Search
`
November 19, 2024

State Briefs

Some Alternate Supplier Electric Customers Paying More

The state’s Office of Consumer Counsel says thousands of residential customers who signed up with competitive electric suppliers paid more for power than customers who stayed with the standard offers from Eversource Energy or United Illuminating.

EversourceSourceEversourceIn Eversource’s territory, customers with 18 of the 28 third-party service providers paid $48 million more than the standard offer. In UI’s service area, customers with 18 of 29 competitive suppliers paid $10 million more than standard-offer customers.

Bryan Lee, a spokesman for the Retail Energy Supply Association, said the consumer advocate “is making an unfair apples-to-oranges comparison when it compares a ‘plain vanilla’ utility standard service electricity rates with the varied and complex product offerings of competitive retail energy suppliers.”

More: New Haven Register

NEW JERSEY

BL England Generating Station Looking to Convert to Gas

BLEnglandSourceWikiThe owners of the coal-fired B.L. England Generating Station have applied to the Department of Environmental Protection for emissions permits to convert the plant to natural gas, now that a controversial pipeline to the facility has been approved.

“It’s probably the dirtiest plant left in the state,” DEP spokesman Larry Hajna said, adding that the 52-year-old plant is one of “just a handful” that still burn coal. The plant on the Jersey Shore is owned by RC Cape May Holdings, a special purpose entity formed by Rockland Capital, Energy Investors Funds and other investors.

Environmentalists are protesting the conversion. They say the 447-MW upgraded plant actually would increase pollution because the gas-fired plant would operate daily, while only one of the plant’s current coal units is active, and it only operates 60 days a year.

More: The Press of Atlantic City

NEW MEXICO

State Sees Rush of Solar Tax Credit Applications

Energy conservation officials have been hit with a flood of applications for the state’s solar tax credit and are on track to meet the $3 million annual cap by July.

This is the last year for the state’s 10% tax credit. A measure calling for extending the incentive through 2024 stalled during the last legislative session.

More: The Associated Press

NEW YORK

Cuomo Announces $150M For Renewables Projects

NYGovCuomoSourcegov
Cuomo

Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday announced $150 million in funding to support large-scale renewable energy projects across the state to help meet the goal of 50% of electricity from renewable energy by 2030.

“This state is a national leader in combating climate change, and with this investment, we are taking our unprecedented efforts one more step toward a cleaner and greener New York,” he said. “This funding will advance large-scale energy projects, continue build[ing] a clean energy economy and generate opportunity for New Yorkers for generations to come.”

Support will be provided by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority in its final solicitation through the main tier of the state’s renewable portfolio standard.

More: Gov. Andrew Cuomo

Microgrid Competition Offers $8 Million

The next round of the NY Prize microgrid competition will provide $8 million in awards for engineering designs and business plans for community microgrids, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

The $40 million program is part of the Reforming the Energy Vision. The NY Prize engineering design and business plan component will award up to $1 million to each of the eight winners. The deadline for proposals is Oct. 13, 2016. The competition is administered by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, which is currently reviewing final reports and conducting an analysis and evaluation of the feasibility studies.

More: Gov. Andrew Cuomo

Study Says Preserved Nuclear Plants Cost-effective

BrattleGroupSourceBrattlePreserving upstate nuclear plants via a proposed Clean Energy Standard provides benefits that exceed the costs, according to an analysis by The Brattle Group for the Public Service Commission. (See NYPSC: Minimal Cost to Meet 50% Renewable Goal.)

The nuclear component of the Clean Energy Standard is responsible for more than 50% of the program’s lifetime financial benefits from carbon avoidance, despite incurring only 21% of the program’s overall costs. Power cost savings enables an additional $3.16 billion in annual gross domestic product, according to the study.

The report was prepared for the New York State IBEW Utility Labor Council, the Rochester Building and Construction Trades Council and the Central and Northern New York Building and Construction Trades Council.

