EPA has overruled New York officials and ordered an additional air quality review for a dormant coal-fired power plant in the Finger Lakes region whose owners want to convert it to biomass and natural gas.
Owners of the Greenidge Generation Plant on Tuesday wrote to the New York Public Service Commission to say the EPA Region 2 administrator rejected the state’s finding that the change from coal to either biomass or natural gas is not a “major modification.”
“The primary basis for EPA’s objection is that, if reactivated, Greenidge will be subject to the Clean Air Act’s … permit program as a new source,” EPA wrote on Dec. 7.
The 106-MW plant on Seneca Lake has been dormant for nearly four years. The owners are seeking to revive it and add a new supply line for natural gas. (See Finger Lakes Plant Seeks Gas Line for Repowering.)
The New York Department of Environmental Conservation had issued a draft permit that EPA said was incomplete.
“We strongly disagree with the EPA’s decision given that the New York Department of Environmental Conservation conducted a thorough and complete review before issuing this draft permit, concluding that Greenidge clearly meets all the federal and state standards for resuming full operation,” Greenidge spokesman Michael McKeon said in a statement. “We are currently analyzing the EPA’s response to determine how best to restart the facility as soon as possible.”
He said the company has 90 days to respond to EPA.
The state awarded Greenidge $2 million on Dec. 11 to renovate the plant in Dresden to allow it to burn 100% natural gas. McKeon said the plant would lose that grant — part of a five-year, $500 million Upstate Revitalization Initiative for the Finger Lakes region — if the delay lasts as long as a year.
The Associated Press published its findings of a yearlong investigation into the security of the U.S. power grid, and its conclusions are not heartening: About a dozen times in the last decade, foreign hackers have gained enough access to operational networks and power plants to allow them to control the flow of power over the grid.
The AP conducted more than 120 interviews with industry experts and government officials, most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity. These sources said hackers from Iran, China and Russia have penetrated the grid and remain “stowed away” where they can strike at will. “If the geopolitical situation changes and Iran wants to target these facilities, if they have this kind of information it will make it a lot easier,” said Robert M. Lee, a former U.S. Air Force cyberwarfare operations officer.
In its report, the news service delved into one such attack on Calpine in August 2013, where hackers gained access to passwords and diagrams of multiple power plants. The AP’s sources pointed to aging network infrastructure — such as computers running on Windows 95 and boot up on floppy disks — used to manage substations and power plants that are simply unable to respond or even detect intrusions.
States, Others File Amicus Briefs in Review of CPV Contracts
More than a dozen states, associations and others filed amicus briefs with the Supreme Court last week in two federal-state jurisdictional cases pitting New Jersey and Maryland regulators against FERC.
The court said in October that it would review lower court rulings throwing out state-issued contracts Competitive Power Ventures won to build a 660-MW combined-cycle plant in Maryland and a 663-MW plant in Woodbridge, N.J. (See SCOTUS Agrees to Hear Md., NJ-FERC Subsidy Case.)
The main parties filed their briefs in early December. Last week, the court received friend of the court briefs from others including the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, the American Public Power Association, NRG Energy and officials from more than a dozen states.
House Republicans are questioning the legality of EPA’s use of social media in its climate rule campaign. While not citing any specific alleged abuses, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.) said that last week’s Government Accountability Office report accusing EPA of violating the law when promoting its water rule calls into question “the use of social media to promote other rulemaking activity.”
“For example, EPA undertook an extensive social media messaging campaign in support of its Clean Power Plan, authoring blog posts and posting messages on Facebook and Twitter,” Upton said in a letter to EPA.
An EPA spokeswoman said the use of social media was aimed at educating the public, not influencing policy. “EPA stands by its outreach efforts on the Clean Power Plan,” she said.
More than Half of New Capacity was Renewable in 2014
Electricity derived from renewable sources made up more than half of the country’s new energy capacity installations in 2014, according to a report by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Solar grew the fastest, increasing by more than 54% and adding 5.5 GW.
Renewable power made up 15.5% of total installed capacity and 13.5% of total generation.
The beneficial use of post-combustion coal products — more commonly known as ash — surged in 2014, mostly because of the clarification of federal regulations governing its use.
The American Coal Association said 62.4 million tons of ash, or 48% of all ash produced in 2014, were beneficially used in various applications, such as fill. That is up 21% from 51.4 million tons used in 2013.
EPA signaled in 2014 that it was rethinking coal ash’s “hazardous material” designation, spurring increased use, the association said. The agency finalized disposal regulations in December 2014 and it was designated non-hazardous. Figures for 2015 are not yet available.
Senate Confirms Cherry Murray as DOE Sciences Director
The Senate has confirmed Cherry Murray, the former dean of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, as the Energy Department’s new director of the Office of Science. She’ll oversee research in fusion energy, high-energy physics and nuclear physics, among other areas.
“Dr. Murray will be an outstanding director of the Office of Science, drawing upon her experience in academia as professor and dean of one of country’s leading universities of engineering and applied sciences,” Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said. The Office of Science also oversees the department’s 17 national laboratories.
In addition to her academic positions at Harvard, Murray has served as associate director and deputy director at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, held positions at Bell Laboratories, and most recently served on the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. She received her bachelor’s and doctorate degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Global coal demand stalled for the first time since the 1990s because of increased renewable energy production, more stringent environmental regulations and a decline in industrial use, according to the International Energy Agency.
The agency said that China’s declining appetite for coal caused much of the stall. Although the country continues to build coal-burning power plants, it is also increasing its use of hydro, wind and solar power.
The IEA said it predicts that coal will provide a significant but shrinking share of the world’s generation, from the current 41% to 37% by 2020.
Akron Company Gets $1.3 Million from DOE for Clean Steam Plant
Ohio company Echogen Power Systems is getting a $1.3 million Energy Department grant to develop a cleaner coal-burning power plant. The government’s Supercritical Transformational Electric Power program is providing it with funding to explore the use of supercritical carbon dioxide, or carbon dioxide at high temperature and pressure.
Echogen, which operates out of a former steel company building in downtown Akron, is using supercritical carbon dioxide technology to boost waste-heat capturing systems in industrial applications. It will use the money to develop a 10-MW demonstration plant to employ supercritical carbon dioxide in a coal-burning system. It says using supercritical carbon dioxide will require less fuel and produce fewer emissions.
Construction of the plant is scheduled to start in 2019, according to Echogen.
FTC to Review Energy Transfer, Williams Cos. Merger
The Federal Trade Commission is reviewing the proposed merger of Energy Transfer Equity with The Williams Companies. The $37.7 billion merger would create the third largest energy franchise in North America.
Energy Transfer and Williams confirmed that FTC would review the proposed combination of the two pipeline giants. The deal also needs FERC approval, which would have to rule that the merger would be in the public interest.
The FTC review will determine if any antitrust issues would arise with such a merger. One legal expert, Franklin G. Snyder of Texas A&M School of Law, said he believes there will be few roadblocks. “Reports so far suggest that the antitrust problems will not be too serious and that it would likely get FTC approval, but the FTC will certainly be looking very closely,” he said.
FERC to Consider Columbia’s $1 Billion Modernization Program
Columbia Transmission, operator of a network of natural gas pipelines serving the Northeast and the Appalachian shale region, has filed a $1 billion modernization program with FERC.
Columbia said it will replace more than 130 miles of pipe, update its preventative maintenance program and add nearly 80,000 horsepower of compression to its standby fleet of compressors to increase reliability in times of high demand and cold temperatures. The proposed modernization program will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 20,000 tons a year, according to the company.
