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December 24, 2024

Grid Takes a Licking, Keeps on Glowing

Outages by Fuel Type (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)
(Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)

PJM overcame the loss of nearly 40,000 MW of generation yesterday, keeping the lights on in the second day of an arctic blast that set a new winter demand record.

The new winter record – 141,500 MW — came during Tuesday evening’s peak as PJM operators scrambled to overcome 38,000 MW in generation outages. The new record exceeded the Feb. 5, 2007 mark of 136,675 MW by nearly 5,000 MW.

“We really exhausted every megawatt we had on the system” Tuesday, Adam Keech, director of wholesale market operations, told the Market Implementation Committee in a briefing yesterday.

Generator outages peaked at 39,520 MW at 8 a.m. Wednesday, as load fell to 134,500.  As of 8 p.m. last night, about 27,000 MW of generation was idled as demand peaked at about 125,600.

PJM operators also overcame gas pipeline curtailments that idled up to 9,046 MW of generation yesterday.

“The pipelines came through pretty well,” Gary Helm, lead market strategist, told the MIC. “We only saw two compressor outages.”

Keech said operators’ ability to forecast load was hamstrung by a lack of comparable temperature data.

“We couldn’t find a temperature set [with extreme cold throughout the RTO] for the last decade. And if you go back that far the [RTO] footprint was so different it’s probably not even useful.” Keech said.

PJM resorted to a 5% voltage reduction when reserves grew short about 8 p.m. Monday, triggering scarcity pricing ­— sending prices briefly above $1,000/MWh. “It hasn’t been this cold in 20 years,” Keech said. “It’s an outlier. That’s why we have scarcity pricing.”

Arctic Blast Boosts LMP's Above $1000/MWh (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)
Arctic Blast Boosts LMP’s Above $1000/MWh (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)

Prices were above $200/MWh for most of the period from Monday evening through Tuesday evening, peaking at more than $1,800/MWh during Tuesday’s morning and evening peaks.

Officials also rescinded outage requests and implored customers to reduce consumption.  And they benefited from an unexpected influx of more than 8,000 MW of imports Tuesday morning — more than half from MISO — that allowed them to cancel an emergency deployment of demand response.

Had the steps not been sufficient, officials said they might have had to resort to rolling blackouts to prevent more widespread outages.

“How close were you to a bigger problem? One unit away?” one stakeholder asked Keech.

Weary from lack of sleep, Keech smiled uneasily. “It depends on the size of the unit,” he said.

PJM Cuts Voltage, Dispatches DR in Arctic Blast: UPDATE

UPDATE: AS OF 5 P.M. TUESDAY, PJM SAID 36,000 MW OF GENERATION, 20% OF INSTALLED CAPACITY, WAS UNAVAILABLE DUE TO FORCED OUTAGES.

PJM operators dispatched demand response this morning after cutting voltages and calling on spinning reserves last night as frigid temperatures stressed generators and created record loads across the RTO.

Officials said they would likely call on DR again to meet tonight’s projected evening peak of 142,000 MW.  That would break the RTO’s all-time winter peak of 138,600 — set this morning.

Officials were forced to take action last night after losing more than 2,000 MW of generation as peak loads hit 132,000 MW, 5,000 MW above PJM’s forecast.

RTO officials called on spinning reserve from about 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., then issued a 5% RTO-wide voltage reduction from 7:50 to 8:50 p.m. “We were able to recover,” Adam Keech, director of wholesale market operations, told the Operating Committee in a briefing this morning.

Today’s morning peak, which broke the previous 2007 record, led officials to call on about 1,900 MW of demand response about 6 a.m. and to purchase 1,100 MW of emergency power from NYISO and MISO between 6 and 11 a.m.

The dispatch of DR pushed prices from $1,000/MWh to $1,800/MWh – over $2,000, including congestion, in some locations.

Officials said they could be forced to issue a second voltage reduction or brief rolling blackouts if conservation efforts and imports fail to make up any shortfalls this evening.  “We do not expect to take that [load shed] action,” Executive Vice President for Operations Mike Kormos said during a media call today.

PJM and state regulators urged consumers to reduce energy use during the emergency. “Every little bit helps,” Kormos said. “There’s 60 million people in our footprint. If everyone does their part, that could easily add up to one nuclear plant, which is 1,000 MWs.”

