Search
`
July 23, 2024

Federal Briefs

If Democrats backing a carbon tax agree to use the revenue to reduce personal and corporate income taxes, congressional Republicans could sign on, says Harvard economist N. Gregory Mankiw, who served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush. Most economists agree a carbon tax is a less expensive way to reduce carbon dioxide emissions than current federal policies, such as the corporate average fuel economy (CAFÉ) standards for automobiles.

More: The New York Times

NRC Seeks Comment on Yucca Mt. Spending

Yucca Mtn. (Source: DOE)
Yucca Mtn. (Source: DOE)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is seeking public comments on how to spend the remaining $11 million in its budget for licensing a nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. The project has been in limbo since 2011 due to opposition from Congress and the Obama administration. On Aug. 13, however, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ordered the NRC to continue the work required to issue a decision on licensing the facility.

More: NRC

Enviro Groups Seek to Resurrect CSAPR

Environmental groups urged the Supreme Court to revive the Environmental Protection Agency’s Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR), saying that a lower court’s nullification would prevent regulators from ever tackling unhealthy power plant emissions that cross state lines. The lower court ruling “would force EPA to follow unworkable judicial algorithms that Congress never enacted,” the Environmental Defense Fund, the American Lung Association and others said in a brief filed Wednesday.

The Supreme Court agreed in June to review the appellate decision vacating the 2011 regulation. The rule would force cuts in smog- and soot-forming power plant emissions in more than two dozen states in the eastern half of the country.

More: The Hill

Solar Panels Reinstalled at White House

Re-installing Solar Panels on The White House Roof (Source: The White House)
(Source: The White House)

Three years after the Obama administration announced plans to return solar power to the White House, workers have completed the installation. President Jimmy Carter had solar panels installed on the White House roof in the late 1970s for heating water. They were removed during a roofing job in 1986 under President Ronald Reagan.

More: Greentech Media

Electric Power Emissions: 29,000 Deaths/Year in PJM

Air pollution from electric generation is responsible for more than 29,000 premature deaths annually in PJM states, more than any other air pollution source, according to a new study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Map of Average Annual Ground Particulate Concentration from Electric Generation (Source: MIT)
(Source: MIT)

The study found that fine particulates (PM2.5) and ozone pollution from electric generation caused 52,000 deaths in the continental U.S. annually, second only to the 53,000 deaths attributed to tailpipe emissions from autos. Within PJM states, auto pollution was second, responsible for more than 23,000 premature deaths.

All told, including other emission sources, such as industrial smokestacks, commercial and residential heating and cooking and marine and rail transportation, air pollution is responsible for 200,000 deaths annually, the study found.

Coal-burning Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio had the highest electric generation mortality rates in PJM, with Kentucky’s 40.2 deaths per 100,000 population nearly double the rate for New Jersey (22.2). New Jersey has a higher overall death rate, however due to higher impacts from autos, shipping and commercial and residential emissions.

Among cities, the Baltimore metropolitan area ranked worst, with an annual mortality rate of 130 per 100,000 due to high emissions from power generation, autos and industry.

Persons who die from an air pollution-related cause typically have about a decade cut from their lifespan, according to Steven Barrett, an assistant professor of aeronautics and astronautics who was one of the authors of the study.

The researchers found that the impact of auto emissions was highest in densely populated areas while power plants emissions, which are deposited at a higher altitude, were more dispersed.

Premature Deaths by State from Electric Generation Emissions (Source: MIT)
(Source: MIT)

The highest electric generation-related death rates were in the east-central U.S. and Midwest, which researchers suggested was due to the burning of coal with higher sulfur content than burned in the west.

The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 74 million people in the U.S. are exposed to levels of PM

2.5 higher than permitted by the Clean Air Act and that more than 131 million live in regions not compliant with ozone limits. The EPA computed the costs for the implementation of the 1990 Clean Air Act to be about $65 billion from 1990 to 2020, potentially avoiding 230,000 premature deaths in 2020.

The MIT researchers based their study on data from EPA’s National Emissions Inventory. The results were published in the journal Atmospheric Environment.

