Exelon agreed to pay a $500,000 penalty and disgorge about $146,000 in profits to settle a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s case alleging that Constellation Energy Commodities Group submitted false information to the California ISO in 2010. FERC alleged Constellation incorrectly designated transactions as “wheeling through” the state although the company lacked a point outside California to deliver the power to. Exelon bought Constellation in 2012.
Rus Ogburn, former manager of performance compliance at PJM, has returned home to become general manager of Somerset County Rural Electric Cooperative. The Somerset County native was at PJM about 11 years, earning a law degree from Temple University while there. He also holds a B.S. in physics and an M.S. in electrical power engineering.
American Electric Power’s third-quarter earnings dropped 11% on writedowns associated mainly with regulatory rulings on a Texas power plant project and the Big Sandy scrubber project in Kentucky. The board of directors nevertheless raised its quarterly dividend by $0.01 to $0.50 per share. The company said it is on track to separate its Ohio generation and wires businesses by the end of the year.
NRG Energy and Exelon Corp.’s Constellation unit say interest in combining solar power with battery storage has surged in the year since Hurricane Sandy knocked out power to millions of homes and businesses on the East Coast.
Customers with solar power were frustrated to discover that losing power from local utilities also knocked out the inverters that connect rooftop panels to the grid, leaving them unable to tap the electricity they were producing. Battery storage — which adds more than 20% to the cost of a typical 10-kilowatt solar system for a four-bedroom home — can solve that problem.
Constellation joined an Edison International unit in investing in Proterra Inc., a maker of electric buses. The utility companies joined other funders in a $24 million Series C financing round.
The Environmental Protection Agency started its 11-city “listening tour” in preparation for writing rules to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants. Some lawmakers have asked EPA to add sessions in coal mining states. In an interview with PBS, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy defended the agency’s plans. “Carbon is a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. We’re doing the same thing for carbon we have done for those other pollutants moving forward,” she said.
Greenhouse gas emissions from electricity generation and industrial sources fell 4.5% in 2012 as power production fell slightly from 2011 and natural gas supplanted coal. The Environmental Protection Agency said emissions fell 10% in the two years since the agency began collecting data in 2010. EPA released a map of emitting facilities’ locations.
Opponents of the Environmental Protection Agency’s plans to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from existing power plants may hang a court challenge on contradictory language in the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990.
The House and Senate drafted contradictory amendments to one section of the law and the discrepancy was never reconciled in conference. Each was intended to ensure that the section — which requires states to develop performance standards for existing sources — would not duplicate regulations already in place.
After being sidelined by fiscal issues, a bipartisan Senate energy efficiency bill is making progress toward a possible vote. S. 1392, known as the Shaheen-Portman bill after its main sponsors, contains provisions concerning building codes, financing, rebates, labeling and technical assistance.
Maryland is among eight states joining a coalition aimed at achieving sales of at least 3.3 million zero-emission vehicles by 2025. The states committed to a range of measures including encouraging charging stations and changing building codes to ease electric vehicle ownership.
Marcellus Shale natural gas production has reached 12 billion cubic feet a day, more than six times the 2009 production rate, the Energy Information Administration reported. Most of the production from the shale formation is coming from Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Increasing residential building air tightness to the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) standard could save as much as $33 billion a year in energy costs, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab reported. Current weatherization measures can tighten a building about 20% to 30%, but “there’s still quite a bit left on the table,” a Berkeley scientist said.
Former White House energy and climate adviser Carol Browner predicts President Obama will reject a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada’s oil sands.
Jon Wellinghoff, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission since 2009, plans to join the Portland, Ore.-based law firm Stoel Rives when he steps down from the FERC position. He submitted his resignation to the White House in May but has not set a departure date. He will work from the firm’s Washington, D.C., office.
