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November 17, 2024

PJM Prepared for Winter Load, Mild Temps Expected

PJM expects 177,628 MW of generation this winter, a 35% margin over the projected peak demand of 131,720 MW, the RTO said Thursday.

The peak load for the 2014-15 season was a record 143,295 MW, set in February. Temperatures are forecasted to be milder this year.

winter
Generator outage rates, which exceeded 20% in 2014, were generally less than 15% in 2015.

While last winter saw colder temperatures than the previous year, when the region was hit by a polar vortex, the RTO experienced fewer generator outages — rarely exceeding a 15% outage rate compared with rates as high as 22% in January 2014.

“PJM has taken many steps to reinforce generator readiness and to continue to improve coordination with natural gas pipelines, a key source for a large portion of the generation fleet,” said Michael Kormos, executive vice president and chief operations officer for PJM.

In preparing for the winter, PJM offered testing to generating units that had not run in the eight weeks prior to Nov. 1, repeating a program begun last year, and had generators complete a survey assessing their fuel supplies.

Also this summer, PJM signed an information-sharing agreement with nine interstate pipelines. (See PJM, Pipelines Pledge Increased Cooperation to Boost Reliability.)

About 10,000 MW of generation have retired since last winter, only about 3,000 MW of which has been replaced, Kormos told FERC in September. (See PJM to FERC: We’re Prepared for Winter.)

 — Suzanne Herel

Monitor: DR, Market Power Changes Needed

By Suzanne Herel

PJM should tighten rules on demand response and market power, the Independent Market Monitor said in its third-quarter State of the Market Report.

The report, which included eight new recommendations, concluded that the RTO’s energy, capacity and regulation markets were competitive for the first nine months of the year.

“The markets are working pretty well,” Monitor Joe Bowring said in an interview. But, he said, “there is still progress to be made in some of the details of the capacity market rules, and we’re concerned about some of the proposed changes to market rules, particularly the hourly offer flexibility.”

The study, released Thursday, found that energy market prices dropped by one-third compared with the same period last year, due to lower fuel prices and decreased demand. The load-weighted average real-time locational marginal price was $38.94/MWh compared with $58.60/MWh in 2014.

pjmUplift decreased 68% in the first nine months over a year ago, from $899.1 million to $285.7 million, but Bowring said the charges remain high, in large part because of inflexible unit parameters based on rigid gas supply arrangements.

The report said that the Capacity Performance rules will address those problems in the future.

“Outages were high, performance incentives remain weak and there is no resolution of the disconnect between the incentives facing electric generating units and the incentives facing gas pipelines, which is a barrier to the construction of new pipeline capacity,” the Monitor said.

Bowring noted his particular concern over the ability of generators to place hourly instead of daily offers.

“The PJM market design incorporates a variety of rules designed to help ensure competitive outcomes,” the report said. “When basic elements of those rules are modified, e.g. the raising of the overall $1,000/MWh offer cap and the introduction of hourly offers in place of daily offers, it is essential that effective market power mitigation be maintained.

“A direct and effective substitute for the current market power mitigation rule limiting units to one offer per day would be to limit any hourly offer changes during the day to changes in the cost of fuel. The failure to maintain limits on aggregate market power will lead to the exercise of market power and the associated negative impacts on the competitiveness of PJM markets.”

The report also found that net revenue for new entrants was down for the first nine months, decreasing 13% for a combustion turbine, 18% for a combined-cycle, 53% for a nuclear plant, 20% for wind and 5% for solar.

Congestion charges dropped by 33% from $1.7 million for the first nine months of 2014 to $1.1 million this year.

The report included eight new recommendations, three listed as high priority. One concerns the energy market and two address demand response, provided that DR remains in the wholesale market following the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Electric Power Supply Association challenge. (See FERC Jurisdiction over DR in Peril as Supreme Court Splits.)