More: The Brattle Group

NORTH CAROLINA

Regulators Side with Duke in NC WARN-Church Solar Deal

NCWARNSourceNCWARNThe Utilities Commission fined an advocacy group $60,000 for violating state law by installing a solar array on the roof of a Greensboro church and then selling the electricity directly to the church. The commission said NC WARN, by law, should have produced the power, sold it to Duke Energy, which then would have sold it to the church.

The commission said NC WARN’s direct contract with the church was impermissible because the church is located within Duke’s exclusive service area. “NC WARN knowingly entered into a contract to sell electricity in a franchised area and sold electricity without prior permission from the commission, subjecting itself to sanctions,” the commission said. It ordered the group to stop operating the solar array and to turn it over to the church.

NC WARN Director Jim Warren vowed to appeal. “The decision to impose the fine is pretty surprising,” he said. “In the past, that kind of fine has been used against outright lawbreakers.” He said the arrangement was made to test the law on electricity sales.

More: Charlotte Business Journal

Health Officials Go Silent on Safety Guidance near Ash Ponds

NCHealthandHSSourceGovThe Department of Health and Human Services says it has stopped offering any guidance to owners of drinking-water wells near Duke Energy coal ash ponds, citing pending legislative action that would govern water testing and advisories.

“We are carefully monitoring this proposed legislation and are not able to comment further on safety recommendations until the General Assembly takes action,” a department spokeswoman wrote in an email.

The department last year issued do-not-drink notices to owners of hundreds of wells near coal ash basins because their water contained elevated levels of hexavalent chromium, but it recently notified the landowners the water was safe to drink. There are no federal or state standards for hexavalent chromium. Lawmakers say the pending legislation will clear up any confusion. “They scared these folks erroneously,” Rep. Pat McElraft said. “Everybody thought Duke was poisoning them when they weren’t.”

More: WRAL

OHIO

Supreme Court Upholds Part of 2012 AEP Rate Case

AEPOhioSourceAEPThe state Supreme Court upheld most of American Electric Power’s 2012 rate increase, remanding part of the case to the Public Utilities Commission to review if customers should receive any refunds.

The court ruled that PUCO was correct when it approved AEP’s special “capacity charge” to make the utility whole during its transition to market-based pricing.

But the court also ruled that a portion of the rate increase was a de facto “transition charge” that added up to $508 million. Some of that, it said, could be improper.

More: The Columbus Dispatch

PENNSYLVANIA

PUC Member Leaving To Take Utility Job

PamelaWitmerSourceGov
Witmer

Public Utility Commissioner Pamela A. Witmer is leaving the commission at the end of April to become vice president of government affairs at UGI Energy Services, a company that comes under the commission’s regulation.

Witmer’s five-year term ended on April 1. A Republican who was appointed by Gov. Tom Corbett in 2011, her departure leaves an important vacancy on the commission, now split evenly between Democrats and Republicans. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has yet to nominate a replacement.

More: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Steam Heat Plants Come Under Scrutiny

The Public Utility Commission wants to focus greater scrutiny on the state’s three public steam heat plants.

The plants produce and deliver steam heat through pipes to business districts in Philadelphia, Harrisburg and the North Shore of Pittsburgh.

Citing the risk for accidents and a thin oversight staff at the plants, the PUC is releasing proposed regulations that will call for more inspections and reporting of steam leaks and emergencies.

More: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

TEXAS

Hunt Group Asks for Rehearing in Oncor Purchase

OncorSourceOncorThe Hunt Group, the would-be buyers of Oncor, are trying to change the terms of a contentious agreement it hammered out only a month ago with the Public Utility Commission. The request for a rehearing offered a bleak assessment of the sale going through.

Minutes after the Hunt Group filed a formal request for a rehearing, PUC staff filed a statement that said the group’s separate application for a rate-setting procedure failed to meet legal requirements necessary to allow the sale to go forward. Legal deadlines loom that could make it difficult to close the purchase. The commission will meet to consider the rehearing on May 4.