“We’re very close [to generation limits],” Kormos added. “The last couple hundred megawatts could allow us to not have to take any forced interruptions.”

Officials did not immediately have details on the number of generators out of service due to the cold. Kormos said some plants suffered mechanical problems and tube leaks or were unable to convert to backup fuel. “We’ve seen everything,” he said.

PJM received a waiver from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under Order 787, allowing RTO officials to share information with natural gas pipelines serving the region. PJM held conference calls with pipelines Friday and Monday and individually validated gas nominations for the RTO’s gas generators.Keech said there were no natural gas curtailments.

State Briefs

Zion Fuel-Rod Removal to Begin

A critical part of the years-long Zion nuclear plant decommissioning is set to begin in January with removal of the spent-fuel rods. The work is vital to EnergySolutions, the company that obtained the Nuclear Regulatory Commission license from plant owner Exelon in order to undertake the decommissioning. Also next month, a court is scheduled to hear an appeal of a federal district court ruling that dismissed a citizen suit over handling of the $800 million decommissioning fund.

More: Chicago Tribune

ComEd Rates Increase

The Illinois Commerce Commission approved a distribution rate increase for Commonwealth Edison that will mean a 5.5% rise in an average bill. The increase is to cover $340 million the utility spent to upgrade its facilities with infrastructure improvements and smart grid components.

More: Chicago Tribune

KENTUCKY

Neighbors Sue LG&E on Coal Ash

Cane Run Generating Station (Source: LGE)
Cane Run Generating Station (Source: LGE)

Residents near LG&E’s Cane Run Generating Station have filed suit against the utility and its parent, PPL, for relief from blowing coal ash. The company plans to replace the 645 MW plant with a natural gas generator in 2015. The suit, which seeks class-action status, asks for damages, civil penalties and action to cap the ash disposal site.

More: Lexington Herald-Leader

MARYLAND

Offshore Lease Sale Announced

The Interior Department announced it will lease 80,000 acres off the Maryland coast for wind development. An auction could be held next year and turbines built as soon as 2018, the director of the Maryland Energy Administration said, although she allowed that schedule might be optimistic. According to a study, the sale area could generate from 850 to 1,450 MW.

More: The Washington Post

NEW JERSEY

Bill Would Push Offshore Wind

Assy. John Burzichelli
Assy. John Burzichelli

A bill in the state Assembly (A-4538) would have electric utilities finance offshore wind projects, with cost recovery from customers and 2.75% extra as a commission. The measure’s sponsor, Deputy Speaker John Burzichelli, is among lawmakers who say they are frustrated by the Board of Public Utilities’ failure to adopt financing regulations that could help get wind development going.

More: NJSpotlight

Pinelands Pipe Drama Escalates

Four former governors announced their opposition to South Jersey Gas’s proposed pipeline through the Pinelands National Reserve. Meanwhile, a member of the Pinelands Commission who spoke against the project was ordered by the state attorney general’s office to stay out of the proceedings because of what the office said was a conflict of interest.

At a Dec. 4 meeting, members of a commission committee erupted against the proposal and the pressure they felt to grant the waiver required for it. The commission may vote on the project — intended to repower the BL England generating plant — on Jan. 10.

More: Asbury Park Press; The Philadelphia Inquirer

Big Questions About EVs

State law required New Jersey auto dealers to sell more electric vehicles in the next several years, but it’s not clear that customers will buy the cars, in part because inadequate charging infrastructure is creating “range anxiety” in potential buyers.

Meanwhile, lawmakers are trying to address the absence of a task force that was supposed to have figured out how to implement the 2003 law setting zero-emission vehicle goals.

More: NJSpotlight

Solar City Opens Center

Solar City Van (Source: Solar City)
(Source: Solar City)

Solar City opened an 8,500-square-foot operations center in Camden County to serve its growing market in the area. The company, which installs residential solar systems, says it has about 1,800 customers in the state. It said the location allows crews to travel to sites and install systems often in less than a day, a big improvement over projects that used to take up to three days.

More: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Retail-Website Bill Passes

The state Senate followed the Assembly in approving a measure authorizing the Board of Public Utilities to create a website for customers to compare competitive retail electricity prices. The bill (A-2132) allows the BPU to require retailers to submit information.