NRC Plant Rating Methodology

NRC 2013 Mid-Year Assessments (Source: NRC)
(Source: NRC)

The NRC grades each reactor based on data submitted quarterly by plant operators (“performance indicators”) and inspections by resident inspectors and regional staff. Its mid-year assessment places each operating unit within one of four levels of regulatory response, with the agency’s scrutiny increasing as plant performance declines:

  1.  The top-rated plants, judged to be meeting all of the agency’s objectives, are subject to the “baseline” inspection program.
  2. Plants with no more than two white findings — indicating problems causing minimal reductions in safety margin — fall into the second category, subjecting them to additional inspections and oversight by NRC regional officials.
  3. Reactors with “degraded” performance, for example those receiving a yellow finding indicating a moderate reduction in safety margin are subject to higher scrutiny, including involvement of senior regional officials.
  4. NRC headquarters officials take part in scrutiny of plants with multiple yellow findings or a red finding, indicating a significant reduction in safety margin.
  5. Not Operating: Plants with unacceptable reductions in safety margins are not permitted to operate and may have their licenses revoked.

MRC Considers Changes to Wind Capacity Calculations

The Markets and Reliability Committee Thursday reviewed two alternatives to protect wind generators from being assigned artificially depressed capacity values due to curtailments ordered by PJM. The committee will be asked to approve one of the alternatives at its next meeting.

Under current policy, when wind generators are curtailed by PJM for any portion of a peak summer hour (2-6 p.m.), the entire hour is excluded from the generator’s capacity calculation.

Under Alternative 2, state estimator data would be used to interpolate output for each five-minute period with curtailments. Under Alternative 3, forecast data from PJM operations — which is currently used for lost opportunity cost calculations — would be used for curtailment periods.

Impact of Alternative 2 & 3 on Curtailed Units (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)
(Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)

Both options would use metered data for all hours without curtailments. Units with no curtailments over peak summer hours would not be affected by either option.

The Planning Committee last month approved Alternative 2 by a 101-23 margin, making it the primary option MRC will consider Sept. 26. The MRC also can select Alternative 3, which was approved more narrowly, 68-40. (See Planning Committee OKs Relief for Wind Generators.)

PJM’s Tom Falin said Alternative 2 may be more accurate for short curtailments while Alternative 3 is more accurate for long curtailments. “The most important curtailments are the long ones,” Falin said. “They’re going to impact the average more than a five-minute interruption.”

An analysis released by PJM showed that Alternative 2 would have increased ratings for 21 wind generators with 12 reduced and two unchanged. Alternative 3 increased ratings for 24 generators and reduced them for 11. (See chart)

Any new procedure approved by would be applied to summer 2013 data when capacity credit calculations are finalized in December 2013.

 

MRC First Readings

The following issues generated little or no discussion among members when they were brought before the Markets and Reliability Committee for first readings Thursday. The issues will be brought to a vote at the next MRC meeting Sept. 26.

Below are brief descriptions of the issues along with their agenda numbers and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.

6. COORDINATED TRANSACTION SCHEDULING

MRC will be asked to approve a new product for scheduling trades between PJM and the New York ISO.

Under the current system, power often flows from PJM into New York even when PJM’s prices are higher. The new product, Coordinated Transaction Scheduling (CTS), is intended to reduce uneconomic power flows between the two regions. Traders would be able to submit “price differential” bids that would clear when the price differences between New York and PJM exceed a threshold set by the bidder.

PJM officials had planned to ask the Market Implementation Committee to endorse the proposal Aug. 7 but postponed a vote to provide answers to members’ questions.

Addressing one of the questions that came up before the MIC, PJM’s Rebecca Carroll told MRC Thursday that PJM does not expect the new product to have any impact on balancing congestion, which results because of a change in transmission system capability between the day-ahead and real-time markets. (Negative balancing congestion occurs when the real-time transmission system cannot accommodate all the transactions scheduled day ahead; positive balancing congestion occurs when the real-time transmission capability increases above what was available day ahead.)

Carroll said the scheduling of external interchange transactions won’t affect transmission capability.

(See MIC Postpones Vote on NYISO Scheduling Product; PJM, NYISO Tout New Option to Improve Power Scheduling.)