The buyers want to split Oncor into two linked companies that could take advantage of a $250 million federal tax break.

More: The Dallas Morning News

Fort Worth to Oncor: Defend Your Rates

The Fort Worth City Council unanimously approved a resolution directing Oncor to explain why its electric transmission and distribution rates should not decrease if its federal tax bill drops under its bankruptcy reorganization plan.

The resolution stems from last month’s approval by the state Public Utility Commission of the Hunt Group’s $18 billion acquisition of Oncor. The PUC last month deferred a decision on the rate question until 2017 at the earliest.

More: Star-Telegram

VIRGINIA

First Commercial Wind Farm Would Top North Mountain

ApexSourceApexApex Clean Energy is applying to site 25 wind turbines atop North Mountain in Botetourt County in what would be the state’s first commercial wind farm.

The Department of Environmental Quality has expressed support for the project, though opponents worry that the 550-foot-tall towers and rotating blades might kill birds and bats or contribute to erosion that would contaminate streams.

More: The Roanoke Times

Richmond Opposes FERC Permit for James River Hydro

The city of Richmond is fighting a company’s attempt to install an 8-MW hydroelectric project at Bosher’s Dam on the James River, saying the generator’s intakes could interfere with fish migration.

Energy Resources USA has filed a request with FERC to give it “priority of licensing” for the hydro project but is not yet seeking a construction permit. It is proposing to divert water at the existing dam through four 2-MW turbines.

The city said the hydro project’s proximity to a fishway might impair fish migration. “The documentation shows the intake for the facility immediately upstream of the ladder, which will adversely impact the function of the ladder,” wrote Patrick Bradley, the city’s water quality manager. “Also, the facility will effectively cut off access to the ladder for operation and maintenance purposes.”

More: Richmond Times-Dispatch

MISO Queue Changes on Hold Pending Technical Conference

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO is postponing a second attempt at changing its generator interconnection queue rules while it assesses FERC feedback and awaits input from a commission technical conference next month.

The RTO will participate in the conference, set for May 13 (RM16-12, RM15-21).

“MISO still believes that reforms to the interconnection queue process are necessary to adapt to a rapidly evolving generation fleet, and we look forward to further discussions with FERC and stakeholders to move this process forward,” the RTO said in an update to the Planning Advisory Committee. (See MISO Unveils Queue Rule Transition as Wind Advocates Seek Delay.)

ferc, miso interconnection queue

FERC last month rejected MISO’s proposed queue changes, saying they assumed the current backlog could be blamed on “speculative” projects and “fail[ed] to consider other potential factors” (ER16-675). Those factors included the timeliness of MISO’s queue processing and its coordination with neighboring RTOs. The commission also said a proposed milestone payment could create barriers to entry for smaller developers.

“We’re free to file again, anytime we want, but we have to address the concerns FERC has,” said Tim Aliff, MISO director of interconnection and planning.

Aliff said MISO’s Interconnection Process Task Force will survey stakeholders to determine which parts of the queue plan are salvageable. He also said some new processes — such as providing interconnection customers with models ahead of the queue entrance — might be included.

MISO also is planning a filing to comply with a FERC order requiring the RTO to charge uniform milestone payments to all external, internal and existing customers. (See FERC Orders MISO to Charge Uniform Interconnection Fees.) Aliff said that filing will be made separately from the revised queue filing.

FERC Stands by Denial of Polar Vortex Make-Whole Payments

FERC last week reiterated its 2015 order rejecting New Jersey Energy Associates’ request for recovery of costs incurred during the polar vortex of January 2014. Natural Gas Price Volatility (Monitoring Analytics) FERC polar vortex

NJEA, which owns the 290-MW South River combined cycle plant, said it was forced to sell natural gas at a loss of $1.3 million after PJM repeatedly canceled the plant’s scheduled start time.

FERC denied the company’s request for a waiver that would have allowed PJM to reimburse it, citing rules against retroactive ratemaking (ER15-952). (See FERC Again Denies Polar Vortex Make-Whole Payments.)