Researchers say the communication protocols utilities use to monitor remote operations have vulnerabilities that could allow major system disruptions. Using those vulnerabilities, an attacker at a single, unmanned power substation could inflict a widespread power outage. One expert said the North American Electric Reliability Corp. has not focused its cybersecurity efforts on this kind of software, but should do so.
The Markets and Reliability and Members committees approved the following measures with little discussion at their meetings last week.
Markets and Reliability Committee
Installed Reserve Margin
Reason for changes: The IRM, which determines PJM’s capacity targets in the base auction, is revised annually.
Impact: The committee endorsed PJM staff’s recommendation to increase the IRM to 16.2% for delivery year 2014/15 (up from 15.9% in the 2012 analysis) and margins of 15.7% for delivery years 2015 through 2018. The change is a result of the increasing alignment of the RTO’s peak demand with demand outside of the region.
The committee approved Tariff and Operating Agreement changes to create the Coordinated Transaction Scheduling (CTS) product.
Reason for changes: CTS is designed to reduce uneconomic power flows between PJM and NYISO.
Impact: The new product will allow traders to submit “price differential” offers that would clear when the price difference between New York and PJM exceeds a threshold set by the bidder. Pending approval by the NYISO board and FERC, CTS will take effect no sooner than September 2014 — later if the Markets and Reliability Committee is not satisfied with the accuracy of the forecasts generated by PJM’s Intermediate Term Security Constrained Economic Dispatch (IT SCED) application.
Members approved Tariff and Operating Agreement revisions to simplify the process for registering demand response customers.
Reason for changes: Current rules require Curtailment Service Providers to submit customer names to both the electric distribution company (EDC) and load serving entity (LSE). The EDC and LSE have 10 days to approve or deny the registration. If either rejects the application — for example because they were mistakenly associated with the customer — the process has to begin from the start.
The change was motivated in part by FERC Order 745, which reduced the LSE’s role in the registration process.
Impact:
Emergency Registration: The LSE will be removed from the review and notification process; EDCs will continue to do reviews under “Relevant Electric Retail Regulatory Authority” rules.
Economic Registration: The LSE will remain involved but PJM will make administrative changes to simplify the review process. The EDC and LSE review process will be separated to eliminate unnecessary reviews.
Members approved increased penalties for under-performing Tier 2 synchronized reserve providers. “It better aligns the refund with what the resource earned,” explained Stu Bresler, PJM vice president of market operations.
Reason for changes: The changes are intended to improve performance of SR resources, which currently produce only 75% of promised reserves. The Independent Market Monitor called for changes in the State of the Market report. The current penalties, written when SR calls occurred about every three days, have lost their effectiveness now that calls occur about once every two weeks.
Impact:
Remove the “contiguous” hours statement from the same-day penalty.
Retroactive obligation to refund the shortfall for all of the hours the resource was assigned over the immediate past interval.
Interval duration is the average number of days between events as determined by a review of the last two years, or number of days since resource last failed to provide the amount of Tier 2 Synch Reserve assigned, whichever is shorter.
Eliminates from the penalty calculationthe conversion of shortfall MW to MWh.
PJM has committed to providing generators with near real-time feedback on their performance starting in January.
The Markets and Reliability Committee heard first readings on the manual changes listed below. The committee will be asked to endorse the changes — excluding those for Manual 28, which is already in effect — in November.
Manual 13: Emergency Procedures
Reason for changes: Compliance with reliability standard EOP-004-2 (Event Reporting); change to load forecasting error metrics effective Jan. 1, 2014; general clean up.
Reason for changes:Revisions to 2014 Day-Ahead scheduling reserve (DASR) requirements for East Kentucky Power Cooperative.
Impact: Load forecasting error (LFE) component is 2.12% (down 0.01%); forced outage rate (FOR) component is 4.29% (down 0.37%); Preliminary DASR Requirement is 6.41% (down from 6.91%).
Manual 14A: Generation and Transmission Interconnection Process
Reason for changes:Implementation of PJM/MISO Joint Common Markets initiatives; adjust terminology in PJM cost allocation rules for new service customers to align with Tariff.