The company has asked FERC to approve the customer agreement surrounding the modernization program by the end of March.
The Siting Council last week issued a 16-page draft fact-finding report on the 63.3-MW fuel cell power plant Beacon Falls Energy Park. The council is expected to rule early next year on whether the plant can be built on a former sand and gravel pit.
If approved, construction of the plant would start next May, said William Corvo, president of CT Energy & Technology, a Middletown company that will own the facility once it is completed. The first phase could be done by July 2017, with completion by the end of 2019.
The plant will use 11.1 million cubic feet of natural gas a day for fuel and 300,000 gallons of water per day for fuel processing, according to the report. Fuel Cell Energy, of Danbury, will manufacture the 21 fuel cells in the project, making it the world’s largest fuel cell plant.
Bloom Energy Subsidy to be Carved out on Delmarva Bills
Delmarva Power and Light customers will begin seeing how much of their monthly bill goes to subsidize Bloom Energy under an order approved this month by the Public Service Commission.
In 2011, Delaware enlisted the California fuel cell manufacturer to build a factory in Newark by offering it $16.5 million in state funds and a 21-year subsidy from Delmarva, which buys energy from the fuel cells to meet its renewable power goals.
Bloom promised to hire 900 workers by 2017. By Sept. 30, it had employed 224. Bloom might have to return some of the $12 million it has received from the state for job creation if it doesn’t meet its workforce goal.
Commission Halts Peoples Gas Pipeline Replacement Program
The Commerce Commission has suspended an $800 million plan to replace 250 miles of Peoples Gas mains over the next three years.
WEC Energy Group purchased the parent of Peoples Gas in June, promising to spend $250 million annually on the pipeline replacement program. Attorney General Lisa Madigan, among others, has expressed fears about how the infrastructure program will impact rates of Chicago customers.
A new pipeline replacement plan is expected to be approved by the ICC by the end of 2016. In the meantime, the company will decide how much gas main work it will perform.
Residents turned up last week to protest NIPSCO’s proposed electric rate increase at a Utility Regulatory Commission regional hearing.
Hearing attendees said the utility’s proposed increase in its flat monthly customer charge from $11 to $20 would punish low- and fixed-income ratepayers. Laura Arnold, president of the Indiana Distributed Energy Alliance, said it is unclear how the utility justified the $9 increase in the fixed monthly charge.
The rate increase would generate $126.6 million in added revenue for the utility. NIPSCO’s last rate increase was in 2011. Public hearings will continue into February, when the IURC will hold an evidentiary session.
Commission Takes Steps to Clean Power Plan Compliance
The Corporation Commission has taken a first step toward figuring out how the state will comply with EPA’s Clean Power Plan, which forces states to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions.
The state has joined several dozen others in a suit to block the regulations, but it also has taken steps toward complying with it. The legislature passed a law last session requiring the KCC to provide information about each utility’s options to comply with the rules, the cost of those options and how they would affect reliability. The three KCC commissioners approved opening a general investigation docket on Dec. 3 and instructed staff to contract with a consultant to examine the options.
The process will involve a public educational session on Jan. 12 with staff from the commission, the Department of Health and Environment and the Attorney General’s office. The commission also plans other hearings and a public comment period.
Gov. Sam Brownback and other state and county leaders recently inaugurated the Buckeye Wind Energy Center, a 200-MW project northwest of Hays. The 25,000-acre wind farm, owned and operated by Invenergy, includes 112 GE 1.7X100 turbines.
During the next 20 years, Invenergy expects to pay out $30 million to the landowners for leases and $17 million to Ellis County in lieu of taxes, said Kelly Meyer, Invenergy vice president of development.
A state senator wants to impose an annual $100 tax on owners of electric cars to substitute for fuel taxes to fund road maintenance and repairs.
“If you’re using our highways, if you’re using our roads out there, you ought to help pay for them,” Sen. Joe Bowen, a Republican, said during a December committee hearing.
The Transportation Cabinet expects fuel tax collections to decline $100.4 million next year as conventional vehicles become more efficient and more electric vehicles take to the road. The National Conference of State Legislatures says that 10 states currently assess a special fee on electric car owners.
Stuart Ungar, president of EVolve KY, a group of electric car enthusiasts, said the tax would discourage electric car ownership.
South Portland officials have rejected two proposals from developers seeking to build solar power farms on city properties, including a former landfill.
One of the proposals came from Ameresco, and the other came from ReVision Energy and Energy Systems Group. City officials said neither bid offered an appealing power purchase agreement nor addressed the city’s desire to install solar arrays on nine municipal buildings.
The Public Service Commission granted a $238 million rate increase to DTE Energy that would raise the average monthly residential bill by $8.22.
The increase will help the utility finance the purchase of two natural gas-fired electric plants to replace two coal-fired plants DTE plans to close in 2016. The total rate increase for residential customers is 5.3%, while commercial customers will pay 3.4% more. Industrial customers will receive a 2.4% decrease.
PSC Chairman John Quackenbush said customers will benefit from a more reliable system and a cleaner environment.
The state’s farming community is still blocking Clean Line Energy’s $2.2 billion Grain Belt Express transmission line, which has been approved in three other states.
In July, the Public Service Commission said the project wasn’t necessary and denied Clean Line Energy’s application. The commission reportedly took into account the farmers’ concerns about crops and pastures and difficulties steering farming equipment around towers. The 780-mile HVDC line has won approval from Kansas, Indiana and Illinois, although opponents in Illinois are planning to appeal the approval process.
Clean Line says the transmission line would deliver renewable, low-cost energy to 200,000 homes in Missouri alone and help the state comply with the federal Clean Power Plan.
MC Power Companies has proposed building a 3.3-MW community solar farm in the city of Independence, which would be the largest in the Kansas City area.
Independence Power & Light would buy the energy from MC Power at a fixed price for 25 years. IPL would have the option to buy the farm after seven years. MC Power has a long-term lease for the land, said Loren Williamson, the company’s senior vice president of project development.
The City Council heard details about the proposed project Dec. 14. The ordinance for the power purchase agreement is scheduled for a vote Monday. It would bring IPL’s renewable energy production to about 13.5%, a step closer to the council’s goal of 15% by 2021.
Talen’s Share of Power Plant Drops 87% in Market Value
The market value of Talen Energy’s stake in a coal plant has declined 87% over the past two years, according to figures provided to the Great Falls Tribune by state revenue officials.
The Colstrip Steam Electric Station, partially owned by Talen Energy, has fared poorly as a merchant generator competing with cheap natural gas, according to officials. “The prospects for coal versus natural gas have deteriorated,” said Julien Dumoulin-Smith, a power sector analyst from UBS Securities.
In 2013, Talen’s stake in the Colstrip station was valued at $400 million. Today, that share is valued at $45.5 million. About three-quarters of residents in Rosebud County, where Colstrip is located, get their electricity from the plant. Diminishing revenue from the plant has prompted the county to raise taxes.
The Board of Public Utilities last week approved plans by South Jersey Gas to build a 22-mile natural gas line through the Pine Barrens without any further review. The decision came after the staff of the Pinelands Commission approved the project without putting it to the commission’s board.
The BPU’s decision raised howls of protests from environmental groups. The Pinelands Preservation Alliance called the decision “deplorable” and said it was a case of “politics and money triumphing over pinelands preservation and the public interest.” New Jersey Sierra Club Executive Director Jeff Tittel vowed his organization would appeal.
One BPU member recused himself and another was not present for the 3-0 vote. The pipeline is designed to deliver natural gas to the B.L. England generating station in Cape May County. The plant currently burns coal and fuel oil, but would be converted to gas if the pipeline is completed.