In its ruling Thursday, FERC said that NJEA’s request for clarification and rehearing was asking the commission for the first time to interpret the phrase “actual costs incurred.”

“NJEA’s request is beyond the scope of its original waiver request and [is] inappropriately raised for the first time in a request for clarification and rehearing of the Sept. 4 order,” it said.

– Suzanne Herel

MISO Planning Subcommittee Briefs

Advancements in energy storage are prompting MISO to expand its definition of non-transmission alternatives to include a new category: non-traditional transmission alternatives.

Storage behaves like transmission in several ways, Matt Tackett, MISO principal, told the Planning Subcommittee during an April 19 meeting.

“We started to realize that we’re struggling because we’re trying to make this thing too broad,” Tackett said. “We need to compartmentalize. Trying to force everything into one bucket is counterproductive.”

Non-transmission planning work is still in a “conceptual stage,” and a storage battery could be categorized as either a non-transmission alternative or a non-traditional alternative depending on how it solves a transmission issue.

MISO will seek stakeholder feedback on the issue until May 20. (See “MISO: More Time Needed to Refine Non-Transmission Alternatives Process,” MISO Planning Subcommittee Briefs.)

MISO to Revise Transmission Service Requests for Pseudo-Ties

MISO plans to revise the requirements for pseudo-tied resources to prevent them from generating without transmission rights, said Ankit Pahwa, MISO senior transmission planning engineer.

Pahwa said MISO is concerned that pseudo-tied resources might let their transmission rights expire continuing to import or export power. The RTO is proposing to add language to transmission service requests specifying that transmission rights be firm, point-to-point and maintained for the life of a pseudo-tie.

“What we’re saying is you have to maintain that transmission right to continue pseudo-tying out of MISO,” Pahwa said.

Additionally, MISO is considering performing system impact studies for all such transmission service requests. The RTO currently performs such studies only for pseudo-ties lasting longer than 18 months.

The proposed changes are part of a recent Planning Advisory Committee directive to “appropriately capture pseudo-tie impacts to MISO’s transmission system.”

MISO Questions Need for Transient Stability Analyses in MTEP

A new MISO white paper questions the need for completing a yearly long-term transient stability analysis as part of MISO’s Transmission Expansion Planning (MTEP) process.

Long Term MTEP Study Scope (MISO) - planning subcommittee briefsThe analysis models the dynamics and power flow of the entire system to provide insight into how the grid can return to stability after a significant disturbance, such as the loss of a generator.

A 10-year study during each planning cycle would satisfy NERC and MISO’s long-term planning horizon requirements, but MISO is wondering if it is necessary.

“The question is: Do you or do you not have to run the 10-year-out summer peak transient stability study?” Pat Jehring, of MISO’s planning expansion department, asked stakeholders.

According to Jehring, the RTO could conduct a long-term study using a broad approach — where the scope is widened to include all modeling changes and how they could affect the system — or a narrower interpretation of such changes. Jehring said MISO took the narrower approach with MTEP15 to save time. The RTO might now follow the broader option for MTEP16, with the analysis accounting for the impact of transmission, load changes and dispatch changes on the system.

Jehring said transmission owners have varying opinions about whether a long-term transient stability analysis would be needed for every MTEP.

Will Kenney, also with the planning expansion department, provided insight into the preliminary MTEP16 voltage stability scope, which identifies future reliability risks to MISO’s system.

Kenney said the MTEP16 scope will model a 2021 summer power flow and a shoulder power flow that assumes a 40% wind power contribution. The RTO will evaluate eight transfer paths during the 2021 summer peak, adding new analysis on the impact of eastbound transfers from Ameren Missouri and Ameren Illinois that sink in American Electric Power’s territory. Analysis of the U.S.-Canada interface will model a winter peak to examine transfers from Manitoba to the U.S. portion of MISO North.