7. SYNCHRONIZED RESERVE (SR) PERFORMANCE

PJM and the Market Monitor will seek a vote on a joint proposal to boost penalties for resources that fall short of their synchronized reserve commitments. The measure, intended to address concerns that the current penalty structure is insufficient to ensure compliance, stalled at the Operating Committee in August as utilities called for more details. (See Bid to Boost Synch Reserve Penalties Stalls at OC.)

9. EFFICIENCY OF DEMAND RESPONSE REGISTRATION PROCESS 

MRC will be asked to choose among three proposals for streamlining the demand response registration process. Current rules require Curtailment Service Providers to submit customer names to both the Electric Distribution Company and Load Serving Entity. The LSE’s role in the process has been largely eliminated as a result of FERC Order 745. (See PJM Proposes Streamlined DR Registration.)

10. ENERGY MARKET UP-LIFT SENIOR TASK FORCE (EMUSTF) CHARTER

MRC will be asked to vote next month on a charter for the Energy Market Uplift Senior Task Force. The task force was created by MRC May 30 to conduct a broad review of its method of pro­vid­ing oper­at­ing reserve payments. PJM said changes are needed to reduce grow­ing uplift costs. (See MRC Approvals 5/30/13PJM Pro­poses Oper­at­ing Reserve Changes to Cut Uplift.)

12. PJM MANUALS

A. Manual 12: Energy and Ancillary Market Operations and Manual 27: OATT Accounting.

Reason for changes: The changes conform to new policies developed by the System Restoration Strategy Task Force on black start generation, critical load and restoration plans.

PJM will lose some existing black start capacity as a result of pending coal plant retirements. The changes are intended to increase the pool of potential resources. Tariff changes reflecting the new policies were filed with FERC July 9 (ER13-1911).

Impact: Affected are manuals 12 and 27:

  • Section 7 of Manual 27 allows the cost of cross-zonal black start units to be allocated to multiple zones based on transmission owners’ critical load share.
  • Section 4.6 of Manual 12 governs the number of critical units in a zone and the ratio of black start generation to critical load in a zone. It also eliminates a restriction on the number of black start units at a station, allows units to provide service outside their zone and changes the time in which a unit must close to a dead bus.

PJM contact: Tom Hauske

B. Manual 01: Control Center and Data Exchange Requirements.

Reason for changes: The changes are necessary to comply with NERC Standard BAL-005-0.2b — Automatic Generation Control.

Impact: Creates a new tie line cut-in process requiring telemetry be in place prior to energization. Includes major changes to Section 5.3.5 (Tie Line Telemetry Specification) to provide more detailed requirements for Tie Line Telemetry and Attachment B to remove redundant text and streamline table. EOP-005-2 and EOP-008-1 requirements are updated.

PJM contact: Chris Smart

Company Briefs

FirstEnergy-logo1FirstEnergy Corp.’s nuclear operating company will meet with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Sept. 5 after security forces at the company’s Beaver Valley nuclear plant apparently failed part of a routine “force-on-force” exercise in April.

More: The Plain Dealer

PPL to Sell Power Plants to NorthWestern Energy?

PPL-LogoAn environmental group asked Montana regulators for documents that may indicate whether PPL Montana is in talks to sell several power plants to NorthWestern Energy. PPL Montana, which owns 11 hydroelectric plants and several coal-fired plants, and NorthWestern, Montana’s largest electric utility, have refused to comment on rumors of a possible sale.

More: The Missoulian

NRG May Follow DR Buy With More Renewables

NRG-LogoNRG Energy Inc., the largest independent U.S. electricity generator, may further expand its clean-energy portfolio after its purchase of Energy Curtailment Specialists Inc., an analyst said. NRG announced the purchase of Energy Curtailment in a statement without giving a price. Energy Curtailment manages more than 2 GW of demand response for at least 5,000 customers.

“We see the transaction as among a series of other potential moves for NRG,” an UBS Securities LLC analyst said. “Other potential ‘alternative energy’ investments to complement NRG’s retail offerings could include distributed solar generation.”

