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October 31, 2024

NY Utility Thermal Energy Network Pilot Program Simmers

A year after New York ordered seven utilities to plan a series of thermal energy network pilot projects, none of the proposals is ready for regulatory consideration.

But progress is being made, and the Public Service Commission on Thursday issued guidance to help further develop the plans to the point at which construction can be authorized.

The Utility Thermal Energy Network initiative is a significant undertaking — one commissioner likened it to creating a new utility. A 2022 state law mandated that UTEN pilot projects be developed as a means of reducing emissions from New York buildings, which are responsible for 32% of in-state greenhouse gas production, the most of any source.

Some New Yorkers already have partly or completely electrified their homes, but many do not have this option, as they lack money or live in a multiunit dwelling. UTENs are seen as a way to reach them and contribute to the emissions reduction goals of the state’s landmark Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.

The PSC formally set the process in motion at its September 2022 meeting, opening Case No. 22-M-0429.

The 14 proposals submitted by the utilities would cost an estimated $362 million to $435 million.

Who will pay for this and over what period is one of the big questions. There also are technical challenges, particularly in densely built urban areas; a dearth of standards and performance metrics; the sticky question of whether fossil fuels can be burned to generate the heat UTENs will share; a state law complicating efforts to drill more than 500 feet deep for ground-source heat pumps; and a shortage of workers skilled to do some of the work.

All of this points to the value of pilot projects and the need to further refine them.

In September 2022, there was some grumbling among the commissioners about the details of the state law driving the case.

On Thursday, one of the commissioners called the legislation “clunky” and said its timeframes were not workable. Projects were to be approved within six months of the legislation taking effect.

But the process drew support from commissioners, even as they asked questions about some individual details or raised yellow flags about others.

That said, the pilots clearly are not ready for prime time.

The order the PSC adopted Thursday described the utilities’ proposals as “a reasonable first step” but insufficiently detailed. It sets out a five-stage planning, review, operation and assessment process to reduce risk and increase speed while preserving the public interest.

The Department of Public Service staff or the PSC itself will review each stage of each project and must sign off before it can progress to the next stage. At any point, the PSC can terminate a project or require it to be modified.

The order presents a strong bias against any use of fossil fuel combustion in the proposed pilot systems and notes the opposition of environmental advocates in submitted comments. But it stops short of banning fossil fuels, saying the PSC might consider their use to ensure reliability and hold down costs.

Estimated costs of individual proposals range in the tens of millions of dollars.

The most expensive initially was an ambitious Con Edison plan to recycle waste heat from a data center to provide heating, cooling and domestic hot water for the New York City Housing Authority’s Fulton Homes complex in Manhattan. Renovation plans subsequently announced by NYCHA knocked the price tag down from $67.9 million to $62.4 million.

KEDNY proposed a $67.7 million project with NYCHA that would link apartment buildings, commercial buildings and a community center in Brooklyn.

Niagara Mohawk proposes to draw thermal energy from the effluent of the Syracuse metro area wastewater treatment plant to serve a new mixed-use development at a cost of up to $66.8 million.

At the other end of the scale, RG&E proposed a $13.2 million system to serve 22 buildings in a disadvantaged Rochester neighborhood.

The order directs DPS staff to convene a technical conference within 30 days and orders the utilities to submit final proposals by Dec. 15. Proposals that are judged compliant will be done with Stage 1 at that point and can progress to Stage 2 of the review.

The process is progressing slowly, and the small freshman class could get even smaller. But PSC Chair Rory Christian called the effort one of the next big steps in moving toward the state’s clean energy goals.

“We’re not just creating a new system, we’re re-imagining energy use in New York state,” he said.

CAISO May Scrap Policy Catalog; Start from Scratch

CAISO is looking at scrapping a catalog of about 60 proposed policies, which include many stakeholder suggestions, saying the document has become “unwieldy” and it might be better to start over from scratch.

The ISO’s so-called “policy catalog” lists current, planned or potential policy initiatives aimed at enhancing CAISO markets. The catalog is used in crafting CAISO’s policy roadmap, which details what CAISO intends to take on over the next three years.

The policy catalog and roadmap were discussed Tuesday during a meeting of the Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM) Regional Issues Forum (RIF).

CAISO updates the policy catalog twice a year; stakeholders can submit suggestions at any time. With about 60 policy initiatives, the latest catalog, released in March, “has proven a little bit unwieldy,” said Becky Robinson, CAISO’s principal economist and director of market strategy and governance.

“There’s often more in the catalog than there is bandwidth to take on,” Robinson said.

CAISO is asking the RIF for ideas to make the catalog “more meaningful and relevant,” she said.

One option would be to consolidate the existing catalog, with stakeholders grouping and prioritizing the initiatives. The second option would be to start over with a “clean slate.” Stakeholders could submit new proposals or re-submit earlier suggestions.

In going from the catalog to the policy roadmap, CAISO would like to coordinate the plan with its strategic goals, resources and other planning processes.