Lawmakers Deliver Votes to Cut Emissions, Rejoin RGGI
The state legislature voted on two measures to cut carbon emissions in the state, handing Gov. Chris Christie an unmistakable message that it doesn’t agree with his stance on global warming.
The Senate cleared a bill that calls for more renewable energy generation, while the General Assembly passed a resolution that calls for the state to rejoin the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. Both votes were largely along party lines, with all Republicans in the Assembly voting against them.
Christie said RGGI was ineffective and represented a tax on utility customers.
Assembly to BPU: Rethink Fishermen’s Energy Project
The state legislature continued its renewable push by passing a bill that requires the Board of Public Utilities to reconsider the Fishermen’s Energy offshore wind project, regardless of its cost.
The bill would require the board to exempt the three-turbine project from a cost-benefit analysis. The vote is seen as another swipe at Gov. Chris Christie’s administration, which supported an offshore wind energy development act five years ago but whose support for renewable energy has waned since.
“The failure of the Christie administration to adopt rules for offshore wind or hold up projects like Fishermen’s Energy has cost New Jersey jobs and economic investments,” said New Jersey Sierra Club Director Jeff Tittel.
Legislators Reintroduce Bipartisan Solar Tax Credit Bill
Two state legislators — a Senate Democrat and a House Republican — are teaming up again to push a solar energy bill that last year passed the Legislature with strong bipartisan support, only to be pocket vetoed by Gov. Susana Martinez.
Sen. Mimi Stewart and Rep. Sarah Maestas Barnes have pre-filed bills that would extend the current state solar tax credits. The 10% credit for a solar installation is set to expire at the end of 2016. These bills would extend the credit through 2024.
Although the legislation passed last year, Stewart said in an interview that she is afraid the bill could have a harder time getting out of the Senate Finance Committee. That is because falling oil prices mean less tax revenue for the state.
The Public Regulation Commission last week adopted a plan to shutter part of the coal-fired San Juan Generating Station, bringing to a close years of wrangling over the best way to curb pollution while limiting the effects on utility bills and the region’s economy.
The 4-1 vote came as environmentalists, consumer advocates, state lawmakers and lawyers for the utility that runs the San Juan plant packed a PRC hearing in Santa Fe.
Under the plan, Public Service Company of New Mexico (PNM) will be allowed to absorb excess capacity from the utilities that are divesting ownership shares in the plant. Most environmentalists and clean energy advocates had previously opposed that, but PNM agreed to a new review by regulators in 2018 to determine whether more or all of the plant should be shut down after 2022.
The solar industry on Long Island is turning its attention from residential installations to commercial systems. One of the island’s largest commercial rooftop installations was unveiled at the Clare Rose beverage distribution facility in Yaphank, a $3.5 million project that will supply more than 90% of the company’s electricity and pay for itself in less than five years. The federal tax credit for that project will exceed $1 million.
“There’s a flurry of activity right now” in the commercial sector, said David Schieren, chief executive of EmPower Solar in Island Park, one of Long Island’s largest installers. EmPower expects to see a 10% shift toward the commercial sector next year, to 40% of its overall business.
In recent years, fewer commercial customers have installed solar. The number of rebated commercial systems is down for the past three years, to just 59 as of the end of November, compared to a high of 235 in 2011. The total number of megawatts on the commercial side is increasing, however, from 4.1 MW in 2013 to 6.1 MW thus far in 2015, according to PSEG Long Island, the local utility.
The New York Power Authority has approved a deal to give cheap electricity to an aluminum smelter that had announced a plant closure. The deal will allow the Alcoa plant in Massena to stay open and save 600 jobs.
The price of power for the plant will be cut and future changes will be tied to the price of aluminum. Authority CFO Robert Laurie said the rate cut, which runs through March 2019, would cost the authority about $12 million annually in lost revenue. Laurie said the authority would likely not find another customer for as much power as the Alcoa plant consumes, which would have to be dumped onto the wholesale power market with “uncertain effects” if the plant closed.
Laurie said Alcoa will pay $12.25/MWh, the lowest electricity price of any NYPA commercial customer, and warned that other customers may approach the authority “to request similar treatment.”
Ohio University’s on-campus power plant burned its last ton of coal on Thanksgiving Day and is now heating its buildings with natural gas, a switch that was completed six weeks ahead of schedule. The university had set Dec. 31 as the deadline to switching fuels, but work on the changeover was completed early.
The university will be installing two permanent natural gas-fired boilers, a project due to be completed by September 2017. The plant’s two coal-fired boilers and the obsolete smokestack will be removed.
The university is now getting about 20% of its overall power from the temporary gas boilers, and is purchasing another 50% on the open market from renewable sources.
The Public Utility Commission named Commissioner Andrew G. Place as vice chairman, replacing John F. Coleman Jr., who will remain on the commission until his term expires in 2017. Place was nominated to the commission by Gov. Tom Wolf earlier this year, and confirmed by the Senate in September.
He came to the commission after serving as director for energy and environmental policy at EQT Corp. Place worked to form the Center for Sustainable Shale Development and held several positions at the state Department of Environmental Protection.
A newly announced EPA haze rule could cost the Coleto Creek coal-fired power plant near Victoria more than $100 million.
The federal agency announced Dec. 9 its haze regulations for the state, which require it to reduce pollutants that impair visibility in national parks and wilderness areas. Coleto Creek and six other coal-fired power plants in the state will need to make expensive upgrades or retrofits under the new rule to cut sulfur dioxide emissions.
Coleto Creek, which is owned by GDF Suez Energy Resources North America, has five years to comply with the new rule.
El Paso Electric’s proposed rate increase should be reduced almost $48 million, or 67% less than the utility has sought, the City of El Paso said in documents filed with the Public Utility Commission.
The city is asking the PUC to reduce the utility’s rate request from $71.5 million to $23.5 million, which would result in an overall rate increase of 5.5%, compared to the utility’s proposed 16.6% increase.
The city also is asking the PUC to reject the utility’s proposal to establish a special rate class for residential customers with rooftop solar systems, which would increase those customers’ rates more than regular residential customers.
Carbon Capture Project Gets Important Land Agreement
Odessa Development Corp. voted to extend the land agreement with Summit Power Group, allowing the company to build a $2.5 billion power plant that captures and stores carbon on a 600-acre site.
Summit officials signed contracts Dec. 7 with the primary companies that will construct the Texas Clean Energy Project, which will sell power, CO2, urea and sulfuric acid. Summit still must raise funding to build the plant, and it is targeting financial closing in spring 2016.
Before the extension becomes final, Summit must also gain the approval of Grow Odessa, the non-profit organization that initially acquired the proposed Summit site. The Odessa City Council has already approved the extension.
Green Mountain Power says it will build a manure digester in St. Albans that will turn cow dung from three farms into electricity and reduce phosphorous pollution into Lake Champlain.
The $8 million project, which will generate enough electricity from methane gas to power about 700 homes, will help meet about one-third of EPA’s target for reducing farm phosphorous runoff into St. Albans Bay.
EPA this summer set new pollution reduction goals for the state’s side of the lake. The digester process will remove much of the phosphorous from the manure. The fibrous byproduct from the process will be turned into animal bedding.
A bill that would authorize new construction of nuclear reactors in the state was introduced Dec. 14 in both houses of the Legislature. Supporters say zero-emissions nuclear energy sources are needed under the Clean Power Plan, while critics of the legislation say building nuclear plants is an expensive way to comply with the federal carbon-reduction mandate.