The full scope of the voltage study will be presented at June’s Planning Subcommittee meeting, according to Kenney. The project should be completed in time for the board’s approval of the MTEP in December, he said.

— Amanda Durish Cook

FERC Consolidates Duke ROE Complaints, Sets Hearings

FERC consolidated and set for hearing two return-on-equity complaints filed against Duke Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Progress by overlapping complainants.

The complaint against Duke Carolinas argue that the current 10.2% ROE exceeds the company’s current cost of equity and should be set no higher than 8.49% (EL16-29). Similarly, the complaint against Duke Progress said its 10.8% base ROE should be set no higher than 8.49% (EL16-30).

FERC also established a refund effective date of Jan. 7, 2016.

– Suzanne Herel

MISO, SPP Disagree on 2016 Joint Study

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO staff are recommending that two joint MISO-SPP committees not develop a coordinated system plan study this year, advising the groups to instead focus on improving their processes.

SPP's Seams with MISO (ACES) Joint Study“MISO is hoping to focus on improving the process for coordinated studies prior to embarking on our next study,” MISO spokesperson Andy Schonert said following last week’s Planning Advisory Committee meeting. He said MISO wants to “take a step back” before proceeding.

MISO said it would review stakeholder input on the recommendation before putting the issue to a final vote.

SPP’s Seams Steering Committee voted earlier this month in favor of producing a coordinated study after discussion with representatives from the RTOs’ Interregional Planning Stakeholder Advisory Committee.

“The overwhelming consensus was that there is sufficient justification to undertake another joint study between the RTOs while concurrently working to implement process improvements,” said David Kelley, SPP’s director of interregional relations.

Schonert said MISO and its stakeholders want another year to align the effort with MISO’s modeling and transmission planning timeline. The RTO also wants any joint study to encompass broader metrics, such as adjusted production costs. He said MISO is committed to learning why proposed projects are not passing interregional reviews and is seeking possible development of a “standalone” interregional process, which would bypass the “triple hurdle” of individual and joint RTO approval procedures.

If just one RTO votes to perform the joint study, the subject is put off until the annual issues review the following year, according to Eric Thoms, MISO manager of planning coordination and strategy.

However, the study will be approved if one RTO votes in favor for three consecutive years — regardless of the position of the second RTO. A first joint study in 2015 failed to recommend any interregional projects, and MISO and SPP met in March for an annual issues review to discuss improving the process. (See MISO, SPP Considering Second Joint Tx Study.)

Thoms said MISO’s current issues with SPP do not warrant a joint study. He pointed out that the new seam along the Integrated System in North Dakota and South Dakota is being monitored, transfer limits between MISO North and MISO South are in place, and congestion has not changed substantially from the 2015 joint study. More historical data is needed before MISO and SPP can identify the persistent levels of market-to-market flowgate congestion, he said.

“This does not mean that we stop monitoring issues or are not open to future studies as we learn more,” said Jesse Moser, MISO manager of infrastructure studies. “Just because we don’t do a study doesn’t mean we stop working with stakeholders on these issues.”

If MISO staff’s recommendation against a study is upheld through a PAC motion, the next opportunity to reconsider would follow the annual issues review in early 2017, Thoms said. If a pressing issue does arise, the two RTOs could scope out a study before the first quarter of 2017, he said.

FERC Denies Occidental’s PURPA Complaints

By Michael Brooks

FERC last week denied Occidental Chemical on three fronts in the company’s battle against MISO and Entergy’s treatment of qualifying facilities.

ferc occidental purpa - occidental logoThe commission dismissed a 2013 complaint by the Dallas-based chemical manufacturer that claimed MISO’s treatment of QFs violated the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (EL13-41). Occidental argued that MISO’s plan to integrate QFs in Entergy’s territory would strip them of their rights under PURPA, as the law assumes that they do not have access to wholesale markets.