More: Bloomberg

Duke CEO Talks Merger Fallout, Coal Ash Dispute

Duke-Energy-LogoDuke Energy chief executive Lynn Good, who began work July 1, discussed her priorities, the coal ash pollution that has prompted state lawsuits and the future of electric service in an interview with The Charlotte Observer.

More: The Charlotte Observer

EnerNOC on Big Data, Business Models

Enernoc-LogoIn an interview, Brad Davids, vice president of utility solutions with EnerNOC Inc., talked about the company’s evolving business model, big data and renewable energy.

More: Utility Dive

Previous coverage in RTO Insider: Capacity Auction Fallout: EnerNOC, Utility Stocks Hit; PJM, FERC Rules Buffet EnerNOC

Federal Briefs

DOE Chief: ‘Incumbents’ Should Embrace Change

“The future is not always 10 years away,” Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz warned in his first major policy address. Speaking at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy, Moniz discussed President Obama’s climate action plan and said industry change will be driven by extreme weather, distributed generation, electric vehicles and pollution concerns.

More: Utility Dive, Greentech Media, National Journal

Video of speech: Department of Energy

DOE Issues Regs On Commercial Fridges

After a wait of nearly two years, the Energy Department proposed energy efficiency rules for new commercial refrigeration equipment and walk-in coolers and freezers. The rules represent one of the Obama administration’s first steps to address climate change through executive authority since the president announced his climate action plan in June.

More: The Washington Post

FERC

Wellinghoff: Solar Power to Overtake Wind

U.S. solar power capacity will exceed wind power generation in about a decade, outgoing FERC Chairman Jon Wellinghoff told Greentech Media. Wellinghoff predicted rooftop solar prices will drop from more than $4 per watt to $1 or $2. “It is going to be the dominant player,” Wellinghoff said. “Everybody’s roof is out there.”

Some analysts predict the U.S. will double its capacity of distributed solar within three years.

More: Greentech Media

JPMorgan Records Sought by Senate Investigators

The U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to turn over “key documents” from FERC’s probe of JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Democrat Carl Levin, who leads the panel, and John McCain, its ranking Republican, asked FERC to include a 70-page document outlining investigators’ findings, which was cited in articles by The New York Times. The regulator kept that document private when announcing a $410 million accord with JPMorgan last month.

More: Bloomberg

Opinion: Ron Binz a Good Choice for FERC

Most people find it tough to get excited about regulators. But President Obama’s nomination of Ron Binz to head the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is reason to sit up and take notice.

More: Forbes

OIL AND GAS

Report: Frackers Cheating Landowners, Govt.

Energy companies are manipulating costs and other data to deny private and government landholders billions in oil and natural gas royalties, ProPublica alleges. Thousands of landowners are receiving far less money than they were promised by energy companies, with some receiving virtually nothing.

Federal law requires that royalty payments to landowners be no less than 12.5% of the oil and gas sales from their leases.

More: ProPublica

DOE Study: Carbon Capture No Salvation for Coal

Coal boosters who hope carbon capture technology will ensure the fuel’s future will find little support in a new report conducted for planners in the Eastern Interconnection.

EPA’s proposed New Source Performance Standards for greenhouse gases will likely make it impossible to permit new coal-fired generation that doesn’t include Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technology.

But the report notes that the Department of Energy’s flagship CCS project, FutureGen in Illinois, “has experienced multiple delays and changes of scope and design [and] its prospects remain uncertain.”

Even if CCS becomes economical, the report concludes, the higher capital costs of coal generators means CCS “may be first deployed on natural gas plants before coal-fired plants, if natural gas prices remain low.”

“… Any state-level incentives to support coal mining and encourage the use of coal face an uphill battle in contending with these challenges.”

PJM Coal-Fired Capacity & Avg. Age (Source: EPA)
(Source: EPA)

The report also predicts the retirement of more than 50 GW of current plants between 2013 and 2016, in addition to the approximately 12 GW retired during 2010 through 2012.  Of the 269 GW of coal capacity in the Eastern Interconnection, about one-third is located in five states that fall all or partly within PJM: Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Illinois and West Virginia. The average age of coal units in these states will be nearly 50 years by 2015.