More: Assembly Democrats; Energy Choice Matters

NORTH CAROLINA

Duke Demolishes Lee Stacks

Demolition specialists imploded twin 300-foot-tall smokestacks last week at Duke Energy Progress’s H.F. Lee Steam Plant in Goldsboro. The coal-fired plant was opened in 1950. It was replaced a year ago by a 920 MW natural gas plant. More implosions are planned next spring to demolish the coal plant’s boilers.

More: NewsObserver.com

NCUC Approves Duke Green Rider

The Utilities Commission approved a Duke Energy Carolinas experimental program that will allow energy-intensive customers to power new load — such as a new or expanded facility — from renewable sources.

Green Source Rider customers will ask for an annual amount of energy and renewable energy certificates to be produced or procured over a specific term. Duke will match the supply source and contract term request with generation from a Duke source or through a power purchase agreement with another supplier.

“We designed a program that responds to certain customer requests for more renewable energy, but that does not adversely affect other customers,” a company official said.

More: Duke Energy

OHIO

High Court OKs Wind Farm

Element PowerRejecting citizens’ objections, the state Supreme Court upheld the Ohio Power Siting Board’s approval of Black Fork Wind Energy’s application to build an up-to-200 MW wind project in Crawford and Richland counties. Black Fork’s parent, Element Power, of Portland, Ore., expects construction to begin in 2015, after it secures power purchase contracts and reapplies for tax credits.

More: The Columbus Dispatch

PENNSYLVANIA

PECO Upgrades Substation

PECO completed a $7 million substation improvement project in Delaware County, installing a 138-kV capacitor bank and related equipment.

More: Wall Street Journal

VIRGINIA

APCO Seeks Rate Increase

Appalachian Power sought State Corporation Commission permission for a $36 million improvement project on the company’s 36-mile portion of the Cloverdale-Lexington 500-kV line, a line it shares with Dominion Virginia Power. The project, to address reliability and market issues, is the utility’s alternative to a more extensive proposal that was rejected. APCO wants to put the improved facility in service in June 2016. At the same time, APCO asked for a $49.9 million distribution rate increase.

More: Appalachian Power; APCO

Federal Briefs

Senator Max Baucus
Senator Max Baucus

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus released a discussion draft of legislation that would consolidate 42 energy tax incentives into two technology-neutral incentives for lower-emission electricity and transportation fuel.

But news that President Obama would appoint Baucus ambassador to China made the outlook for the proposal even more uncertain than it was already. Sen. Ron Wyden (D., OR), Baucus’ expected successor as chair, has not committed to support of Baucus’ package, but has been exploring technology-neutral options himself.

The Baucus draft would keep existing tax credits in place through the end of 2016. Facilities placed in service after then would receive a technology-neutral tax incentive based on greenhouse gas emission levels. While wind power’s credits would remain at about current levels, solar projects, which use the investment tax credit more than the production tax credit, could lose.

More: National Journal; Politico; EarthTechling

FutureGen Faces Another Challenge

FutureGen AllianceThe Sierra Club filed suit over the federal government’s beleaguered FutureGen project, possibly adding to the years of delay the carbon capture and sequestration project has already had. The suit targets Ameren Energy Resources, which owns a plant in Meredosia, Ill., that is to be retrofitted for the government-supported project. Environmental permits for the project do not ensure sufficient controls, the Sierra Club said.

More: Journal-Courier

States Urge EPA Flexibility

Delaware, Illinois and Maryland were among 15 states that urged the Environmental Protection Agency to let states use flexible approaches to cutting greenhouse gas emissions instead of requiring individual power plants to install emission controls. In a letter, the states — which also included Washington, California and Minnesota — said their flexible approaches have succeeded in reducing emissions, and argued their methods could be templates for others as EPA writes rules for existing power plants.

More: Reuters

Bill Would Fix Munis’ Problem

A bipartisan group of senators introduced legislation to loosen Dodd-Frank restrictions that have restricted public power utilities’ ability to engage in swap deals for risk management. The Public Power Risk Management Act (S.1802) is similar to a bill that passed the House unanimously.

The change would put municipal utilities on the same footing as other utilities, raising the limit on transactions for which a muni’s counterparty has to register as a swap dealer. The current low limit makes counterparties reluctant to engage in the transactions.

More: Sen. Joe Donnelly

EIA: Gas Overtakes by 2035

Natural gas will exceed coal as the largest single power generation source around 2035, the Energy Information Administration said. By 2040, EIA said in its preliminary annual energy outlook, gas will supply 35% of U.S. power and coal 32%. The agency sees average electricity use growing at about 0.9% a year.