  • The rules around the three pivotal supplier test should be clarified and documented. In addition, markup should be constant across price and cost offers; there should be at least one cost-based offer using the same fuel as the available price-based offer; and the parameters of the cost-based offer should be at least as flexible as the parameters of the available price-based offer.
  • PJM should require nodal dispatch of demand resources with no advance notice required. Alternately, if nodal location is not required, subzonal dispatch of DR with no advance notice should be mandatory.
  • PJM should eliminate the measurement of DR compliance across zones within a compliance aggregation area. “The multiple zone approach is less locational than the zonal and subzonal approach and creates larger mismatches between the locational need for the resources and the actual response.”

The remaining recommendations were of medium and low priority and regarded uplift and planning, respectively.

PJM spokesman Ray Dotter had no specific comment on the recommendations, saying only that many “appear consistent with the themes of prior State of the Market reports.”

“PJM looks forward to working with the Independent Market Monitor to flesh out these new recommendations to ensure a complete understanding and to determine how they may be addressed, including through potential introduction into the stakeholder process,” he said.

Federal Briefs

The development of carbon capture and storage technology will be vital to address climate concerns, but it will require government support to make it happen, according to a report by the National Coal Council.

The report was drawn up at the request of Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, who wanted recommendations on what can be done to encourage development and use of carbon-capture technology and how to level the playing field.

The council’s report said the Clean Power Plan rules have “severely tilted the energy playing field,” and that the incentives available for carbon capture and storage are too small to encourage commercial use. “Without commercial-scale deployment, developers have no history to understand technical risks, frequency and duration of down time, and other critical factors that become known only with operation,” the report said.

More: POWER Magazine

USDA Doles out $2.3B in Loans to Rural Co-ops

USDASourceGovThe Department of Agriculture is providing nearly $2.3 billion in low-interest loans to rural electric cooperatives for infrastructure improvements.

The loans, provided through the Rural Utilities Service Electric Loan Program, will go to 77 cooperatives and smaller utilities in 31 states. USDA said the loans will help build or improve about 12,000 miles of transmission and distribution lines. They will also finance $108 million for smart grid technology improvements, $41 million for renewable energy programs and $9 million for storm damage restoration.

More: Electric Co-op Today

McCarthy Must Testify in Murray Energy Case

Gina McCarthy
Gina McCarthy

A U.S. District Court judge ruled that Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy must testify in a case pitting Murray Energy against the agency’s Clean Air Act regulations.

The coal producer’s attorneys argued that McCarthy was deeply involved in drafting the regulations, and Murray should be able to depose her about her analyses concerning possible loss of jobs caused by the regulations. EPA and the White House sought to block her appearance, saying the regulations are clear enough on their own and that McCarthy’s testimony is unnecessary.

Judge John Preston Baily of the District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia ruled that McCarthy’s testimony is material. “By statute, the administrator is responsible for conducting the evaluations in question,” Bailey wrote in his order, adding that “she has personally been involved with discussions about” the regulations.

EPA is considering an appeal.

More: The Hill

FERC Sets Tech Conference for ‘Connected Entities’ Rule

fercFERC has agreed to set up a technical conference to explore its proposed rule that would require ways to identify companies and individuals participating in wholesale energy market trades.

Several parties asked FERC for clarity about its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking issued in September that would require RTOs and ISOs to begin registering market participants through common alpha-numeric identifiers, including lists of their “connected entities” and a description of their relationships (RM15-23). The proposal would use a new system called Legal Entity Identifiers, which are already used by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission to track swaps trades. (See Are You Two Related? FERC Wants to Know.)

Several parties asked for either an extension of the Dec. 8 deadline for comments on the notice or a technical conference to clear up what they called “ambiguities.” FERC scheduled the conference for Dec. 8 and extended the comments deadline to Jan. 22.

More: National Law Review

Erosion of Solar ITC May Hit Midwest Hardest

Solar energy advocates and some legislators are warning that the upcoming reduction in the Investment Tax Credit for solar will impact customers and small businesses in the Midwest, where few state-level solar programs are in place to provide incentives in addition to the federal subsidies.