The study, “Current State and Future Direction of Coal-fired Power in the Eastern Interconnection,” was conducted by ICF International for the Eastern Interconnection States’ Planning Council and the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) with funding from DOE.

More: Full Report; Summary

MRC Actions

The Markets and Reliability Committee approved agenda items 2, 4 and 5 unanimously Thursday. Details are below:

2. PJM MANUALS

A. Manual 28: Operating Agreement Accounting

Reason for change: Revises the manual to reflect Tariff changes regarding lost opportunity cost compensation, as approved by FERC in docket ER13-1200.

The changes regard the amount of lost opportunity costs that a generator receives when PJM ordered it to reduce its output to maintain system reliability.

PJM made the changes to ensure that generators were not rewarded for operating units above the Maximum Facility Output specified in their interconnection agreements.

PJM told FERC the change was needed to prevent generators from causing constraints by operating above their Maximum Facility Output and then being rewarded with lost opportunity cost payments when PJM orders them to reduce output.

The new rules limit lost opportunity cost compensation to the lesser of the Maximum Facility Output or Economic Maximum (the highest incremental megawatt output level the unit can achieve while following economic dispatch).

Impacts:

  • Changes sections 5.2.6 and 5.2.8 (Operating Reserve & Reactive Services Lost Opportunity Cost Credits) to limit lost opportunity cost compensation.
  • Section 7.2 (Shortage Pricing) amended to incorporate calculation details for non-synchronized reserve market lost opportunity costs.
  • Modifies section 5.3 (Operating Reserve) to correct errors and provide clarifications on exempting deviations during shortage conditions; adds revisions for associating interfaces to the East or West BOR regions.
  • Modifies sections: 5.2.3 to incorporate details of Lost Opportunity Cost Credit for Synchronous Condensing; 5.2.6 (Wind Lost Opportunity Cost) to align language with Tariff; 17.3 (Allocation of Annual and Monthly FTR Auction Revenues) to correct section reference.

PJM contact: Stan Williams

B. Manual 14B: PJM Region Transmission Planning Process

Reason for changes: Updates to reflect changes from FERC Order 1000, switch to two-year planning cycle and revised benefit/cost test for Market Efficiency projects.

Impact:

  • Separates Reliability and Market Efficiency into subsections
  • Adds a new section (2.1.2) to explain two-year planning cycle on Market Efficiency projects.
  • Changes to reflect Order 1000.
  • Changes energy market benefit calculation component of benefit/cost ratio for Market Efficiency projects eligible for regional cost allocation. The change in total energy production cost and change in load energy payments (previously weighted .70/.30) will be equally weighted.

PJM contact: Tim Horger

4. PARAMETER LIMITED SCHEDULES (PLS) REVISIONS

PJM will add new processes for generators seeking exemptions from operating parameters under changes endorsed by the MRC.

The parameters are defaults for different types and sizes of generators, covering minimum run and down times, maximum daily and weekly starts and turn down ratios (Eco Max/Eco Min). They were initiated in 2008 to ensure lower make whole payments for generators whose entire offers were not covered by Locational Marginal Pricing revenues.

Reason for change: The change will reduce administrative burdens on members.

Impact: The proposed change would create three types of exemptions:

  • Temporary Exception: A one-time exception of 30 days or less;
  • Period Exception: An exception lasting for at least 31 days but no more than one year during the 12 months between June 1 and May 31; and
  • Persistent Exception: An exception lasting for at least one year.

The changes will require revisions to Attachment K of the OATT, Schedule 1 of the Operating Agreement and section 2.3.4 of Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations.

Assuming FERC approval, the changes will be effective Oct. 1.

PJM contact: Jacqui Hugee

5. STAKEHOLDER PROCESS ON TRIENNIAL CONE REVIEW

Members will consider changes to the Cost of New Entry (CONE) triennial review process under a problem statement and issue charge approved by the MRC. CONE values are used in PJM’s Reliability Price Model (RPM) to obtain capacity resources.

Reason for problem statement: PJM and members agreed to explore changes in the review process in a settlement approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in January (Docket No. ER12-513).