More: UtilityDive

DOE Outlines Storage Vision

Dept of Energy DC Headquarters (Source: DOE)
Dept of Energy DC Headquarters (Source: DOE)

The Department of Energy outlined near- and long-term performance targets for power grid storage, including an AC storage system with a capital cost of less than $250/kWh able to run for more than 4,000 cycles. The report was prepared for Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chair Ron Wyden. “The expansion of the electricity system can be accelerated by the widespread deployment of energy storage, since storage can be a critical component of grid stability and resiliency,” DOE said.

More: DOE; Greentech Media

Co-ops Get More RUS Loans

Cooperatives in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Virginia are among co-ops in 25 states that got Rural Utilities Service loans for power projects in the latest round of government awards. The total of $1.8 billion is mostly for power line upgrades and generation, but includes about $45 million for smart grid technology. On RUS’ latest list are EnergyUnited Electric Membership Corp. in North Carolina; Bedford Rural Electric Co-op in Pennsylvania; Cumberland Electric Membership in Tennessee and Kentucky; and BARC Electric Co-op in Virginia.

More: Greentech Media

Company Briefs

Dominion LogoAs USEC’s Megatons to Megawatts program ends, Dominion Resources noted its own role in burning up uranium from Russian nuclear warheads. According to the company, Dominion’s nuclear stations in Virginia, Connecticut and Wisconsin used the equivalent of 429 warheads. Dominion Virginia Power’s two North Anna reactors used the equivalent of 99 warheads and the two Surry reactors the equivalent of 136.

More: Richmond Times-Dispatch

FirstEnergy Makes Executive Moves

James Pearson (Source: FirstEnergy)
James Pearson (Source: FirstEnergy)

James Pearson, senior vice president and CFO, will begin reporting to President and CEO Anthony Alexander with the Jan. 1 retirement of Pearson’s boss, Mark Clark. Clark, executive vice president for finance and strategy served 37 years with the company.

John Judge, vice president and chief risk officer, will report to Pearson. The moves are among a number of changes the company said will expand the responsibilities of key executives and reflect its focus on its regulated businesses.

More: FirstEnergy

PJM Offers New Methods for Downloading Data

PJM last week began offering new ways to download Locational Marginal Price data from the PJM website with the introduction of a “data miner” application.

PJM Vice President for Market Operations Stu Bresler said the application was developed in response to stakeholder requests for a more efficient ways to download large amounts of data.

Data Miner Screen Shot (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)
Data Miner Screen Shot (Source: PJM Interconnection, LLC)

The application allows querying and filtering by date range, pnodes and “topic,” with choices of xml of csv outputs. The data can be obtained through a user interface or scheduled for regular retrievals through a “rest-based” web service.

Four sets of data will initially be available, with others added later: DA LMP (daily LMP, energy prices); RT LMP (daily LMP, energy prices, Ancillary Services Optimizer); DA monthly aggregates (monthly LMP, monthly energy prices); RT monthly aggregates (monthly LMP, monthly energy prices, ASO).

Members will be able to continue using any code they developed to “scrape” the data previously.

Manual Changes

The Markets and Reliability Committee last week endorsed changes to manuals 3A, 14A and 28:

Manual 3A: Energy Management System (EMS) Model Updates and Quality Assurance (QA)

Reason for Changes: General update.

Impacts: Updates contact information; definitions; Adds model validation and benchmark tests in response to FERC audit finding 13.

Manual 14A: Generation and Transmission Interconnection Process

Reason for Changes: PJM/MISO JCM update.

Impacts: Defines times when interconnection request information will be exchanged and studied; Reinforces JOA requirements to impose the applicable study criteria; Describes Transmission Service Request studies to be performed.

Manual 28: Operating Agreement Accounting

Reason for Changes: Section 5 – ER13-2413; Section 6 – Docket #ER14-297.

Impacts: Changes section 6.3 to increase penalties for resources that fail to provide assigned amounts of Tier 2 Synchronized Reserve. Changes section 5.2.6 to clarify the requirements that must be satisfied in order for wind resources to be eligible to receive Lost Opportunity Cost (LOC) credits.

Uplift Task Force Broadens Scope

Members voted last week to expand the scope of the Energy Market Uplift Senior Task Force to incorporate reactive cost issues originally assigned to a separate panel.