Ray Davis, president of OGW Energy Resources, an Ohio-based solar developer, said it is difficult for solar to compete without the subsidies. “As we are primarily a coal region, our grid kilowatt-hour costs are relatively low as compared to other regions,” he said. “Therefore the ITC truly is the part of the puzzle that makes solar fiscally feasible in the Midwest.”

Legislation extending the credit for wind and other renewables only — but not solar — was passed by the Senate Finance Committee earlier this year. Without an extension, the commercial tax break will decrease from 30% to 10% at the end of 2016, and residential support will be eliminated.

More: Midwest Energy News

US Coal Burn to Stay Steady Despite Retirements

EnergyInformationAdminSourceEIADespite the retirement of 23 GW of coal-burning capacity this year, American power plants will burn the same amount of coal next year. Surviving coal plants will ramp up to meet demand and burn about 773 million tons of coal in 2016, according to the Energy Information Administration.

In addition to increasing generation to fill the void left by plant closures, coal is also expected to compete strongly next year as natural gas steadily becomes more expensive, EIA said. Coal prices are expected to remain fairly steady.

“You’ve got this big wave of retirements that you don’t get for the rest of the decade,” said James Stevenson, director of North American Coal at IHS Inc. in Houston. “That means after this, coal demand is pretty stable.”

More: Bloomberg Business

Obama’s Keystone Decision Elicits Yawn from 35% of US

Although the Keystone XL issue has dominated the news media, only about a third of Americans care one way or the other about President Obama’s rejection of the pipeline that would have delivered heavy crude oil from Canada to the Gulf Coast, according to a Reuters poll.

About 35% of 920 people polled said they didn’t agree or disagree with the president’s decision. Another 27% qualified their opinions with “somewhat.” Obama rejected the proposed 1,200-mile pipeline on Nov. 6.

More: Reuters

Wellinghoff: Pipeline Purchases May not be Wise for Utilities

John Wellinghoff
John Wellinghoff

While Eversource Energy, Duke Energy and Dominion Resources are betting big on natural gas pipelines, the volatility of the gas market in light of growing renewable and battery market power could leave those investments  stranded, according to former FERC Chairman Jon Wellinghoff.

Wellinghoff told Bloomberg Business that spending billions on natural gas pipelines may look like good sense when coal plants are closing and natural gas-fired plants are sprouting. But he noted that renewable energy is growing, and battery storage technology is emerging quickly.

“These utilities are taking a risk that these will be stranded assets that ultimately their shareholders will have to pay off,” Wellinghoff said. “We will see regulators being more critical of these asset decisions as prices of renewables continue to go down.”

More: Bloomberg Business

Report: EVs Emit less Pollution over Life Cycle and Getting Cleaner

ElelctricvehiclesSourceWikiElectric vehicles generate half the emissions of gasoline-powered cars over their lifetimes, even when pollution from battery manufacturing is accounted for, according to a new study by the Union of Concerned Scientists.

The study looked at the greenhouse emissions of conventional and electric vehicles during manufacturing, operation and end of life.

While electric cars generally exceed the global warming emissions of gasoline cars in production because of their use of large lithium-ion batteries, they make up for that within 18 months of driving, according to the report.

More: Union of Concerned Scientists

NRC Increases Oversight of TVA’s Sequoyah Plant

A series of unplanned shutdowns at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Sequoyah Nuclear Power Plant near Chattanooga has spurred the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to increase its oversight of the plant.

NRC cited four outages at the plant’s Unit 1 in the past three quarters. “Overall, the Sequoyah plant is operating safely,” the commission said. “However, these shutdowns point to potential performance issues and we want to ensure that TVA addresses them appropriately.”

TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said the utility has taken steps to improve operations. “We’ve already placed initial corrective actions into place to improve overall performance,” he said. “We’ll continue to look at that. We’ll focus on trying to get Unit 1 back into regular oversight status.”