WEC Energy Group said new sources of power wouldn’t be needed for at least 10 years, given the company’s recent completion of new plants. Republican State Rep. Kevin Peterson said during a legislative hearing that his bill “simply reopens the door to technology that has advanced well beyond what it was when our state closed that door 30-plus years ago.”
During Gov. Scott Walker’s 2010 campaign, he promised to end the state’s more than 30-year moratorium on erecting nuclear plants. Currently, 13% of the state’s electricity supply comes from nuclear sources.
WASHINGTON — With low oil and gas prices crimping the petroleum industry’s budgets, two major energy lobbying groups are combining forces. The American Petroleum Institute and America’s Natural Gas Alliance will begin 2016 as a single organization under the API banner.
The move appears to be driven by a desire by members of ANGA — a smaller, newer organization — to trim costs. Seven of the 17 members listed on ANGA’s website are also API members.
API, founded about 85 years ago, has more than 625 members, including refiners, suppliers and pipeline operators. In 2013, according to its IRS filings, it had a staff of about 300 and a $49 million payroll, one-fifth of its $238 million budget.
ANGA, founded in 2009, has a staff of about 22 representing 17 dozen independent natural gas exploration and production companies. It reported $7.2 million in payroll in its $67 million budget for 2013.
Ominously, ANGA’s biggest source of income, program service revenue — dues — dropped by more than a quarter in 2013, from $76.7 million in 2012 to $56.5 million in 2013. API’s program service revenue dropped from $225 million to $210 million over the same period.
ANGA ran an operating deficit of more than $10 million in 2013, following a shortfall of $7 million in 2012 — this after running a surplus of $53 million as recently as 2010.
Data for 2014 is not yet available.
“As a single organization, the combined skills and capabilities bring an enhanced advocacy strength to natural gas market development,” API CEO Jack Gerard, who will remain in his position, said in a statement. “The combined association’s expanded membership will provide additional lift to API’s ongoing efforts on important public policy issues.”
ANGA president Marty Durbin will lead a new group at API that will handle the gas lobby’s interests. ANGA members not already affiliated with API will become full members.
The organizations did not return requests for comment on whether the merger would result in layoffs. In an email to “colleagues” Tuesday, Durbin named four ANGA staffers he said would be joining him in the transition, promising they would provide “a continued high level of engagement and expertise.”
Gerard earned $14.1 million in 2013. Durbin earned $767,000 after becoming CEO in May of that year.
According to The Hill, API spent $9 million lobbying Congress last year — more than any other energy trade group — while ANGA spent $1.4 million.
Congress’ approval last week of a repeal of the decades-long ban on crude oil exports gave API a rare chance to celebrate lately. It said the legislation “will help bring U.S. energy policy into the 21st century.”
FERC ordered MISO Thursday to post its day-ahead market results earlier, saying the RTO’s current schedule doesn’t allow gas-fired generators enough time to procure fuel.
The commission said MISO had failed to comply with Order 809, which moved the timely nomination cycle deadline for gas to 1 p.m. CT from 11:30 a.m.
The commission ordered MISO to move the posting of its day-ahead market results “at least” 30 minutes earlier to 12:30 p.m. CT. It also ordered the RTO to set a notification time for its forward reliability assessment commitment (FRAC) that is “sufficiently in advance” of the gas evening nomination cycle (ER15-2256 and EL14-25).
In separate orders, FERC accepted Order 809 compliance filings by SPP and CAISO. Order 809, issued in April, also added a third intraday nomination cycle. (See FERC Approves Final Rule on Gas-Electric Coordination.)
MISO Filing
MISO submitted a compliance filing in July that proposed posting day-ahead market results one hour earlier at 1 p.m. CT and the FRAC notification time two hours earlier to 5 p.m. CT. It also proposed moving its day-ahead market trading deadline one hour earlier during daylight saving time, so that the deadline would be 10 a.m. CT year-round.
The RTO also proposed reducing the day-ahead market solve time from four hours to three, saying that would meet Order 809’s requirement for posting post market results “sufficiently in advance” of the evening nomination cycle to allow gas-fired generators to obtain fuel and pipeline capacity while minimizing the impact on market participants.
MISO said the earlier publication of the day-ahead results would reduce costs by making up to 1,600 MW of longer lead notification generation capacity available. Similarly, the 5 p.m. CT FRAC notification time would allow consideration of up to 4,214 MW of longer lead notification resources.
MISO said its proposals were an effort to balance the Order 809 requirements against stakeholder preferences to maintain a day-ahead market deadline no earlier than 10 a.m. CT. Because most of its footprint operates in the Central Time Zone, MISO said, market participants use the morning hours to determine generation availability, develop forecasts and formulate bids and offers.
FERC not Persuaded
FERC said posting results ahead of the evening gas nomination cycle is not a substitute for posting in advance of the timely nomination cycle, which it said is “the most liquid time to acquire both natural gas supply and pipeline transportation capacity.” MISO’s proposed day-ahead notifications would overlap with the timely gas deadline, leaving generators no time to submit nominations.
The commission said MISO failed to demonstrate that moving its posting at least 30 minutes earlier “will be unduly burdensome or disrupt its markets.”
While MISO said it was not currently experiencing the gas scheduling challenges faced by PJM and the Northeast markets, FERC said, it had “recognized that in the future it could have scheduling difficulties as coal-fired plants retire.”
“For at least part of the year, MISO, like PJM, NYISO and ISO-NE, generally schedules its day-ahead market using Eastern Prevailing Time, which means that it has more time compared to SPP and CAISO during the morning hours to complete its day-ahead schedule in time to meet the 2 p.m. ET (1 p.m. CT) revised timely nomination cycle deadline,” the commission said. “Thus, it is not apparent how requiring MISO to move its day-ahead posting deadline in advance of the timely nomination cycle places an undue burden on the staffs of MISO and its stakeholders.”
The commission acknowledged that MISO’s stakeholders generally prefer to purchase natural gas during its most liquid period (natural gas price certainty) over being able to obtain pipeline service during the timely nomination cycle (quantity certainty). It said MISO should work with stakeholders to reduce its market solve times further “to allow market participants to submit bids reflecting increased fuel price certainty.”
MISO has 30 days to submit a new compliance filing.
SPP Change Approved
FERC, meanwhile, accepted Tariff revisions SPP submitted in August that moved the deadline for day-ahead market offers up 90 minutes to 9:30 a.m. CT (ER15-2377).
The RTO will now post day-ahead results at 2 p.m. CT, up from 4 p.m., and shorten the reoffer period to 45 minutes, with reliability unit commitment (RUC) offers due at 2:45 p.m. CT and results posted by 5:15 p.m. (See “Board Approves Gas-Electric Timeline Change” in SPP BoD/Members Committee Briefs.)
FERC said SPP had “identified characteristics on its system that justify its proposal not to publish its day-ahead market results prior to the timely nomination cycle,” noting its low risk of natural gas pipeline constraints and the impact changes would have on weather forecasting for its “extensive wind resources.”
The commission ordered SPP to submit an annual informational report for the next three years on its efforts to further align its gas and electric scheduling practices. SPP staff have said they can implement the changes — which will require new software — by next fall. The work is being done in conjunction with an enhanced combined-cycle project, at an estimated combined cost of $7.7 million. (See “Enhanced Combined-Cycle Project Moves Forward” in Board of Directors/Members Committee Briefs.)
No Change for CAISO
The commission also said CAISO had shown good cause why its existing day-ahead practices should not be changed (EL14-22).