The Markets and Reliability Committee approved a revised charter for the EMUSTF, which it created May 30 to minimize energy market up-lift charges and develop methodologies for allocating make-whole payments (see MRC Approvals 5/30/13.)

The changes incorporate into the charter the scope originally assigned to a subgroup on Day-Ahead Reliability and Reactive Cost Allocation (DARRCA). The DARRCA group met nine times from December 2012 through October 2013 and was attempting to create solution packages when the process “stalled,” PJM’s Dave Anders told the MRC.

“The consensus was that the issue would be better dealt with in the context of all uplift,” Anders said.

The task force continued its work under the expanded scope with a meeting Dec. 20.

MRC First Reads

The Markets and Reliability Committee heard first readings last week on two proposed problem statements:

Credit Requirements for Qualifying Transmission Upgrades

Transmission developer H-P Energy Resources LLC asked members last week to consider reducing what the company says are excessive credit requirements for Qualifying Transmission Upgrade (QTU) projects.

QTUs are small transmission projects — typically less than $10 million — that can be offered into the capacity market to relieve transmission constraints in Locational Deliverability Areas (LDAs).

Attorney Janine Durand told the Markets and Reliability Committee that the current rules require credit postings that can be multiples of the construction cost, creating a barrier to entry that artificially raises capacity prices in LDAs.

As an example, Durand cited a $7 million reconductoring of a 230 kV double circuit that could increase the Capacity Emergency Transfer Limit (CETL) into an LDA by 900 MW. Under the current credit requirement, the developer would be required to post security of 0.3 Net CONE — $32.57 million, based on the last Base Residual Auction.

The MRC will be asked next month to approve a problem statement and issue charge to consider changes.

Gas-Electric Task Force Communication Issue

The Markets and Reliability Committee will be asked next month to approve a revision to the Gas Electric Senior Task Force’s problem statement to respond to a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission order authorizing the voluntary sharing of non-public, operational information between gas pipelines operators and electric transmission operators. (See FERC OKs Gas-Electric Talk.)

The FERC order is intended to reduce the likelihood of operational problems for gas-fired generation, PJM’s Sean McNamara told the MRC last week.

At 1000th FERC Meeting, Ex-Chairs Reminisce — and Talk Their Books

By Kathy Larsen and Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON – Former chairs gave a primer on the last 36 years of federal energy policy Thursday as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission celebrated its 1000th open meeting.

Former chairs Betsy Moler (term 1988-97, chair 1993-97), James Hoecker (1993-2001, 1997-2001), Curt Hebert (1997-2001, 2001) and Joseph Kelliher (2005-2009) talked of their achievements, regrets and recommendations for the future. Charles Curtis (1977-81), FERC’s first chair and the last chair of the agency’s predecessor, gave his reminiscences by video.

They praised FERC’s bipartisan decision making and its expanded authority and regretted the persistence of seams between RTOs. Two, who now represent utilities, gently chided the agency for the aggressiveness of its enforcement actions.

The formers were introduced by Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur in what was, coincidentally, her first meeting as acting chair. “We’re so thrilled that you’re here,” LaFleur gushed. “These are FERC celebrities, so I’ll keep the bios short.” (See video of the meeting.)

FERC’s Origin: Replacing a “Broken Agency”

Curtis recalled FERC’s origin as a replacement for the Federal Power Commission, a “broken agency” with a 15-year backlog of cases and low respect in the appellate courts. “It was a mess,” he said.

For the first few years, the new commission held day-long meetings twice a week — very unlike the brief, mostly ceremonial meetings of current practice.

“I’m very pleased to note that in the ensuing years … its reputation, both in the appellate courts and Congress, has radically improved,” Curtis said.

Order 888

Moler headed the agency when it implemented the Energy Policy Act of 1992, issued the landmark open access transmission Orders 888 and 889, and moved into its current headquarters.

When she took office, she recalled, there was limited competition among generators, tight power pools but no Regional Transmission Organizations. Wholesale power sales required individual commission approval. “The incumbent utilities owned and governed the wires — fiercely, I might add,” she said.

She acknowledged the growth of competition since, but she lamented the commission’s “ineffective federal siting authority” and noted that “seams persist” between RTOs

Order 2000

Hoecker chaired the agency when it issued Order 2000, which created the framework for Regional Transmission Organizations.