More: Chattanooga Times Free-Press

MISO Unveils CPP Study Scope, Will Deliver Preliminary Near-Term Results Next Month

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO on Thursday released the final scope of studies it will conduct through mid-2016 to help the RTO’s 13 states evaluate their compliance options under the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan.

The near-term analysis, expected to be completed by January, will look at the implications of various compliance paths. It will be based on the models used in prior analyses of the draft CPP with updates reflecting the final rule.

The mid-term analysis, expected to run through June, will use new models based on the most relevant compliance paths from the near-term study to determine likely resource buildouts and their locations under three separate futures. It will be the foundation for transmission development under the 2017 MISO Transmission Expansion Plan.

A long-term analysis, which will run through late 2018, will seek to develop transmission overlays needed to implement state compliance plans.

“MISO’s CPP study efforts over the next two [to] three years will create a bridge between the uncertainty and complexity that exists today and the modeling certainty needed for effective transmission overlay design,” the RTO wrote in its 10-page study scope.

miso

The near-term study will model six scenarios, including a business-as-usual case, compliance via coal retirements and increased gas generation, and one weighted toward energy efficiency with a wind and solar buildout. The study will apply seven mass- and rate-based compliance options, both with and without interstate trading.

Preliminary Results in December

Bakke said MISO’s research team will have preliminary near-term analysis results ready to be presented at December’s Planning Advisory Committee meeting. “We’re trying to frontline as much as we can of this study into January and February,” said Jordan Bakke, senior policy studies engineer at MISO.

At last week’s PAC meeting, stakeholders expressed concern that the study could lead to an overwhelming output of information.

“We’re not going to lead with a mountain of data. We’re going to lead with the peak of the mountain,” Bakke responded.

MISO’s analysis, Bakke said, will examine the CPP from a system perspective, purposefully omitting an individual state breakdown. Bakke also called a study on reliability impacts under the rule “premature.” Instead MISO is asking for states to reach out with their plans so the RTO can begin applying them.

“When we move into our mid-term analysis, that’s when we get more detailed. For now, these are generic assumptions,” Bakke said. He added that the mix of rate-based and mass-based compliance in the study scope will be more nuanced when states come forward with their plans.

MISO isn’t putting itself under a deadline to qualify for the CPP’s Clean Energy Incentive Program, which rewards states with emission rate credits for “early action.” MISO said the program is “complex and will be further reviewed as the study progresses.”

States that delay coming forward with a plan or extension request beyond late 2016 will have a preset federal plan imposed on them in November 2017. State requests for extensions are due next September. (See Revised Clean Power Plan Allows More Time, Sets Higher Targets.)

“In the final rule, they’re really allowing states to do a wide variety of things… You have a fair bit of options in what your plan will look like,” said Mary Waight, one of MISO’s policy studies engineers, during a CPP informational workshop on Nov. 6.

McCarthy Defends CPP, Asks for Continued Engagement

By Tom Kleckner

AUSTIN, Texas — Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy ventured into somewhat unfriendly territory last week at the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners’ annual meeting to defend the Clean Power Plan and urge continued dialogue.

Calling the CPP the “biggest single step America has taken to deal with climate change and carbon pollution,” McCarthy told her keynote audience she fully expects the plan to be implemented.

McCarthy
McCarthy

“We know this rule will stand the test of time because it’s grounded in facts and science and firmly rooted in the Clean Air Act,” she said. “We’re confident we’ll withstand the litigation.”

More than two dozen states filed challenges in federal court after EPA’s Oct. 23 publication of the final rule in the Federal Register. (See Legal Debate over Clean Power Plan Takes Center Stage.)

“If you think we go into a corner when someone sues us, that’s not how we do it,” said McCarthy, her thick Boston accent making “corner” sound like “conner.”

“We will be sitting down with the states and the regions, and we’ll be working together. We’ll be answering questions the best we can. Every state knows that when they work with us to develop a state plan, we’ll come up with a plan that best meets their needs … while litigation continues elsewhere.”