This plan was detailed in a document titled “Qualifying Facilities Generator Readiness for MISO Reliability Coordination and Market Integration,” which was circulated at informational meetings with QFs. It included two options for QF participation, one of which was labeled the “hybrid option.” Under this option, a QF is allowed to submit offers or self-schedule in both the day-ahead and real-time markets up to its maximum capacity. MISO said that by using financial schedules, which Entergy would be required to agree to, QFs would be able to maintain their right to sell at the avoided cost rate, pursuant to PURPA.

Occidental argued that the hybrid option would prevent QFs from exercising their right to sell as-available energy under PURPA. The company also argued that MISO should have been required to seek FERC approval for its integration plan.

The commission was unpersuaded by Occidental’s arguments.

“In this instance, registration under the hybrid option allows QFs to participate in the MISO market, while continuing to exercise their rights pursuant to PURPA,” FERC said. “We find that the use of financial schedules in conjunction with the hybrid option preserves a QF’s right to provide as-available energy.”

Complaint Against LSPC

While its complaint against MISO was pending before the commission, Occidental filed a complaint against the Louisiana Public Service Commission in February 2014. Occidental protested that the PSC had essentially adopted MISO’s QF integration plan.

FERC declined to take action on the PSC complaint while Occidental’s MISO complaint was still pending. In response, the company sued Entergy and the PSC in federal district court, which stayed the proceeding until FERC reached a decision in the MISO complaint. Occidental appealed, and in January the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned that decision, noting that it could take years before FERC reached a decision. It ordered the lower court to give FERC 180 days to resolve the MISO complaint; if FERC had not reached a decision, the court could proceed with the suit (15-301).

With the MISO complaint settled, FERC subsequently issued a notice of intent not to act on the PSC complaint (EL14-28).

Rehearing Denied

Finally, FERC denied a rehearing request from Occidental regarding its order waiving the requirement for Entergy to sign power purchase agreements with QFs that have capacities over 20 MW (QM14-3). (See FERC: Entergy not Required to Buy from Large QFs.)

Occidental argued that the commission ignored evidence showing that MISO’s integration plan would deny its Taft QF, located at its Hahnville, La., chemical plant, nondiscriminatory access to the RTO’s markets.

But FERC noted its decision upholding MISO’s plan. “Given this finding, Occidental’s argument in the instant case that it lacks nondiscriminatory access to the MISO markets based on the MISO QF integration plan is moot,” it said.

FERC Affirms Entergy Refund Order on Off-System Sales

By Tom Kleckner

FERC last week affirmed its 2012 ruling requiring Entergy to make refunds to ratepayers because of an improper allocation of the sources of off-system energy sales between 2000 and 2009.

Entergy Service Area - FERC Refund Order on Off-System SalesThe commission denied in part and granted in part requests for rehearing by Entergy Services and the Louisiana Public Service Commission (EL09-61-003).

The PSC set the proceedings in motion with a 2009 complaint alleging Entergy and its affiliates violated their system agreement and engaged in “imprudent utility conduct” when Entergy Arkansas sold excess electric energy to third-party power marketers and other non-agreement members. Entergy’s system agreement is a 1982 contract between the companies and Entergy Services that governs the planning and operation of the companies’ generation and bulk transmission facilities on a single-system basis.

An administrative law judge’s initial decision found Entergy Arkansas had violated the system, ordering refunds. FERC affirmed part of the decision, finding that although the agreement’s relevant provisions are “ambiguous,” it does provide authority for the individual companies to make opportunity sales for their own accounts.

The PSC and Entergy requested a rehearing of the decision based on four issues:

  1. Was the commission correct in finding the system agreement permitted the opportunity sales?
  2. Did Entergy violate the agreement in accounting for the sales?
  3. Was FERC correct in ordering refunds?
  4. Did the commission err in reducing the refund amount as a result of the PSC’s delay in approving a power purchase agreement between Entergy Louisiana and Entergy Arkansas?

FERC rejected Entergy and the PSC’s arguments on each of the first three matters, affirming its previous decision.