Impact:
Adds queue coordination rules to define times when the interconnection request information will be exchanged and studied.
Describes Transmission Service Request studies: Initial Study; System Impact Study (during Feasibility Study timeframe); System Impact Study (during System Impact Study timeframe).
Reinforces the JOA requirements to impose the applicable study criteria. Rules for reinforcements <$5 Million are modified to align with current practice of requiring the first project which loads a facility over 100% to have cost responsibility.
Manual 14B: PJM Region Transmission Planning Process
Reason for changes: M14B requires imposing historical commercial probability of proposed projects at each phase of study. Past studies identified many reinforcements which were not needed due to drop out of projects from the queue. The processing of project studies in the queue has improved in recent years, which has reduced the size of the backlog.
Impact:Shift factors used in commercial probability to earlier point in process and drop the use of the historical Feasibility Study commercial probability factor. At Feasibility Study phase, use Impact Study commercial probability factor (currently 53%); At Impact Study phase, use 100% commercial probability factor.
Reason for changes: Problem statement on cyclic peaking and starting factors, referred to Cost Development Subcommittee by the MRC.
Impact: CDS reached consensus on two changes: (1) Resource owners shall use original equipment manufacturer (OEM) values if available and (2) grandfather in OEM values for technologies no longer being built. Adds reference to extended cold start.
Manual 18: PJM Capacity Market
Reason for changes: Conform to other manual language; FERC docket #s ER12-513, ER13-535; ER13-2140; ER13-1023.
Reason for changes: Compliance with FERC final order on Performance Based Regulation, requiring regulating resources to be compensated with the mileage ratio multiplier in the regulation performance credit.
Impact:Implements compensation methodology detailed in PJM’s January 15, 2013 compliance filing:
Regulation Credits (Section 4.2) – Remove marginal benefits factor from capability and performance credit calculation. Mileage ratio will be used as the performance multiplier in the regulation performance credit.
Regulation Charges (Section 4.3) – Changes include specifics around the regulation obligation.
Changes are retroactively effective to the Performance Based Regulation implementation date, Oct. 1, 2012.
Manual 41: Managing Interchange Regional Practices / Regional Transmission and Energy Scheduling Practices
Impact:Merge the content of M41 and the Regional Practices document and retire M41. Post Regional Practices document on the Manuals page of the PJM website.
The Markets and Reliability Committee last week endorsed the following manual changes:
Manual 3: Transmission Operations
Reason for changes: Update.
Impact:Adds language regarding approval of emergency rating changes; added applicability for individual generators greater than 20 MVA; clarified reference to voltage coordination; revised outdated references.
Reason for changes:Improve the procedure for analyzing and addressing short circuits.
Impact: PJM currently analyzes short circuit cases for the current year +1 and +5. System modifications are difficult for transmission owners to implement with a one-year lead time. The annual Regional Transmission Expansion Plan will analyze short circuit base cases for the current year +2.
Reason for changes: Changes made at RFC request, and for consistency.
Impact:Includes changes to reactive capability testing; replaces outdated references; requires generators operating or scheduled for PJM to operate to notify PJM prior to attempting a restart following a trip or failure to start.
PJM’s plans to limit capacity imports seem to be changing almost daily, based on reports provided to stakeholders.
Officials have said they expect to set an overall import limit of less than 11,000 MW in addition to several directional limits.
Officials told the Planning Committee Oct. 18 that they were considering five or more directional limits. (See Import Cap Likely to Settle About 9,000 MW.) But at last week’s Markets and Reliability Committee meeting, PJM staff was again referring to their original plan of three limits: North, West and South.
Stu Bresler, PJM vice president of market operations said there will “probably” be three directional limits and that the west and south limits will “probably interact.”
However many directional limits are ultimately set, their sum is expected to exceed the overall cap. But it will be the overall cap that controls.