EPA’s final rule calls for reducing power plant carbon dioxide emissions by 32% from 2005 levels by 2030. It calculates individual state targets ranging from a 7% reduction for Connecticut to a 47% cut for Montana. States would have to comply with interim goals between 2022 and 2030, but they have the option of asking for a two-year extension by Sept. 6, 2016.

Encouraging Extensions

McCarthy said the extension option was why the first step was specifically designed not to be a “heavy lift.”

“We are looking for states requesting extensions,” she said. “That lets us know which states are actively working this issue and what their timelines are. We’re confident the states have the flexibility and options to meet their goals. While we needed to recognize state targets, we also needed to recognize that electrons flow out of those state boundaries all the time.”

McCarthy encouraged state officials to continue working with EPA. “By doing that,” she said, “we will have done great justice to this rule and aligned our common missions going forward.

“Your part, in my opinion, remains an essential part of our success: to ensure the plan maintains reliability, to ensure our consumers are well served and to ensure energy remains affordable.”

Pushback

When the floor was opened to questions, McCarthy received pushback from several NARUC members.

Julie Fedorchak, chair of the North Dakota Public Service Commission, pointedly said the final rule was “anything but thoughtful,” noting her state’s emissions target went from an 11% reduction to a 45% reduction in the final plan.

McCarthy agreed North Dakota’s targets are “challenging” but said the final plan gives states a wider range of compliance options, such as regional trading programs.

“We’ve opened tremendous opportunities for flexibilities,” she said. “We hope that those flexibilities make this easier.”

Ryan Sitton, a first-term commissioner on the Railroad Commission of Texas, asked McCarthy what she thought was Congress’ role.

“It’s two-fold,” she responded, first pointing to the Clean Air Act and the authority it gave to EPA to regulate pollution. Secondly, McCarthy said, “Congress has an ability to provide solutions to climate change today, if they choose to do that.

“The president has made it clear if Congress wants to provide more flexibility than we’re working under [now], he would welcome that. Right now, that doesn’t seem to be where we’re at.”

Leakage

McCarthy and Joe Goffman, EPA’s associate assistant administrator and general counsel, nearly made it out of town without discussing “leakage,” in which states might use new gas plants to compensate for retired older plants without achieving the state’s emission reductions.

The concern for states is that stricter requirements for new plants may not allow them to build the newer plants. States that do build the new plants can set aside emissions allowances (for renewable energy and gas plants), but the plants would not be eligible for trading programs.

Appearing on a panel discussing multi-state solutions to the CPP, Goffman thanked the moderator and the audience for not asking about leakage before he left the stage early.

McCarthy was asked about leakage after her keynote address and jokingly responded, “Next question.”

Turning serious, she then said, “The short answer is my eyes glaze over when people start talking about leakage.”

McCarthy said she believes it’s important to “maintain the integrity of the reductions so they’re achievable. We don’t want to prejudge how it’s handled. We’re looking for continued engagement on this, so unfortunately, I don’t have a silver bullet on how this might be resolved.”

Michael Nasi, a partner with Jackson Walker, said the CPP incents the construction of combined-cycle gas turbines. However, as he pointed out, new fossil generation would “not be consistent” with the federal administration’s carbon-reduction goals.

“What’s to keep them from coming back to undercut [new-emissions standards]?” he asked. “How do you integrate new [intermittent] renewables when you need gas to balance them out?”

Mass-Based vs. Rate-Based

Goffman did contribute to his panel discussion on multi-state options, saying that whether to take a rate-based approach or a mass-based approach won’t be the first question asked.

“Don’t devise cures that induce disease,” he said. “Making the system work will take priority.”

A mass-based approach expresses the state’s goal as the maximum number of tons of CO2 that can be emitted during a specific time period. The rate-based approach sets the state goal based on pounds of CO2 per megawatt-hour of generation from covered plants. The mass-based approach limits total emissions.