CAISO’s July compliance filing said its load-serving entities feared less accurate supply forecasts with an earlier start to the day-ahead market. FERC agreed, saying “moving the close of the day-ahead market earlier could reduce the accuracy of demand, hydroelectric supply and variable energy resource output forecasts.”
The ISO’s day-ahead market closes at 10 a.m. PT and market results are published at 1 p.m. PT.
As with SPP, the commission ordered annual informational reports on CAISO’s efforts to improve coordination of gas and electric schedules.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last week sided with FERC in the latest chapter of the long-running legal dispute over the California-West Coast energy crisis of 2000-2001.
A three-judge panel declined to overturn FERC’s decision to apply the Mobile-Sierra doctrine — which presumes that the rate set in a freely negotiated wholesale-energy contract is just and reasonable — in determining whether Pacific Northwest power buyers are entitled to refunds.
The judges also dismissed a challenge to the scope of evidence FERC considered in the Mobile-Sierra review, saying the issue was not ripe for its review.
California Deregulation
The case before the 9th Circuit stems from the turmoil that followed California’s deregulation of the electricity market in the mid-1990s, which resulted in skyrocketing spot prices in California and the Pacific Northwest, largely driven by market manipulation by Enron and other power marketers.
The petitioners, which include the city of Seattle, challenged several FERC orders issued following the 9th Circuit’s 2007 remand of the Port of Seattle case. In that case, the court reviewed challenges to FERC’s denial of refunds to wholesale buyers that purchased power in the Pacific Northwest spot market at unusually high prices.
The court ruled that FERC’s failure to consider evidence of market manipulation was arbitrary and capricious. FERC had to “consider the possibility that the Pacific Northwest spot market was not … functional and competitive,” the court ruled.
FERC was ordered to examine evidence of market manipulation “in detail and account for it in any future orders regarding the award or denial of refunds in the Pacific Northwest proceeding.”
In response, FERC said it would invoke the Mobile-Sierra doctrine, meaning the presumption that the contracts were just and reasonable could be overcome only if specific criteria were met, such as “where it can be shown that one party to a contract engaged in such extensive unlawful market manipulation as to alter the playing field for contract negotiations.”
FERC’s invocation of the Mobile-Sierra presumption meant electricity buyers would need to “demonstrate that a particular seller engaged in unlawful market activity in the spot market and that such unlawful activity directly affected the particular contract or contracts to which the seller was a party.”
FERC said it would not consider “general allegations of market dysfunction” because the Pacific Northwest spot market operated solely through bilateral contracts, unlike the California spot market, which used a central clearing price and a centralized power exchange.
In last week’s order, the court rejected FERC’s contention that it lacked jurisdiction to review the commission’s application of Mobile-Sierra. But it deferred to what it called “FERC’s reasonable determination” that Mobile-Sierra applies to short-term sales.
“The mere short-term nature of these spot sale contracts does not render FERC’s application of the Mobile-Sierra doctrine unreasonable,” the court said. “Although long-term contracts may play a special role in stabilizing the energy market … the Supreme Court has drawn the rule so that the presumption may be invoked with regard to any contracted for rate.”
Evidentiary Challenges not Ripe
The court said, however, that it lacked jurisdiction to rule on the petitioners’ challenges to restrictions that FERC imposed on the evidentiary proceeding. The petitioners said they should be permitted to introduce evidence of reporting violations, violations of obligations under the Uniform Commercial Code and state contract law, and violations by sellers that were not parties to the challenged contracts.
The court said the evidentiary orders are preliminary and lack the “definitive substantive impact” required for the court to assert jurisdiction.
It noted that “FERC has already shifted course on the ‘shape’ of the proceeding in a way that suggests some elements of its orders may not be sufficiently final for review. … Significantly, it appears that despite arguments raised by the petitioners, at least some evidence of bad faith may have been admitted in the [evidentiary] proceeding.”
The court said FERC’s final order resulting from the remand hearing will be reviewable and will allow a “more effective review of the evidentiary decisions since the court will be able to review all of the evidence taken together.”
WESTBOROUGH, Mass. — Increasing the export limits at a substation in eastern Maine’s wind country could save millions in power costs and reduce emissions, according to a draft report presented to the ISO-NE Planning Advisory Committee last week.
The study was requested by SunEdison, owner of two wind farms totaling 147 MW, Stetson and Rollins, that are served by the Keene Road substation.
The area around the substation has a peak load of 38 MW, which has dropped in recent years because of the closure of nearby paper mills.
The study found that increasing the export limit from the current 175 MW to 225 MW could save $1.4 million to $5.7 million in production costs annually by allowing additional wind development in the area and displacing more expensive hydropower. The savings are based on production costs of $0/MWh for wind, $5/MWh for hydro and $10/MWh for thermal energy imported from New Brunswick.
CO2 emissions reductions could range as high as 35 kilotons with the displacement of fossil fuel-fired generation, the draft says.
“The transmission investment could be worthwhile then, as these market efficiencies could be met,” said John Keene, senior counsel at SunEdison.
ISO-NE spokeswoman Marcia Blomberg said the analysis was an economic study of hypothetical system changes. The RTO has not developed cost estimates for the transmission upgrades that would be required to increase the export limits, she said.
Transmission Assumptions
ISO-NE is proposing changes in the way it makes transmission planning assumptions to reduce subjectivity and better reflect the likelihood of transmission constraints and generator outages.
In a presentation to the PAC, ISO-NE identified potential changes, noting that the current base case assumption that two generators are out of service “may be too pessimistic in some cases, too optimistic in others.”
The proposed changes are in response to a 2013 problem statement by the New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE), which said the current planning procedure allowed too much subjectivity in base case development.
“The degree of latitude in the current transmission planning procedure can create inconsistency within the region and between the development plans of various transmission owners,” NESCOE said.
The group proposed the use of statistical parameters to narrow the range of assumptions, which it said could increase the uniformity of transmission planning analyses among utilities and expedite state siting proceedings.
ISO-NE proposes using cumulative probability — the aggregation of the probabilities of specific conditions — to determine a “region of reasonable test conditions.”
Under current practice, disturbances are typically studied at peak load levels in steady-state analysis, which usually results in more pronounced thermal and voltage responses. The RTO uses 100% of the projected 90/10 summer peak load for the New England Control Area.
Going forward, the RTO proposes identifying the load and key resources that can stress transmission constraints and determine the likelihood of exceeding various combinations of load and unavailable generation. “This is similar to the installed capacity requirement, but not exactly the same way load is treated,” said Richard Kowalski, technical director of system planning for ISO-NE.
The RTO said its next steps include identifying the most appropriate weeks of the year and hours of the day to use in setting study periods and how to best model intermittent and distributed resources.
PJM said Thursday it will weigh in on the controversial power purchase agreements American Electric Power and FirstEnergy negotiated with the staff of Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
General Counsel Vince Duane told the Markets and Reliability Committee that PJM will analyze how the PPAs — which essentially re-regulate 6,300 MW of generation — will affect the region’s wholesale electricity market.
Duane said the analysis will be released by spring. “Our hope is that this analysis can help to inform the public debate so that regulators and policymakers understand fully any trade-offs that may arise through the policies they may be considering.”
It’s unclear whether PJM’s report will come in time to influence the Ohio commission’s rulings on whether to accept the settlements. A PUCO administrative judge has ordered hearings on the FirstEnergy settlement beginning Jan. 14. The judge ruled that the settlement raised new issues not covered during a seven-week trial this fall.
The companies have said they expect PUCO to rule in early 2016.