Reliability Agreement Amendment
The proposed amendment to the Reliability Assurance Agreement (RAA) states: “PJM shall model increased power transfers from external areas into PJM to determine the transfer level at which one or more reliability criteria is violated on any monitored facilities that have an electrically significant response to such transfers, provided that PJM shall maximize transfers on other facilities not experiencing any reliability criteria violations as appropriate to increase the Capacity Import Limit. The aggregate MW quantity of transfers into PJM at the point where any increase in transfers would violate reliability criteria will establish the Capacity Import Limit.”
“The most economical bids would clear until we hit the limit,” explained Mike Kormos, PJM executive vice president, operations.
Generators with firm transmission that commit to providing capacity in future auctions and have pseudo-ties allowing PJM to control their dispatch would be exempt from the cap.
The MRC will be asked to approve the changes in November.
`Follow-on Discussion’
One issue that won’t be included in the import change is a proposal making external resources that clear subject to a must-offer requirement in subsequent auctions. Andy Ott, PJM executive vice president for markets, said that issue will be part of a “follow-on discussion.”
“This proposal is very narrow,” Ott said. The goal will be to limit PJM’s risk from imports being cut during Transmission Loading Relief procedures, a risk he said is not accounted for in PJM’s Installed Reserve Margin.
At the Oct. 18 meeting, PJM’s Mark Sims told members that the limit will be “slightly lower” than 11,000 and closer to the 8,347 MWs imported on July 16, 2013, the highest import observed in an analysis of three years of historical data.
The Planning Committee approved a problem statement on a proposed cap in response to the May Base Residual Auction, in which more than 7,400 MW of imports cleared.
PJM wants to include the new limit in February when it posts the planning parameters for the 2014 base auction. To meet that schedule, officials plan to present proposed methodology and manual language at the Planning Committee meeting Nov. 7. The MRC will be asked to vote in one of its two November meetings.
Transmission owners said last week that they will address transparency concerns over their load calculations but insisted the issue be resolved by their committee rather than in the Markets and Reliability Committee.
The MRC approved a problem statement in June after industrial customers complained that two-thirds of PJM’s transmission owners have failed to file FERC-approved tariffs disclosing the methodology their electric distribution companies (EDCs) use to allocate costs to load serving entities (LSEs). (See Industrials Call for Transparency in Transmission Owner Calculations.)
At a special MRC meeting Wednesday, members agreed to delay action on the problem statement to allow a response from transmission owners. Meg Sullivan, of Duquesne Light, chair of the Transmission Owners Agreement Administrative Committee (TOA-AC) told the meeting that the issue was under the jurisdiction of the TO panel and would be on its Nov. 6 meeting agenda.
Proper Forum
“We believe the forum to address the problem statement should be” the TOA-AC, she said. She said the TO panel would seek to “address it to everyone’s satisfaction.”
Attorney Robert Weishaar, who represents the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition, said he was willing to delay further action but not to concede that the TOs’ committee has jurisdiction over calculation of the total hourly energy obligations (THEO), peak load contributions (PLC), and network service peak loads (NSPL).
“I’m certainly willing to have the discussion with the TOs-slash EDCs,” he said, calling it a “practical step forward.
“But some aspects of the problem statement will have to come back to the MRC,” he added.
Weishaar said NSPL calculations are the transmission owners’ jurisdiction, but that other calculations are under MRC’s purview.
Equal Footing
David Scarpignato, representing retail provider Direct Energy, noted that only transmission owners have voting rights within the TOA-AC. “For everyone to have equal footing, it has to be in the stakeholder process,” he said.
But PJM’s Dave Anders, secretary of the MRC, urged a delay in further MRC action to give the TOA-AC “a couple months” to find a solution. He noted that most EDCs are represented in the TOA-AC. “There’s no reason to at least not have that discussion.”
David Pratzon, who represents generators, agreed. “Let’s not have this jurisdictional fight at this time if we don’t need it,” he said.