The panel generally agreed a mass-based approach with a trading program offers more benefits than a rate-based approach. The latter can be more complex, and thus more expensive.

“It behooves all state interests, your regulators’ office and your governor’s office, to figure out what works best for your state,” said Doug Scott, vice president of strategic initiatives with the Great Plains Institute.

“The EPA did a remarkable job putting this together,” said Latham & Watkins’ Bob Wyman. “They didn’t take a position on which one they preferred.”

That said, Latham did note, “Rate-based looks backwards, it creates more transaction costs … in every other way, it’s less effective.”

Ameren Earnings up on Warm Weather

Ameren reported third-quarter profits of $343 million ($1.41/share), a 17% increase over the St. Louis-based utility’s $293 million ($1.20/share) for the same period last year.

AmerenAmeren said warmer summer weather and a seasonal rate redesign helped boost revenue 9.8% to $1.83 billion. As a result, the company adjusted its guidance range to $2.58 to $2.68/share from $2.48 to $2.68, assuming normal temperatures for the remainder of the year. For the first nine months of 2015, Ameren reported net income of $601 million ($2.47/share), representing a $63 million year-over-year increase.

Ameren has made $886 million in capital expenditures in Ameren Illinois and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois in the first three quarters, a 17% increase over the same period in 2014. Capital spending for Ameren Missouri dropped 19% to $444 million.

About $475 million in capital spending went to FERC-regulated electric transmission projects, including the construction of the $1.4 billion Illinois Rivers 345-kV transmission project that stretches 330 miles from Palmyra, Mo., to Sugar Creek, Ind.

“We continue to allocate significant amounts of capital to those businesses that are supported by modern, constructive regulatory frameworks to enhance good reliability and allow customers to better manage their energy usage, among other things,” CEO Warner L. Baxter said during a conference call.

— Amanda Durish Cook

End of Con Ed-PSEG Wheel?

By William Opalka

Consolidated Edison of New York says it will end use of the “PSEG wheel” to route power into New York City if it doesn’t win relief in a cost allocation dispute with PJM.

In a letter last month to PJM, Con Ed said it may end its use of the wheel when its current term expires on April 30, 2017.

“Although Con Edison will not decide until April 2016 whether or not to extend the agreements, we do think it is appropriate to inform you … that Con Edison’s analysis based on currently available information does not demonstrate that the agreements should be extended,” it wrote.

In a separate filing with the New York Public Service Commission (12-E-0503), Con Ed said it had identified less costly alternatives to the wheel, in which Public Service Electric and Gas takes 1,000 MW from Con Ed at the New York border and delivers it through New Jersey to Con Ed load in New York City.

On Oct. 23, Con Ed also asked FERC to reconsider its request that it force PJM to recalculate the cost allocation for two transmission upgrades in northern New Jersey (EL15-18). Con Ed asked FERC to consider PJM’s response in the cost allocation dispute over the proposed Artificial Island transmission project, in which PJM acknowledged weaknesses in its distribution factor (PJM: Artificial Island Cost Allocation Appears ‘Disproportionate’.)

“PJM previously responded to Con Edison’s arguments by asserting that DFAX is appropriate for all transmission projects,” Con Ed wrote. “However, in its answer to the Artificial Island complaint, PJM now concedes that DFAX can produce ‘an atypical cost allocation when applied to unique projects,’ by which it means projects that are not needed to address transmission overloads.”

con ed
PSEG short circuit solution (Source: PJM)

PJM assigned Con Ed $629 million of the costs of a $1.2 billion transmission upgrade to address a short-circuit problem in the PSE&G transmission zone outside New York City. PSE&G was allocated $52 million of the cost. Con Ed was also assigned $51 million of PSE&G’s $100 million Sewaren storm-hardening project.

Con Ed says it should pay only $29 million for the two New Jersey projects. FERC rejected Con Ed’s request to change the cost allocations in June. (See Con Ed Rebuffed Again on NJ Cost Allocation Dispute.)