“Although the Louisiana commission argues that the system agreement prohibits opportunity sales through its provisions concerning the powers of the operating committee … it is notable that the Louisiana commission can point to no specific provisions that make such a prohibition,” FERC said.

Over-Recovery

However, the commission also rejected Entergy’s contention that no refunds were due to ratepayers because the matter involved a misallocation of costs among different companies rather than an over-recovery. “Entergy Arkansas’ off-system sales of low-cost energy from system resources had the effect of forcing up the rates of captive customers of other operating companies by precluding their purchase of the low-cost energy,” the commission said. “Those captive customers were essentially over-charged as a result of Entergy’s improper accounting under the system agreement and thus are due refunds.”

The commission also clarified that interest on refunds should be included in the payments, consistent with the commission’s general policy.

And it agreed with the PSC’s argument that the refunds should not be reduced by a 12-month period in which the Louisiana regulators delayed approval of a PPA between Entergy Louisiana and Entergy Arkansas. FERC said a more equitable approach would be to reinstate refunds for the 12-month period at issue, saying it could not “necessarily conclude” the PSC’s delay in processing the PPAs was so excessive the refund amounts should be reduced.

In a separate order, FERC set further hearing procedures to determine the final allocation of refunds, which the Louisiana commission has estimated at $77.5 million (EL09-61-002). Entergy contends the amount should be less than $25 million.

The commission agreed with the ALJ that a full re-run of Entergy’s intra-system bill was necessary to provide a fair accounting of damages. FERC found the damages should be altered to reflect adjustments to service schedules and other provisions in the system agreement, including for bandwidth payments.

Entergy’s companies essentially operate as one system, although each has different operating costs. Low-cost companies make annual payments to the highest-cost company, using a “bandwidth” remedy that ensures no operating company has production costs more than 11% above or below the system average. Regulators in Entergy’s states have regularly challenged the annual bandwidth filings, which began in 2007.

New York Environmental Department Rejects Constitution Pipeline

By William Opalka

New York environmental officials on Friday denied a water quality permit for a 124-mile pipeline that would have delivered shale gas from Pennsylvania to markets in eastern New York and New England.

The New York Department of Environmental Conservation said developers of the Constitution Pipeline failed to address regulators’ concerns during a yearlong review.

The water quality permit, which is required under Section 401 of the federal Clean Water Act, was the last regulatory approval needed by Williams Partners and its co-developers, Cabot Oil & Gas, Piedmont Natural Gas, and WGL Holdings, for the pipeline through northeastern Pennsylvania and New York.

FERC approved the pipeline in December 2014, but developers lost the 2016 construction season when FERC would not allow limited tree cutting along the project route after New York officials protested because of the lack of the Section 401 permit. (See Constitution Pipeline Delayed Nearly a Year.)

Failed to Address Environmental Concerns

constitution pipeline, new yorkThe DEC said Constitution’s “application fails in a meaningful way to address the significant water resource impacts that could occur from this project and has failed to provide sufficient information to demonstrate compliance with New York state water quality standards.”

Constitution said it “will pursue all available options to challenge the legality” of the decision. The project was intended to deliver 650,000 dekatherms of natural gas per day to the Wright, N.Y., compressor station for transport farther east.

“In spite of NYSDEC’s unprecedented decision, we remain absolutely committed to building this important energy infrastructure project, which will create an important connection between consumers and reliable supplies of clean, affordable natural gas. We believe NYSDEC’s stated rationale for the denial includes flagrant misstatements and inaccurate allegations, and appears to be driven more by New York state politics than by environmental science,” the company said in a statement released Monday.

The department blamed the company for failing to adequately address its concerns about the project’s impact on 251 streams and 500 acres of forest. The denial also cited the short- and long-term effects of trenching during construction, the loss of shade critical to stream health and the impact the loss of vegetation would have on potential flooding.