He noted the commission’s increased subject matter expertise and the expanded enforcement authority it obtained since his departure.  He said that the agency now looks more like the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“I think going forward FERC will be much more capable of managing crises and understanding markets in real time.”

West Coast Energy Crisis

Hebert served as chair for only seven months in 2001, a stormy period marked by power crises in California and the west, created by California’s dysfunctional rules and exacerbated by predatory traders at Enron and other power marketers.

The commission came under fire from Congress and the states for not enforcing powers it lacked — and wouldn’t gain until after the 2003 blackout. “Whereas generally you have the states pushing back [and saying] we don’t want you in our business… they wanted help, they wanted enforcement,” Hebert said.

Despite progress since, Hebert said, “the end of electric restructuring is nowhere in sight, after two decades — or more if you date it back to PURPA,” the 1978 Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act, which required utilities to buy power from cheaper “qualifying facilities” operated by independent power producers.

Praise for Bipartisanship

Kelliher led the commission’s implementation of the 2005 Energy Policy Act, which gave the agency authority to set mandatory reliability standards and to issue civil penalties of up to $1 million per day.

He praised the agency for its history of bipartisanship, contrasting it with the SEC, Federal Communications Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, where he noted party-line votes are common. “The fact that we served different presidents but we’re not saying tremendously different things is very important and a source of strength at FERC,” he said. “It means policy is more longstanding, more permanent.”

Regrets, They Have a Few

Commissioner Philip Moeller asked the formers what they might have done differently, or what they didn’t do that they wish they had.

Moler said she was tempted to extend competition to the retail level in Order 888. “I didn’t have the votes,” she said, adding, “I also know all hell would have broken loose. Just ask Pat Wood,” a reference to the 2001-2005 chair, whose proposed Standard Market Design sparked a backlash from states and Congress.

Hoecker cited Enron, whose traders’ schemes, he said, “flummoxed” the agency.

Kelliher said he would have liked to make more progress on transmission cost allocation.

The question was whether the commission should act by rule making, something like Order 888 but limited to RTOs. “We thought about it,” he said, but didn’t know what framework to use. “The models hadn’t been in place long enough” to have confidence in them, he said.

Kelliher also said he wished he had been more aggressive in addressing the PJM-MISO seam in 2006 — an issue still bedeviling policymakers today. (See FERC to Look Over PJM’s, MISO’s Shoulders at Joint Talks, p.1)

“You should do it,” he told the sitting commissioners. “Don’t be seduced like I was” by promises, he advised.

Talking their Books?

All of the former chairs worked in the industry after their FERC tenures and some of their recommendations to the current commission appeared to reflect those interests.

Moler, who headed Exelon Corp.’s Washington office as executive vice president for government affairs and public policy from 2000 until her retirement in 2010, said the most important thing facing FERC now was “protecting the integrity of competitive markets.”

She decried the “meddling” in markets by Congress and states through tax credits and renewable portfolio standards. These influences are “absolutely pernicious,” she said, and “do lopsided, crazy, wacky things to competitive markets.”

Enforcement Critique

Hebert and Kelliher both suggested that FERC has been overzealous in its enforcement.

Hebert remarked that his point of view has changed from his time as a young lawyer and state legislator, through his service on the Mississippi Public Service Commission and after his FERC term, a stint as executive vice president at Entergy Corp. between 2001 and 2010. He’s now a partner at the Jackson, Miss. law firm of Brunini Grantham Grower & Hewes, and a visiting scholar at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington.

“Enforcement actions done well can protect the consumers,” he said. “Enforcement actions not done well — punitive in nature maybe when they shouldn’t be — can move things in the wrong direction and hurt the consumer.”

Kelliher, now NextEra Energy Inc.’s executive vice president for federal regulatory affairs, called for “a little more Christmas spirit in the enforcement mission.”

“FERC always said its policy was ‘firm but fair’ enforcement. I feel like I’m Jacob Marley’s ghost carrying chains to confess it was really was more firm than fair,” he said. “I’m asking you to do a better job than I did in helping good companies comply.”

Order 1000

Hoecker, senior counsel at Husch Blackwell LLP in Washington, is counsel to WIRES, a trade group representing both incumbent utilities and independent companies that own transmission.

He urged commissioners to work on Order 1000 implementation. “You’re going to make mistakes. It’s not going to be perfect,” he said. “You have got to get it done in my lifetime. I want to see these markets happen.”