PSE&G, a unit of Public Service Enterprise Group, responded that a decision to terminate the wheel would not impact the cost allocation cases. There would be future consequences for planning of reliability projects over lines that extend from New Jersey into New York City, it added.

“We wish to make clear that if Con Edison does not extend the agreements, it may not rely upon the capability of the PJM or PSE&G systems … as a planning assumption in future reliability determinations,” the company wrote.

PSE&G and PJM transmission owners also asked FERC to reject Con Ed’s bid to use PJM’s Artificial Island filing in its cost allocation case.

They countered that the cases pose different technical challenges and that granting the motion would create an endless loop of interlocking disputes that would force FERC to continually revisit previously decided cost allocation decisions.

Con Ed’s peak load in New York’s five boroughs and Westchester County is more than 13,000 MW.

Finger Lakes Plant Seeks Gas Line for Repowering

By William Opalka

A power plant developer says it has met most requirements to repower a 106-MW coal-fired generator in the Finger Lakes region that has been closed for more than four years.

Greenidge Generation says it hopes to repower the facility with natural gas as a merchant plant by the middle of next year. To do so, it has asked state regulators for expedited approval of a 4.6-mile connection to the Empire Connector interstate gas pipeline. The petitions are before the New York Public Service Commission (15-E-0516, 15-G-0571, 15-T-0586).

An environmental group has challenged the company’s request for a certificate of public convenience and necessity, saying the plant is not needed and runs counter to the state’s clean energy goals.

“The public need for the pipeline is entirely dependent upon the public need for the generating station. Because [the developer] has failed to demonstrate a public need for reopening the generating station, there is no basis for determining that there is a public need for a new gas pipeline to the generating station,” the Committee to Preserve the Finger Lakes wrote.

The group also said the reopening of fossil fuel-fired power plants runs counter to the state’s Energy Plan released earlier this year that seeks to cut greenhouse gas emissions 40% below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80% by 2050. “These targets cannot be achieved if New York continues to bring fossil-fueled generating infrastructure online,” it said.

The group asked the commission to deny the request for expedited approval and instead conduct evidentiary hearings.

Greenidge disputes the environmentalists’ characterization of the public need. “The commission has consistently recognized that [merchant] facilities are in the public interest … where they have been shown to provide benefits in the form of increased employment, improved reliability and lower prices for electric energy and capacity throughout New York state,” it wrote.

It also says the Energy Plan does not restrict natural gas generation. “Moreover, CPFL’s allegations with respect to the state Energy Plan involve only legal and policy matters and fail to raise any contested issues of material fact for which a hearing would be required,” the filing said.

Built in 1953, the plant is located on Seneca Lake in Yates County. It was purchased in 1998 by AES and operated by it and its subsidiaries until March 2011, when it was mothballed. The plant has not operated since.

During the AES bankruptcy proceeding in 2012, the company said it intended to permanently retire the plant. The plant was sold to GMMM Holdings, which in turn sold the facility to Greenidge in February 2014, according to the Greenidge filing.

Greenidge said most permits are current, but it needs an air permit and water withdrawal permit from the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

Utilities, Investors see Green in Clean Power Plan, Discount Litigation Risk

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — New carbon emission regulations may face an uncertain future in the courts, but investors and utility executives said last week it won’t upset the long-term shift away from coal-fired generation and toward increased efficiency.

Twenty-six states have joined legal challenges to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan.

“I don’t think it matters [to utility capital spending plans],” said Stuart Zimmer, general partner with Zimmer Partners, which manages energy-focused hedge funds. “You have to comply. You don’t know if you’re going to win or lose [in court]. You have to have a plan in place,” he said during a panel discussion at the Edison Electric Institute’s 50th annual Financial Conference.

James Hempstead, associate managing director for Moody’s Investors Service, agreed.