Weishaar said the lack of transparency undermines accountability, noting that utilities sometimes change methodologies without notice. The calculations are used to allocate energy, capacity, and transmission cost responsibility among LSEs.
Weishaar’s proposal would require Baltimore Gas & Electric, PECO Energy, PPL Electric Utilities, Dominion, Dayton, PEPCO, AEP, Duquesne Light Company, Rockland Electric, and Duke Energy to file Attachments M-1 or M-2 to the PJM OATT disclosing their methodologies. FirstEnergy, Commonwealth Edison, Public Service Electric & Gas, Atlantic City Electric and Delmarva Power & Light have already filed such disclosures, according to Weishaar.
Operators of gas-fired generators could include the costs of ensuring fuel supplies in their energy market offers under changes being considered by stakeholders.
The Markets and Reliability Committee Thursday approved a problem statement authorizing a task force created in March to consider allowing generators to include the cost of firm gas transportation in energy market offers and to reflect gas price changes between day-ahead commitments and real-time operation. PJM already allows dual-fuel generators to reflect the cost of backup fuel in their offers.
The problem statement also will allow the Gas Electric Senior Task Force (GESTF) to consider potential changes to the timing of day-ahead market clearing to align it more closely with the nominating schedules of gas pipelines.
Currently, units must place gas nominations before knowing whether they will be dispatched in the day-ahead market. Thus they may have to sell gas if their offer does not clear or derate during the morning peak if they don’t have enough gas.
The problem statement was approved without opposition, although Howard Haas, of Independent Market Monitor Monitoring Analytics expressed concern that it was “very prescriptive” in its discussion of potential solutions.
Haas noted that dual fuel generators can submit multiple cost offers reflecting gas and oil operation. Before making any changes, Haas said, the task force should consider “What is the nature of the risk, given current market rules, and who should handle the risk?”
The task force was formed to study potential reliability problems resulting from PJM’s increasing reliability on gas-fired generation. (See previous coverage on gas-electric coordination.) The group’s work is expected to continue through the 2016/2017 delivery year, during which PJM expects significant additions of gas-fired generating capacity to replace coal retirements.
Natural gas’ share of PJM’s generation has nearly tripled since 2007, rising to almost 20% of electric production in 2012.
Although PJM does not face any immediate reliability problems, officials say it could take five years to build new generation to respond to potential capacity shortages.
Because natural gas generation relies on “just-in-time” fuel supplies, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has warned that some plants may not be able to operate on the coldest days when gas demand for heating is at its peak.
FERC has held six technical conferences on the relationship between the natural gas and electricity markets since last year (docket #AD12-12-000).
To date, PJM has been working to improve coordination with gas pipelines through information sharing and cross training of dispatch personnel. At FERC’s Oct. 17 meeting, M. Gary Helm, PJM Lead Market Strategist, said PJM’s winter reserve margin — currently about 40% and projected to remain above 30% through 2016/17 — is “more than adequate.”
The Eastern Interconnection Planning Collaborative (EIPC) announced last week the selection of Levitan & Associates, Inc. to lead a Department of Energy-funded study on the ability of gas systems to supply gas-fired generation into the next decade. Levitan, of Boston, was chosen from among six consultants that submitted proposals.
Participating in the study in addition to PJM are ISO-NE, NYISO, MISO, TVA and the Independent Electric System Operator (IESO), which serves Ontario.
Billions are at stake. Vertical demand curves are bad. On that there was agreement at last week’s Markets and Reliability Committee meeting.
Beyond that, however, there was little common ground evident in a first reading of PJM’s proposal to cap the volume of Limited Demand Response that can clear in the capacity auction.
PJM’s proposal came to the MRC after winning support of 75% of the voters at the Capacity Senior Task Force. None of three alternatives proposed by states and demand response aggregators won support of more than a quarter of the 182 voters.