AEP Ohio announced the eight-year power purchase agreement on Dec. 14. FirstEnergy announced a similar eight-year PPA on Dec. 1.
“Our job is not to make policy decisions — or to try to prevent lawmakers and regulators from making choices that advance valid state and local interests, even where such choices might complicate PJM’s functions,” Duane said, reading a statement. “It is our job, however, to express our views on regional reliability and the performance of the wholesale electricity markets in assuring that objective in the least-cost manner. This responsibility includes assessing the potential for state policies to negatively impact this objective and informing policymakers of the trade-offs that can arise from their policy objectives.
“The record in Ohio shows that PJM’s markets have, since their inception, succeeded in providing reliable, competitively priced wholesale electricity. Our markets and regional transmission expansion planning process will ensure that wholesale electricity remains reliable and competitively priced in Ohio,” Duane said.
PJM spokesman Ray Dotter said Tuesday that the analysis will be a “general look at the performance and value of markets” and “not be specifically about Ohio.”
Nevertheless, Duane’s comments appeared to rebut the arguments AEP and FirstEnergy have presented to Ohio regulators — that the PPAs were needed to protect ratepayers from volatile natural gas prices and the reliability risks of plant retirements. Wall Street sees the PPAs as a way to prop up the finances of the companies’ aging, uneconomic generators.
Impact on Customers
AEP’s deal provides guaranteed income for the output of the company’s 2,671-MW ownership share of nine plants, as well as its 423-MW contractual share of Ohio Valley Electric Corp.’s (OVEC) generating fleet, until May 2024.
AEP said the agreement would raise a typical residential customer’s bill by 62 cents per month. but save consumers $721 million over its eight-year life.
Opponents say AEP’s projections assume an unlikely increase in natural gas costs in the later years. The Ohio Consumers’ Counsel has predicted that the deal would cost consumers an extra $2 billion.
Dynegy is among the members of the newly formed opposition coalition The Alliance for Energy Choice, which enlisted Todd Snitchler, PUCO chairman from 2011 to 2013, to represent their cause.
“I see this as a clear retreat from competitive markets, and it’s an attempt to re-regulate without changing the law, and I don’t think the commission has the power to do that,” Snitchler told The Columbus Dispatch.
Environmental Impacts
AEP won the support of the Sierra Club — which rejected the FirstEnergy settlement — with a promise to double the state’s wind generation and nearly quintuple its solar capacity. AEP’s agreement also includes a promise to retire or convert some of its coal-fired generators to natural gas. (See AEP Ohio Reaches PPA Settlement with PUCO Staff, Sierra Club.)
While the Sierra Club agreed to support the deal, other environmental groups were not swayed by the utility’s promises.
“This shortsighted settlement is a raw deal for people and their health. It guarantees higher energy bills for families and small businesses, big profits for AEP, and at least eight more years of asthma-inducing, climate-warming, dirty energy for all,” the Ohio Environmental Council said.
Dick Munson, director of Midwest Clean Energy for the Environmental Defense Fund, said in a statement: “AEP and its allies will tout the utility’s commitment to close coal plants 15 years from now with this proposed subsidy, even though economics would force its aging, inefficient coal plants to close much sooner. Ohio regulators should foster a fair energy marketplace and reject AEP’s bailout.”
A spokesman for the Environmental Law and Policy Center said that group also opposes the settlement, but provided no details.
‘Thumbing of the Nose’
Republican state Sen. Bill Seitz, who chairs the Senate Public Utilities Committee, was also upset by the deal, saying it is contrary to last year’s passage of SB 310, which repealed the mandate that utilities purchase half of their renewable energy from sources within Ohio.
“The settlement’s requirement for 900 MW of in-state renewables … is a direct thumbing of the nose to a legislative decision, and things will not go well for PUCO if they continue to defy the will of the General Assembly,” he said.
The deal, he said, “unfairly saddles all ratepayers (whether served by AEP or not) with the additional cost of the renewable energy, in addition to making the [competitive retail electric service] providers less able to compete because their customers will be paying for what may be poor choices and bad, costly deals made by AEP.”
The proposed settlement would require Ohio Power, AEP’s regulated distribution company, to buy the output of its parent’s plants.
FirstEnergy’s proposed deal would have its regulated utilities, Ohio Edison, The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. and Toledo Edison, purchase 3,244 MW of power from generation owned by its unregulated FirstEnergy Solutions unit: the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station in Oak Harbor, the W.H. Sammis Plant in Stratton and a portion of the output of OVEC units in Gallipolis and Madison, Ind.
In both cases, the PPAs are structured to guarantee the profitability of the generating units, which have been losing in the wholesale market to cheaper, newer natural gas plants.
Plant Sales an Option
AEP acknowledged in January that it was seeking a buyer for its merchant units in Ohio and Indiana, including the units covered by the PPA. The settlement does not prevent AEP from selling the plants, but does require any buyer to honor the PPA’s terms.
“Nothing in this stipulation limits the right of AEP Ohio or its affiliates to sell any PPA unit, provided that any such sale would be made subject to the commitments made in this stipulation,” according to the settlement.
“We have the right to sell those plants, but at this time we have no plans to do so,” AEP Ohio spokeswoman Terri Flora said Thursday.
The settlement indicated AEP is seeking to sell its 423-MW share in the OVEC plants, however.
“AEP Ohio will continue reasonable efforts to explore divestiture of the OVEC assets, but the signatory parties agree that ongoing inclusion of the OVEC PPA in the PPA rider is not dependent upon a successful divestiture of the OVEC asset,” it says.
ALBANY, N.Y. — New York regulators on Thursday declared a public policy need for long-proposed transmission upgrades and recommended finalists to make competitive bids to NYISO (13-T-0454).
The New York Public Service Commission advanced its AC Transmission proceeding by adopting staff recommendations to select two main projects from 22 proposals for new 345-kV transmission crossing the Central East and UPNY/SENY interfaces: the upgrade of the 91-mile, double-circuit 230-kV Edic-New Scotland-Rotterdam line to 345 kV and the upgrade of the 51-mile, double-circuit 115-kV Knickerbocker-Pleasant Valley line to a 115/345-kV double circuit. (See NYPSC Staff Recommends $1.2B in Transmission Projects.)
NYISO will review transmission and other solutions to address the public policy need identified by the commission, which said persistent transmission congestion causes higher prices and raised reliability concerns.
The declaration will allow the winning developers to obtain cost recovery from the beneficiaries of the upgrades under NYISO’s Tariff. FERC Order 1000 requires transmission providers to consider transmission needs driven by public policy requirements established by state or federal laws or regulations.
The commission asked NextEra Energy Transmission New York, North America Transmission and a coalition of utilities known as the New York Transmission Owners to submit their projects for consideration by the ISO.
The commission’s vote was a victory for Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who proposed an “Energy Highway” to eliminate bottlenecks preventing the delivery of upstate power to load in and around New York City.
Although the ISO will consider non-transmission alternatives, the commission rejected the arguments of the Hudson Valley Smart Energy Coalition and others who insist system reliability could be maintained by increased energy efficiency if even a small percentage of proposed downstate power plants are built.
“There’s no question we need transmission to move power from upstate to downstate, just to maintain basic reliability,” commission Chair Audrey Zibelman said at the meeting.
Later, she said the projects would benefit older, struggling upstate plants. “It makes no economic sense to have plants sit idle when we could have them operating to serve needs downstate,” she said.
Using Existing Rights of Way
The selected projects will be built within existing transmission corridors, with new substations at several points. The PSC said the lines were reaching the end of their useful lives and would need to be replaced in any case.