With the legal challenges, “there will be some starts and stops and some lurching over the next couple of years … but utilities can see the writing on the wall. They know that they need to shift their generation supply mix and it needs to be a cleaner mix and they need to be more efficient … and that’s where they’re heading.

“To the extent that you have the CPP that is a federal mandate that helps you get your state regulators to get those costs approved, that’s a good thing,” he added. “Whether its MATS [Mercury and Air Toxics Standards] or CSAPR [Cross-State Air Pollution Rule] or CAIR [Clean Air Interstate Rule] or the CPP or whatever the next version of that is going to be, [the regulations are] going to keep coming. That is what’s incorporated into our long-term view.”

clean power plan
Akins

American Electric Power CEO Nick Akins said his company has urged officials in the 11 states in which it operates to file implementation plans even as nine of them fight the rule in court.

“Clearly [it’s] a great investment opportunity for AEP moving forward,” he said, referring to grid upgrades to support renewables and distributed generation. “I don’t think there’s any question that customers in the future are focused on a cleaner energy economy.”

Moody’s Toby Shea agreed that the CPP is an opportunity for utilities to increase their rate bases. “In the near term we see it as more positive than negative,” he said, adding, “There’s a risk that you keep making all these investments and pushing up the rates — at some point you’re going to get some pushback” from regulators.

Overruns, Waste Issue Cloud Nuclear’s Future

Although the CPP encourages emissions trading — which would benefit non-emitting generation — few utilities are likely to include nuclear plants in their capital spending plans, speakers said.

c;lean power plan
Adams

“It seems to me that the only place we are going to see nuclear generation construction is going to be in fully regulated, vertically integrated utility states like you’re seeing in South Carolina and Georgia,” said Kenneth Adams, managing director of global public markets for TIAA-CREF, which manages retirement and other investment funds.

Zimmer said nuclear power will be a tough sell even to utilities in such states because of the cost overruns plaguing Southern Co.’s two new Vogtle units in Georgia, which are more than three years behind schedule, and SCANA’s two new Summer units in South Carolina, now projected to cost more than $12 billion, a 20% increase over the original price tag.

“Southern Co. has seen what was once the best premium in the group get destroyed by the risk and overhang of building a nuclear plant and cost overruns. It now trades at a much lower price relative to its history,” he said. “SCANA … has seen its stock trade at a 10 to 15% discount. [Nuclear plants] are really risky investments. You don’t have real clarity on what they’re going to cost.”

clean power plan
Zimmer

Zimmer said he had discussed with Dominion Resources CEO Thomas Farrell and CFO Mark McGettrick the possibility of adding a third unit to their North Anna nuclear complex. “[They said] ‘it’s our second-to-last option.’”

Policymakers will have to make “a big-boy decision” about nuclear waste to improve nuclear power’s prospects, said Michael E. Webber, deputy director of the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin.

“Either we store it or we process it,” he said. “I’d like to see us process it because that is the better environmental solution and the better economic solution.”

PJM Seeks FERC OK for $687M in Tx Upgrades

PJM on Friday asked FERC to authorize cost responsibilities for $687 million in upgrades included in a revised Regional Transmission Expansion Plan approved by the Board of Managers in October (ER16-319).

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The cost allocations would become effective Feb. 11. Transmission customers have 30 days to submit comments about the proposed charges.

The upgrades address reliability issues or economic constraints, all on lower voltage facilities.

Included are 11 market efficiency projects, estimated at $59.3 million, which are expected to produce savings of $815 million over 15 years. They were selected from among 93 proposals, 58 from nonincumbent transmission developers.

New baseline reliability projects totaled $580.5 million. An additional $47.7 million was authorized for changes to previously approved baseline projects.

In July, the board approved $295.1 million in projects, mostly to address Artificial Island stability problems. (See PJM Board OKs LS Power’s Artificial Island Project Despite Objections.)

Since 2000, the board has approved more than $27 billion in transmission spending.

— Suzanne Herel