens Oncor Bid in Lawsuit Against PUCT.)

EFH, which has been in Chapter 11 for two years and is burdened by almost $50 billion in debt, has said it now wants to spin off Oncor tax-free. It is expecting a positive tax ruling this week from the Internal Revenue Service, which would eliminate a potential $4 billion tax liability. Oncor has been valued as being worth as little as $17 billion and as much as $23 billion.

The holding company was to file a plan for Oncor by July 8 with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. Instead, it told the court it was in discussions with “multiple interested parties regarding a potential transaction” and asked for an extension.

EFH has proposed a separate path for its Luminant generation arm and TXU Energy retailer, selling them to senior creditors who are owed $24.4 billion. Hearings are scheduled to begin Aug. 17 in Delaware.

ERCOT Discusses Wind Integration at GCPA Luncheon

By Rory D. Sweeney

AUSTIN, Texas — Wind energy is quickly becoming a dominant force in ERCOT’s resource mix, and the grid operator is making changes to address it.

Speaking to a packed house at a Gulf Coast Power Association luncheon last week, Kenan Ögelman, ERCOT’s vice president of commercial operations, said ERCOT is adding a desk in its control room to monitor renewables and rethinking its ancillary services needs.

“That’s how big a deal this is both in terms of managing the system conditions and giving the correct response to what happens,” he said. “We feel we need people dedicated to watching that.”

Fast response, rapid ramping and managing inertia are the biggest needs, he said.

Wind production on ERCOT’s system surpassed nuclear production in 2015 and its growth curve is “more exponential than linear,” Ögelman said.

Kenan Ögelman, vice president of commercial operations at ERCOT, discusses the dominance of wind on his system at the GCPA's July luncheon in Austin.
Kenan Ögelman, vice president of commercial operations at ERCOT, discusses the dominance of wind on his system at the GCPA’s July luncheon in Austin. © RTO Insider

“The mix of resources is changing,” he said. “The characteristics of those resources is also different than what we had previously, so doing business as we had — as far as ERCOT goes — is different.”

ERCOT’s ancillary services were designed in the 1990s and assumed heavy reliance on gas cogeneration facilities.

Its reliability unit commitment, for example, reimburses unused units but is capped and doesn’t allow for recovering all costs, Ögelman said. The current market isn’t pricing that service efficiently, which is sending inappropriate pricing signals, he said.

Chief among ERCOT’s needs is maintaining reliability. Although ERCOT’s wind-speed data date back to the 1950s, monthly output can vary unpredictably. However, as the lowest-cost resource on the system, wind tends to be dispatched, Ögelman said.

While not a problem during high demand, it becomes one during the spring and fall shoulder periods when load is low and wind makes up a high percentage of dispatched generation. Because wind output can change dramatically, ERCOT has to manage the risk that it might disappear.

This is further complicated by the fact that it’s hard to keep non-renewables operating during low loads. The abundance of wind — running because production tax credits offset uneconomic bids — have increasingly resulted in negative prices on the system from midnight through 5 a.m., Ögelman said.

“The market is saying you have to pay to stay on,” he said.

So with generation at risk of suddenly disappearing and the market providing no incentive to diversify sources, ERCOT is seeking solutions. The process starts with more information to develop better models and forecasts. For example, some risk can be mitigated, he said, by diversifying where the intermittent generation comes from on the system. Wind resources from the three main regions — the panhandle, West Texas and the Gulf Coast — tend to provide wind supply at different times and can balance each other out. For solar, the movement of the sun across the system requires an extra hour in the morning to reach full capacity, but offers an extra hour in the afternoon.

Another challenge is that low load combined with low inertia gives the system no way to recover from disturbances, raising the threat of cascading outages, Ögelman said.

ERCOT performed a “future ancillary services” study, which found that the inertia need will vary based on the capacity of combined cycle units on the system, which provide twice as much inertia as other sources. As economical as they are, even combined cycle units can be forced offline with high enough wind penetrations.

Generation units with governors or other frequency-control devices provide automatic systemwide frequency response. However, as wind pushes them off the system, that service disappears. ERCOT is also looking at how to incentivize load, which can respond quickly and then return to normal. Frequency response provided by the load, Ögelman noted, can be more valuable than that coming from generators.

ERCOT plans to talk to stakeholders at the Technical Advisory Committee about ancillary services to see if needs can be met with market design features that stakeholders want. It will also look into how best to analyze inertial service. The tools exist, Ögelman said, but aren’t fine-tuned to what’s optimal for a market design and reliability standpoint.

The amount of intermittent resources on the system can continue to increase, he said, as long as they agree to be curtailed as necessary.

[Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly reported that wind production surpassed nuclear production on ERCOT’s system in 2014.]

Maine PUC Endorses Gas Pipeline Contracts

By William Opalka

Disregarding its staff’s recommendation, Maine’s Public Utilities Commission on Tuesday endorsed a plan in which electric ratepayers would help finance natural gas pipeline expansion (2014-00071).

Access Northeast Map - content - maine puc natural gas pipeline contracts PUC staff said last month that ratepayer subsidies were unnecessary because market conditions have changed dramatically since 2013, when the proposal was first made. (See Maine PUC Staff Advises Against Pipeline Contracts.)

The vote to ignore the staff recommendations was unanimous. The order includes a proviso that four other New England states considering similar financial support would have to follow suit for Maine’s participation. Only Massachusetts regulators have made that commitment so far and that decision is being challenged in court. (See More Pipelines for New England: ‘Gold-plating’ or Necessity?)

“There are so many more things that need to happen before a shovel gets turned or more gas begins to flow, and most of those things are outside of Maine’s control,” Tim Schneider, Maine public advocate, told the Bangor Daily News. He also opposed the staff recommendation.

The commission said they have determined the benefits of new pipeline capacity outweigh any costs.

Yet to be determined are those costs or when supply contracts might be signed. Under state law, any action would require written approval from Gov. Paul LePage.

“The fossil fuel industry hoodwinked the PUC into gambling $1 billion of Mainers’ hard-earned money on a massive new gas pipeline,” Conservation Law Foundation attorney Ben Tettlebaum said in a statement. “From Day One, this LePage-appointed commission has been desperate to find any way to justify overwhelming concessions for Big Gas, no matter the cost.”

The approval comes after the cancellation earlier this year of the Northeast Energy Direct expansion project. The largest remaining proposal is the Access Northeast project, which would increase natural gas capacity from New York to Maine. A related proposal before FERC to allow local distribution companies to sell natural gas to utilities for power generation is being opposed by some power plant owners. (See Generation Owners Seek to Block EDC-Pipeline Deals.)