Katie Guerry, representing DR aggregator EnerNOC, which proposed one of the alternatives, said she would continue to seek work a consensus before the MRC votes on the issue next month. Some members suggested PJM merge its proposal with “Option B,” proposed by state consumer advocates and Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative (SMECO).
But there was no indication that PJM and the generation owners who strongly back the RTO proposal were willing to give any ground. If PJM is unable to obtain support of two-thirds of stakeholders in a sector-weighted vote of the MRC, the PJM Board of Managers can unilaterally decide to file the proposed changes with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
“Option B just doesn’t do it,” said Andy Ott, PJM executive vice president for markets. “It won’t address the reliability problems we’ve identified.”
Boom-Bust Cycle
PJM says the current rules result in a vertical demand curve that leads to boom-bust cycles in which the system “oscillates” between being long on capacity, with low prices, and being short on capacity with high prices.
PJM wants the new rules in place by February, when the RTO must post planning parameters for the 2014 Base Residual Auction.
Under current rules, 4.8% of PJM’s reliability requirement can be filled with limited demand response, with higher levels possible if excess capacity clears against the sloped Variable Resource Requirement (VRR) demand curve. PJM wants to reduce the 4.8% by all of the 2.5% Short-term Resource Procurement Target (STRPT) for a net of 2.3%.
The SMECO/Public Advocates proposal would reduce the 4.8% by only a portion — to be determined — of the 2.5% holdback.
A simulation found that PJM’s proposal would have increased total costs by $1 billion over actual costs in the 2015/16 auction and $800 million for 2016/17 while reducing the volume of limited DR clearing in the two years by 64%.
The SMECO/Public Advocates’ proposal would have increased costs by less than 1% over the two years while reducing the volume of limited DR by about one-fifth. (See Demand Response Changes Could Cost $1B Annually)
Cheaper Long-Term Solution
PJM officials said their proposal will ultimately save consumers money by ensuring adequate capacity and keeping energy market prices low.
The one-year snapshot provided by the simulation “is not looking at the big picture,” Ott said. “What we’re looking at is the long term low-cost solution.”
Ott said the projected increase in capacity costs “could be looked at as what we’re undervaluing long-term resource adequacy at today.”
Without reforms, Ott said, “we’re going to have a much bigger reliability problem that will be much more expensive to correct because there will be less time.”
CEO Terry Boston, who speaks infrequently at meetings, also weighed in, noting that energy market costs were the lowest in 10 years in 2012. “That’s because we’ve had adequate capacity to call on when we need it,” he said. Through September, load-weighted energy represented almost 78% of costs versus 13% for capacity.
Representatives of Exelon, Duke and AEP strongly backed PJM’s proposal.
Duke’s Ken Jennings said PJM’s baseload coal plants, which clear in the energy market at $40/MWh or less, “will go away” without changes to allow an increase in capacity prices.
Difficult `Value Proposition’
But those representing load were not convinced of the urgency for changes and said PJM’s proposal could damage the growth of demand response.
“We’re struggling to see it in the same way as PJM,” said Susan Bruce, representing the PJM Industrial Customers Coalition. Paying an additional $1 billion annually for capacity, she said, is “a value proposition that’s hard for us to get our hands around.”
“If there’s other, better, data [to counter the simulation estimates] we’d like to see it,” said Walter Hall, of the Maryland Public Service Commission.
Hall said the state has not taken a final position on the issue but is concerned that the capacity market limits and other changes proposed by PJM to allow more flexible deployment of DR threaten the state’s EmPOWER Maryland load-reduction programs, which were authorized by the state legislature.
“We want to see [DR] maximized,” Hall said.
DR gets the vast majority of its revenue from the capacity market. “Without those revenues the programs might not be able to continue and certainly wouldn’t be able to grow,” Hall said.