Impact:  The inquiry will assess the use of the Handy-Whitman Index of public utility construction costs for adjusting CONE and consider other potential changes.

PJM is required to file Tariff changes with FERC in time for the 2014 triennial review or a status report if stakeholders are unable to reach consensus on changes.

PJM contact: Paul Sotkiewicz

State Briefs

Duke Settles with Environmental Groups

Duke Energy agreed to quit burning coal at its share of the Wabash River Station power plant in western Indiana by June 2018 under a settlement with environmental and citizens groups that also calls for the company to increase its investments in renewable energy. The Natural Resources Defense Council ranked the Wabash River Station ninth among 25 coal-fired power plants it says are responsible for half of the mercury pollution in the Great Lakes region.

The settlement ends the activist groups’ challenge of Duke’s state air permit for its new $3.5 billion, coal-gasification plant in Edwardsport that went online this summer.

More: Associated Press

MARYLAND

PSC Delays Vote on Wind Farm Deadline

The Maryland Public Service Commission deferred action for one week on a request from Dan’s Mountain Wind Force LLC that its deadline to start building wind turbines be extended until Dec. 31, 2014. The PSC staff recommended approval of the extension request, saying the company had solved financial problems with an agreement with Exelon Corp. to fund construction and eventually purchase the project.

More: Cumberland Times-News

NEW JERSEY

NJ to Build Micro Grid for Transit System

The U.S. Department of Energy and the state of New Jersey announced plans to design a small electric grid that will serve the state’s transit system and withstand the onslaught of storms like Superstorm Sandy. The micro grid will power the transit system’s rail operations between Newark, Jersey City and Hoboken.

More: Reuters

Critics: PSEG Solar Program Too Costly

The Chemical Industry Council of New Jersey and the state’s Division of Rate Counsel are balking at the expansion of PSEG’s solar power program, calling it too expensive. Public Service Electric & Gas won state regulatory approval of a plan to expand its “Solar4All” program by putting solar panels on factories, warehouses and landfills.

The chemical trade group says power costs for New Jersey industrial customers are already 59% higher than the national average.

More: The Trentonian

NORTH CAROLINA

Thousands Say No to Duke Coal-Ash Settlement

Virtually all the nearly 5,000 comments filed on a proposed settlement of coal-ash lawsuits against Duke Energy opposed the deal or called for hearings on it. North Carolina filed suit in August against 12 Duke Energy coal-fired power plants where it said ash has polluted water.

The actions followed earlier suits against Duke’s Riverbend and Asheville plant, meaning that all 14 of Duke’s North Carolina coal plants are now the targets of state litigation.

More: The Charlotte Observer, WCNC

A.G.: Duke’s Profit Margin Hurts Consumers

Attorney General Roy Cooper said a state Supreme Court ruling should lead to lower utility profits and customer rates. The court backed Cooper’s appeal of Duke Carolinas’ 2011 rate case, which increased rates 7.2%, saying that the state Utilities Commission didn’t fully document the impact to customers of the return on equity granted Duke.

Cooper says state regulators should heed that ruling in reducing ROE in a rate case currently before them.

More: The Charlotte Observer

OHIO

AEP Denies Report It’s Likely to Sell Ohio Plants

American Electric Power says there is no basis for an analyst’s report suggesting the company might sell its Ohio power plants. The report, from UBS Investment Research, comes as AEP is changing its structure to make the Ohio plants into a new subsidiary.

An AEP spokeswoman said there are “no current plans to sell that business.” AEP has about 9,000 MW of generation in Ohio, the company’s largest market among the 11 states where it has utility customers.

More: Columbus Dispatch

Kasich Aide Rebuffs Query Over EPA Chief’s Ouster

The spokesman for Ohio Gov. John Kasich mocked a Democratic legislator who asked the governor to release documents on the sudden resignation of the Ohio EPA’s chief water expert. “If she had her way, we’d all be living on a collective farm cooking organic quinoa over a dung fire,” Kasich’s spokesman said.  “So, I think we’ll take her views in context.”

Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported that coal interests have contributed about $50,000 to Kasich and another $170,000 to state lawmakers since 2011.