“Although the department repeatedly asked Constitution to analyze alternative routes that could have avoided or minimized impacts to an extensive group of water resources, as well as to address other potential impacts to these resources, Constitution failed to substantively address these concerns,” the DEC wrote.

Constitution said it “voluntarily agreed” to incorporate re-routes, adopt trenchless construction methods, commit to trout stream restoration and spend $18 million for wetland mitigation and $8.6 million for migratory bird habitat restoration and preservation.

Tree Cutting

The department was also annoyed that it received reports that landowners, “possibly with Constitution’s knowledge, clear cut old-growth trees along the right of way for the pipeline, including trees near streams and water bodies, even after the FERC ruled that Constitution could not cut trees in the right of way.”

New York, Constitution Pipeline
First sections of Constitution Pipeline arrive in New York Source: Constitution Pipeline

Constitution said that allegation is “completely inaccurate and contradicts the third-party environmental monitors working on behalf of FERC.”

The DEC said it conducted a “rigorous review,” including receipt of 15,000 public comments.

Environmentalists lauded the decision.

“Gov. [Andrew] Cuomo’s rejection of the Constitution Pipeline represents a turning of the tide, where states across the nation that have been pressured into accepting harmful gas infrastructure projects by FERC may now feel emboldened to push back,” said Roger Downs, conservation director for the Sierra Club’s Atlantic Chapter. “Cuomo’s leadership could inspire a domino effect of related pipeline rejections as other states begin to put the protection of water and our climate before flawed energy projects that do not serve the public interest.”

Constitution’s rejection came two days after Kinder Morgan announced it was shelving its Northeast Energy Direct pipeline, which was to deliver Pennsylvania shale gas through New York, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. It cited an uncertain regulatory climate for the project as well as a lack of commitments from electric utility customers. (See Kinder Morgan Suspends Northeast Energy Direct Pipeline.)

Kinder Morgan Board Suspends Work on Northeast Energy Direct Pipeline

By William Opalka

Kinder Morgan said Wednesday it has suspended work on the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline, citing an uncertain regulatory climate and a lack of commitments from New England power generators to reserve capacity.

The $3.3 billion project, being developed by subsidiary Tennessee Gas Pipeline, was to deliver shale gas from Pennsylvania into New York, with a line also running through Massachusetts and New Hampshire. The Kinder Morgan board approved the project last summer and it sought federal approval late last year (CP16-21). (See Northeast Energy Direct Files for FERC Certificate.)

“The board’s initial approval was based on existing contractual commitments at the time by local gas distribution companies to purchase natural gas from the project, as well as expected commitments from additional LDCs, electric distribution companies and other market participants in New England,” the company said in a statement. “Unfortunately, despite working for more than two years and expending substantial shareholder resources, TGP did not receive the additional commitments it expected. As a result, there are currently neither sufficient volumes, nor a reasonable expectation of securing them, to proceed with the project as it is currently configured.”

The company conducted an open season last year to engage potential customers and received commitments for only 751,650 dekatherms per day of the pipeline’s 1.3 million dekatherms per day capacity.

Kinder Morgan's Northeast Energy Direct project

A controversial aspect of the project, and that of another proposed pipeline, Access Northeast, is the proposal to have EDC ratepayers foot some of the project costs through their utility bills. (See Massachusetts Regulators Endorse Pipeline Contracts.) Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey has opposed the move, and similar proposals in other New England states have yet to be enacted.

“The New England states have not yet established regulatory procedures to facilitate binding EDC commitments, that the process in each state for establishing such procedures is open-ended and that the ultimate success of those processes is not assured,” Kinder Morgan added in its statement.

Project opponents were elated.

“It’s a rare thing to see a fossil fuel company admit there simply isn’t enough need for what they’re selling,” Conservation Law Foundation President Bradley Campbell said. “It is increasingly apparent that free market forces are rapidly driving us toward a clean energy future, and today’s decision by Kinder Morgan is a telling sign of things to come. Our environment, our economy and the health of our communities depend on continuing to see fossil fuels out the door.”