The upgraded lines will use towers of up to 105 feet to meet NERC standards. The current, lower voltage lines are generally 80 to 85 feet high.
The projects have an estimated cost of $1.2 billion. Officials said a “conservative” cost-benefit analysis by The Brattle Group showed at least $1.20 in benefits for every $1 spent.
“There’s some analysis that the savings from the recommendations could reach $2,” Zibelman said. The savings primarily come from the reduction in congestion charges on those parts of the New York system that are projected to hit $473 million in 2019, rising to $562 million in 2024, without the upgrades. The gap could be even higher if natural gas prices rise from their current low levels.
Raj Addepalli, managing director of utility rates and service for the PSC, presented what he called an “optimistic” timeline under which NYISO could complete its solicitation and analysis of proposals by the second quarter of 2016.
The commission will have to approve the ISO’s recommendations and grant siting certificates for the selected projects. Final commission approval could come in 2017, followed by a two- to three-year construction schedule, with an in-service date of 2019.
NYISO CEO Bradley Jones issued a statement saying the move is an important step in remedying the state’s aging infrastructure. “The NYISO stands ready to solicit projects and will conduct the planning studies necessary to select the most efficient and cost-effective projects that will meet the public policy needs identified by the commission,” he said.
Lifeline for Nukes?
After the meeting, Linda DeStefano of Syracuse, representing the Alliance for a Green Economy, objected that the transmission projects could provide a lifeline to nuclear plants on Lake Ontario. “We think that Gov. Cuomo is very concerned about Indian Point, but we wanted to make the point that we think that the nuclear plants near us are also very old and not safe,” she said.
Phil Wilcox, who observed the meeting on behalf of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 97, based in Buffalo, had a different take. “This will give [the nuclear plants] a signal that they may have a future,” he said. Unions have been vocal in support of keeping struggling nuclear plants operating.
No Conflict with REV
The commissioners rejected complaints that the projects would conflict with the state’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative, a plan to increase the use of distributed and renewable energy.
“The future envisioned by REV is that distributed energy resources deployed locally will help customers become efficient and dynamic electric users. These new customer resources will also be able to be used to more effectively balance increased investments in wind and solar resources that are deployed remotely,” the commission said.
“Additionally, the commission recognizes that large scale central generation, including our safe upstate nuclear facilities that are in their licensed periods, can continue to be operated and new investments can be made to compliment [sic] the distributed resources. Stated another way, while there is no doubt that we can all become better environmental and economic stewards by becoming more efficient energy consumers and using energy more efficiently, the commission also recognizes that in its entirety the optimal system design will be met by a balance of central station and distributed resources and that this balance will be found by markets that accurately value resources and public policies that stress the importance of building an electric system that reduces waste and decreases rather than increases reliance on fossil fuels.”
Projects Selected
Below is a more detailed description of the projects identified by the New York Public Service Commission as the transmission needs driven by public policy requirements:
Segment A: Construction of a new 345-kV line from Edic or Marcy to New Scotland; construction of two new 345-kV lines or two new 230-kV lines from Princetown to Rotterdam and decommissioning of two 230-kV lines from Edic to Rotterdam.
Segment B: A new double circuit 345 kV/115-kV line from Knickerbocker to Churchtown; a new double circuit 345-kV/115-kV line or triple circuit 345-kV/115-kV/115-kV line from Churchtown to Pleasant Valley; decommissioning of a double circuit 115-kV line from Knickerbocker to Churchtown; decommissioning of one or two double-circuit 115-kV lines from Knickerbocker to Pleasant Valley. The commission ordered Orange and Rockland Utilities, the owner of the Shoemaker-Sugarloaf facilities, and Central Hudson Gas & Electric, the owner of the Rock Tavern substation, to cooperate with the developer selected for Segment B.
Upgrades to the Rock Tavern substation: New line traps, relays and other upgrades needed to accommodate higher line currents resulting from the new Edic/Marcy-New Scotland, Princetown-Rotterdam and Knickerbocker-Pleasant Valley lines.
Shoemaker to Sugarloaf: A new double circuit 138-kV line from Shoemaker to Sugarloaf; decommissioning of a double circuit 69-kV line from Shoemaker to Sugarloaf.
All six members of the state’s congressional delegation met on Dec. 10 with U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz to press for answers about the proposed Plains & Eastern Clean Line transmission project, which would deliver wind energy from the Oklahoma panhandle to Arkansas and Tennessee.
Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton earlier this month placed a hold on a presidential nominee for a position at the Energy Department, saying they wanted more thorough answers to their questions about the 700-mile HVDC transmission line. A spokesman for Boozman said Thursday that the Republican senators were unsatisfied with Moniz’s answers and were not ready to lift the stay.
“We continue to have serious concerns that this project erodes the rights of local communities and the state of Arkansas to have a seat at the table in the decision-making process,” the senators said in a statement.
The developers of a proposed 80-MW wind farm haven’t taken some fundamental steps to connect to the region’s grid, utility representatives said last week.
Dragonfly Industries International, which for the past year has pushed to build a wind power facility in Elm Springs, has had only fleeting discussions with the nearest electric utilities that are potential buyers of the power, Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corp. and Southwestern Electric Power Co. “We talked to them a few times, and what we have done primarily is direct them to the Southwest Power Pool,” said SWEPCO’s Peter Main.
But Dragonfly also has not applied to SPP, an essential step to make sure the region’s grid can accept whatever power the wind plant might generate.
Peoples Gas Files New, Lower Estimate on Pipe Replacement
Peoples Gas has reduced the estimated price of its proposed Chicago gas main replacement project in a new filing with the Commerce Commission that pegs the cost at $6.8 billion instead of the $8 billion it earlier reported. The new price, however, is still more than double the original $2.6 billion.
The utility, which said the lower price was possible because of cost controls, is the target of an ICC investigation to determine whether the utility’s owners concealed the project’s escalating price tag before regulators approved the recent merger between Wisconsin Energy Corp. and Integrys Energy Services, the parent company of Peoples Gas.
The new estimate failed to win over Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who has threatened an investigation as well. “Peoples’ report is simply more of the same,” she said. “It does not address concerns we and the independent auditor raised. Instead of a complete overhaul of the program, they’ve decided to forge ahead with little regard for the consumers who are on the hook for this massive cost overrun.”
The Commerce Commission last week approved new delivery rates for Ameren’s electric and gas customers. A typical monthly electric bill will increase in January by $2 to $7, while gas bills will increase $2 to $6.
The revenue will help pay for Ameren’s modernization program. The utility expects to spend $67 million on natural gas line infrastructure and $100 million on its electrical grid next year.
The commission also approved a $67 million rate decrease for ComEd that reflects efficiencies from ComEd’s smart grid rollout. That will translate to about $1 in monthly savings on the average residential bill beginning next month.
Duke Energy Indiana has revised its seven-year $1.83 billion plan to revamp the state’s aging electric grid, hoping to avoid a full-blown rate proceeding. Duke’s 800,000-plus electricity customers in the state are expected to pay about 6% more from 2017 to 2022 to pay for the upgrades.
The Utility Regulatory Commission forced the utility to revise its plan after a court rejected the commission’s approval of an infrastructure improvement plan for Northern Indiana Public Service Co. Utilities in the state are able to recover infrastructure investments using a rate mechanism called a tracker, avoiding a costly rate-increase proceeding. The court’s ruling has forced regulators to review its previous approvals of the tracker surcharge.
Duke’s modernization proposal includes features such as energy-efficient transmission lines, smart meters and a “self-healing” smart grid system that can reroute power during storm outages. Duke has estimated that its grid modernization will create or sustain more than 5,000 jobs. The IURC is expected to make a decision by mid-2016.
Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican, has named a veteran coal-mining executive as the state’s secretary of energy and environment.
Charles G. Snavely, a 35-year industry veteran who most recently was president of eastern U.S. operations for Arch Coal, holds a mining engineering degree from Virginia Tech.
“Charles understands the balance we must maintain between the commonwealth’s need for low-cost, reliable energy and the need for clean water and air for all Kentuckians,” Bevin said.
Portland is considering building a solar energy farm at a capped landfill and installing solar panels on several municipal buildings.
The move would follow in the footsteps of neighboring South Portland, and it would help Mayor Ethan Strimling fulfill a campaign promise to procure 25% of the city’s power from renewable sources in a decade.
A city-backed proposal by ReVision Energy, a New England solar contractor, would install 2,916 solar modules at the city’s old Ocean Avenue landfill and mount photovoltaic panels on the roofs of schools, airport and library facilities.
Three Democratic legislators are proposing to increase the amount of electricity that state utilities must obtain from renewable resources and to spend $40 million on green job training.
The legislation would set a renewable portfolio requirement of 25% by 2020. The current goal is 20% by 2022.
Supporters say the moves would create 2,000 jobs and reduce carbon emissions by the equivalent of 563,000 cars per year at a small cost to ratepayers.
Net-Metering Cap Inaction Threatens Solar Installations
Solar advocates say the legislature’s failure to raise net-metering caps could stymie several Berkshire solar projects. State Sen. Benjamin Downing, a Democrat, holds out hope that a compromise can be still be reached that would allow solar developers to take advantage of federal tax incentives that expire at the end of 2016.
Customers who qualify for net-metering are currently capped at 4% of peak electrical usage for private installations or 5% for public installations. The caps have been met in towns served by National Grid, but not in towns served by Eversource Energy.
Solar supporters say that several projects are unable to move forward without a guarantee they will be net-metered, meaning they will be paid the full retail price for any power they send out to the grid. In order to take advantage of federal tax credits, projects have to be fully operational before Jan. 1, 2017.
It is becoming more expensive and complicated to get new energy projects approved in the state, business leaders lamented at the 2015 New Hampshire Energy Symposium, hosted by the New Hampshire Business and Industry Association.
“Applicants are not only facing additional administrative and legal hurdles, but significant financial hurdles to do business in New Hampshire as an energy provider,” said Susan Geiger, an energy lawyer with the Concord firm Orr and Reno.
The legislature has devised new rules for the Site Evaluation Committee to evaluate as it considers an unprecedented push for new pipeline and power transmission projects. The nine-member SEC usually has the final say on such projects, even if they receive the necessary federal permits.
Judge Hears Arguments in Farmington-Bloomfield Dispute
A district court judge is considering a motion to dismiss a City of Bloomfield lawsuit alleging breach of contract in connection to the municipality’s attempt to take over part of the electric system that is owned and operated by a neighboring municipality, the City of Farmington.
Bloomfield argues that under a 1960 agreement, in which Farmington acquired its electric system from a private owner, Bloomfield also had the rights to acquire the power system within its city limits.
At a hearing, a Farmington attorney argued that Bloomfield would have had the rights to infrastructure within its boundaries if it had sought to acquire the utility within 14 years of the agreement. But she said Bloomfield’s rights expired in 1974 under the statute of limitations.
New York State Electric and Gas and Rochester Gas & Electric began drone inspections of 36 NYSEG substations in an effort to evaluate the effectiveness of the remote-controlled aircraft.
The utilities, both owned by Iberdrola USA, had previously used helicopters for the inspections. The evaluation of the drone experience is expected to be complete in the coming weeks.
The drones are being flown only in the immediate vicinity of the NYSEG substations and at a maximum altitude of 300 feet. The contractor has also inspected static wires at a substation owned by Central Maine Power, another Iberdrola subsidiary.
The state’s Green Bank has joined a new international network of public entities to facilitate financing for clean energy initiatives.
The Green Bank Network, an alliance of six of the new public clean energy banks, is aimed at accelerating the deployment of more than $40 billion into clean energy projects around the world, according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Initial funding is provided by the ClimateWorks Foundation, whose founders include the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, KR Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Oak Foundation and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
The state’s bank, which was created as part of the Reforming the Energy Vision plan, will be joined in the network by the UK Green Investment Bank, the Connecticut Green Bank, the Green Fund of Japan, Malaysian Green Technology Corp. and Clean Energy Finance Corp. of Australia. The banks appointed the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Coalition for Green Capital to create the network.
NYISO has enhanced its website to offer more user-friendly information for consumers as well as detailed information about the state’s wholesale electricity markets and high-voltage electric grid.
New sections of the website include value metrics that provide ongoing measurements of NYISO’s performance relating to reliability, markets, planning, authoritative information, financial responsibility and customer satisfaction.
The site includes a new real-time view of the fuel mix being used to generate electricity in New York as well as real-time data on the amount of electricity being used by consumers, dynamic price data and information on power flows to and from the grid.
Industrial Customers to Get Power Bill Price Break
The Utilities Commission has approved a special electric discount for industrial power users aimed at stemming the flow of jobs from the state.
The qualifications for companies to apply for the corporate subsidy, known as a “job retention tariff,” won’t be spelled out until Duke Energy proposes a discounted rate and related details, possibly next year. Such a proposal would need to be approved by the commission.
The subsidy is something Duke has been seeking for favored customers for at least four years. For a utility company, the loss of an industrial customer could be equivalent to disconnecting several large neighborhoods and shopping areas.
About 50 people gathered recently in Schefield to argue against the proposed 87-turbine Brady Wind Energy Center in southern Stark County.
“I think we need to let the Stark County commissioners know that there’s a lot more people out there that are against the wind farm than people who are for, or who are going to benefit from it,” said Tom Reichert, who lives south of Dickinson. He said his view will be obstructed if the project is built.
NextEra Energy Resources, which operates six wind farms in the state, did not have a representative at the Dec. 5 meeting. The second phase of its Brady project could include up to 60 turbines.
Suit: Chesapeake Energy Engaged in Deceptive Business Practices
The attorney general is suing Chesapeake Energy following an investigation into the company’s dealings with landowners to secure oil and gas leases.
“These alleged deceptive business practices occurred as part of a rush to lock up acreage in the Marcellus Shale region,” said Attorney General Kathleen Kane.
The suit asks for restitution and civil penalties under the Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law.
The Public Utilities Commission has approved a construction permit for the Dakota Access oil pipeline project. The proposed 1,134-mile pipeline would deliver Bakken crude from North Dakota to Illinois. The $3.8 billion project awaits approval from North Dakota, Iowa and Illinois.
The 2-1 vote came with a list of 49 conditions aimed at protecting landowner rights.
“If this pipeline is constructed, it is imperative and non-negotiable that construction and reclamation be conducted in a manner that allows farmers and ranchers impacted by the pipeline to very quickly get back to their business of producing food for the world in a manner uninhibited by the pipeline,” said PUC Chairman Chris Nelson, who added the conditions before the vote.
Chattanooga Wastewater Resources officials want to build a facility to generate electricity from the 300,000 cubic feet of methane produced each day by a sewage treatment plant.
The city’s Department of Public Works says it will apply for a Tennessee Valley Authority grant to cover more than half the cost of the $6.1 million project, which would burn the methane to fuel a steam turbine.
The grant would come from a 2011 settlement between the TVA and EPA committing the authority to reduce pollution in its service area.