More: WOUB Public Media, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Associated Press

DPL: No Gimmicks to Win Retail Customers

Dayton Power and Light Co. won’t be offering gimmicky plans to lure customers as its Ohio market opens to retail competition, company officials said. “We’ll try to keep it on the straight and narrow,” CEO Phil Herrington told the Dayton Daily News in an interview.

More: Dayton Daily News

PENNSYLVANIA

Pa. Board Drafts New Gas Drilling Rules

The state Environmental Quality Board approved a draft regulation that officials said will strengthen environmental performance standards for oil and gas activities.

The proposal includes provisions covering exploration in parks and wildlife areas, spill prevention, waste management and the restoration of well sites after drilling. The rule also includes standards on the construction of gathering lines and temporary pipelines and provisions for identifying and monitoring abandoned wells.

The Department of Environmental Protection is recommending a 60-day public comment period on the new rules, with at least six public hearings across the state.

More: PA Dept. of Environmental Protection

TMI Clean Up to Cost $1 Billion

FirstEnergy Corp. estimated it will cost nearly $1 billion to decommission Three Mile Island Unit 2, which has been idle since its partial meltdown in 1979. The company disclosed the figure at a public hearing in Hershey Aug. 28.

FirstEnergy says it will continue to maintain the facility until Unit 1, operated by Exelon Nuclear, is shut down. Unit 1 has a license to operate until 2034.

More: York Daily Record

PPL Rates Up for Residential Customers

The price of electricity for PPL Electric Utilities’ default residential customers will increase slightly while default commercial customers’ rates will drop. The new “price to compare” for residential customers will be 8.5 cents per kWh, up from the current 8.2 cents.

More: The Morning Call

Court Rejects Challenge to PPL Power Line

A federal judge threw out a lawsuit by conservation groups to block construction of a high-voltage power line by PPL and PSEG through the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area.

More: The Morning Call

PPL Fined for Diverting Crew in 2011 Snowstorm

PPL agreed to pay a $60,000 fine to settle a complaint that it transferred a repair crew working on a high-priority outage in a 2011 snowstorm to fix a low-priority outage. The switch — a violation of the state utilities code — meant 1,326 customers in the higher-priority area were left in the dark about four hours longer than necessary.

More: The Morning Call

14 MW Solar Project Wins OKs

A 14 MW solar project that will be Pennsylvania’s largest has won local land use approvals. Orion Renewable Energy Group, LLC should begin construction in about a year on the 100-acre site near Chambersburg in Franklin County.

More: Public Opinion

VIRGINIA

Va. Gov. Hopefuls Debate Energy Issues

In a joint forum on energy issues, Virginia gubernatorial hopefuls Terry McAuliffe and Ken Cuccinelli sparred over McAuliffe’s electric car company and Cuccinelli’s position on climate change and involvement in a dispute over gas royalties.

More: The Washington Post

Dominion Updates Long-Range Electric Plan

Natural gas-fired generation is the foundation of Dominion Virginia Power’s updated long-range energy plan, which also includes emissions-free resources to respond to U.S. greenhouse gas regulations.

More: Associated Press, Richmond Times-Dispatch

Regulators OK First Prepaid Electric Program

The State Corporation Commission (SCC) has approved rules allowing Rappahannock Electric Cooperative customers to participate in a voluntary prepaid electric service program, the first offered in the state. The program allows a customer to prepay for electric service and permits the cooperative to suspend service when sufficient funds are not available.

Customers using the prepaid option will pay the same for electricity as those using traditional billing but will avoid having to pay a large deposit, late payment fees, or reconnection charges. The coop serves about 155,000 customers in a rural region from Fredericksburg to Front Royal.

More: Rappahannock Electric Cooperative, Virginia State Corporation Commission

WEST VIRGINIA

Potomac Ed: Cooperating with Billing Probe

Potomac Edison said it is complying with a West Virginia Public Service Commission investigation into the company’s billing practices, after residents complained about irregular billing and a lack of meter-reading.

More: WHAG Online

PSC Seeks Feedback on Renewable Program

The West Virginia Public Service Commission is seeking suggestions for simplifying its application process for homeowners seeking credits for rooftop solar systems.

More: The Journal