BGE, Pepco Impact
Baltimore Gas and Electric and Pepco Holdings Inc. have told state regulators that PJM’s proposals to dispatch DR by zip code and with as little as 30 minutes lead time won’t work with residential and small business participants, Hall said.
He said the state would consider “taking this up with FERC if necessary” to prevent restrictions on the program.
Gloria Godson, representing PHI, echoed Hall’s concerns. “We’re going to have significant customer confusion and customer education issues at a minimum,” she said.
Unlike PHI, which has divested its generation, BGE parent Exelon Corp., which owns more than 23,000 MW of generating capacity in PJM, stands to benefit from increases in capacity prices.
Jason Barker, representing Exelon, said reliability is the paramount issue in the current debate. “We shouldn’t lose sight of that in light of the economic interests,” he said. “BGE supports PJM’s proposals on the basis of reliability, comparability and market efficiency,” he added.
Ed Tatum, representing Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, said he agrees with PJM that there must be caps on limited DR. But he said PJM’s proposal “appears to go beyond what is really necessary.”
Eliminating the 2.5% “holdback” will cut the volume of limited DR clearing by half, he said. “That’s a major change … and a big transfer of wealth.”
He urged PJM to modify its proposal to find consensus with representatives of load — to “see if there isn’t something that we as a family can live with.”
‘Fabricated’ Emergency
The sharpest exchange of the more than hour-long debate came when Duke’s Jennings criticized the deployment of demand response, which set prices at $1,800 per MWh in some zones during heat waves in July and September.
Such deployments should be limited to “real emergencies,” he said, “not fabricated emergencies that arise because we decided to drive … generators out of the market.”
Guerry said Jenning’s comment was a “horrible misrepresentation of what happened in September.
“It wasn’t a fabricated emergency. [DR] was the last resource available in the dispatch stack before having to go to load shedding,” she said.
Others in the room shook their heads in disagreement with Guerry’s account. Although PJM did implement limited load shedding in the September event due to local reliability concerns, officials said they had generation in reserve that could have been called upon during the two heat waves. Guerry said later that she was referring specifically to PJM’s dispatch of DR in the ATSI region on Sept. 10 and 11, when it set prices at $1,800/MWh for several hours.
Guerry questioned the foundations of PJM’s proposal. “We continue to have questions about whether the vertical demand curve has been reintroduced,” she said.
She reiterated her call for a delay on the capacity market revisions pending other changes to increase the flexibility of DR. “We’re very concerned that we’re developing limits on a product that we have not finished … redefining,” she said.
Stakeholders will continue the debate at tomorrow’s CSTF meeting.
NRG Energy Inc. will pay $2.64 billion to acquire the assets of bankrupt Edison Mission Energy, adding nearly 8,000 MW coal, gas and wind generation. EME’s assets include four coal-fired plants in Illinois, about 10 gas-fired plants in California and more than 30 wind projects in 11 states. “These aren’t great assets, but they didn’t pay much for them,” said Morningstar analyst Travis Miller.
NRG is also among investors who paid $10 million for a stake in EcoFactor, a contender in the cloud-based home energy services and analytics sector.
Ameren Corp. will sell its Elgin, Grand Tower and Gibson City natural gas plants in Illinois to an affiliate of private equity firm Rockland Capital. Ameren said it expects after-tax proceeds of more than $137.5 million from the transaction.
The company also has received approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to sell five coal-fired power plants in Illinois — Duck Creek, E.D. Edwards, Coffeen, Newton and Joppa — to Dynegy Inc. Ameren announced in December it would sell its merchant power plants to focus on its regulated utilities in Illinois and Missouri.
Pilot programs in Michigan and Illinois suggest smart meters and variable pricing are changing consumers’ patterns of energy use. “Many of our customers consider it a challenge to see how much they can reduce their rate,” said a spokesman for DTE Energy.
Navigant Research says as many as 5% of customers could eventually adopt variable pricing but that penetration will be less than 1% by 2020 unless utilities act aggressively to eliminate barriers.