RIF’s Expanded Role

Discussion of the policy catalog and roadmap comes as the RIF is expanding its role at CAISO.

The RIF is an independent, self-governing body that includes stakeholders from various sectors across the Western Interconnection. It provides feedback on WEIM-related issues.

RIF’s enhanced role was mentioned in January, when the WEIM Governing Body and ISO Board of Governors approved changes recommended in the WEIM Governance Review Committee’s Phase Three (EDAM) Final Proposal. (See CAISO Approves Day-ahead Market for Western EIM.)

In its proposal, the committee “encouraged the RIF to continue its transition from a role that was largely educational at its outset to one that is capable of providing advisory input as well.” The committee urged CAISO staff to support the transition.

Josh Walter, who chairs the RIF, said the forum’s evolution “provides the opportunity to have a more meaningful impact on the WEIM’s Governing Body and their decision-making.”

“This new role allows the RIF to discuss and opine on active stakeholder initiatives, provide direct input to the Governing Body on decisional issues independent of CAISO staff and serves as an important resource in market development and enhancement decisions,” Walter told RTO Insider.

During Tuesday’s meeting, WEIM Governing Body member Anita Decker said she’s looking forward to watching “this evolution of the RIF.”

“I really want to reinforce that the RIF really is part of the WEIM governance,” Decker said. “We want to hear from you.”

Noting that the Governing Body already is “highly supportive” of the RIF, Meg McNaul, the forum’s vice chair, pointed to two immediate goals for the group. One goal is to help stakeholders communicate their policy positions to CAISO through the existing process.

The second goal is a new endeavor for the RIF. The group will organize a roundtable discussion on CAISO’s policy catalog and roadmap so stakeholders can weigh in on prioritization of initiatives. The first roundtable is expected to take place early next year.

The RIF also has a longer-term role, McNaul told RTO Insider.

“As the EIM evolves, the RIF can play an important role in contributing to the regional dialogue on topics of importance to the stakeholder community, as shown by this week’s in-depth discussion of price formation topics,” she said.

What’s in the Catalog

Proposals in CAISO’s policy catalog are those that would require a stakeholder process and typically result in ISO tariff changes.

The latest version of the catalog lists, “Initiatives Currently Underway and Planned,” which include enhancements to resource adequacy, day-ahead markets, price formation and energy storage modeling.

Among its 57 “discretionary initiatives,” the catalog lists pumped storage with multiple pumping levels, balancing-area-authority islanding of internal regions, and a potential WEIM-wide transmission rate.

More Federal Outreach Needed to Support Clean Energy Development on Tribal Land

LAS VEGAS — The government and developers need innovative capital approaches and a commitment to building deep relationships to unlock the potential of clean energy development on tribal lands, experts said in a panel at this week’s RE+ conference held at the Venetian Expo and Caesars Forum.

However, the federal government is behind on outreach to tribal leaders about how to address financing and skill gaps, RTO Insider was told.

Tribal land accounts for 5.8% of the U.S. landmass but 6.5% of utility scale renewable energy generation potential, said Margaret Tallmadge, senior development manager at Navajo Power, a majority native-owned utility scale solar developer working with tribal nations and communities across the U.S.

Barriers to developing this “outsized potential” include “access to capital; limited opportunities to build technical capacity and internal capacity within tribes to pursue their own projects; and minimal knowledge of tribal sovereignty, federal Indian law and regulatory complexities in Indian country,” Tallmadge said.

Some of those barriers are exacerbated by the federal government, which is lagging in its trust responsibility to tribes, Paul Dearhouse, a senior consultant to the Tribal Energy Loan Guarantee Program at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Loan Programs Office (LPO), told RTO Insider. “We’re a few years behind in actually sending out a ‘Dear Tribal Leader’ letter, saying, ‘Here’s a program designed to finance tribal energy projects. What’s your thoughts? What’s your feedback? What are the best ways to do that?’ We haven’t done that to date.”

Tribal input is vital to develop appropriate ways of dealing with the unique challenges tribes may face, where they have land ideal for renewables development but little access to capital and often no experience working with developers whose incentives and financing structures are designed with short-term ownership rather than long-term land stewardship in mind.

Developers working with tribes also need to be innovative, balancing the need to craft project structures that enable the tribe to participate without a large capital outlay with financiers’ desire to have traditional PPAs, said Kevin Blaser, managing director of energy systems at Bakinaw Federal Contracting.

One example of where limited access to capital creates issues is with interconnection queues. While a pain point for most utility-scale development, they create an even larger challenge for projects on tribal lands, Dearhouse said. FERC orders and rules implemented at the RTO level to fix aging infrastructure can result in escalating fees to maintain a project’s position in the interconnection queue. Most tribes won’t have the large amount of capital needed to maintain their queue position, creating “a huge barrier,” but also an opportunity.

“This is a new frontier to make our LPO offerings better, to do a proper rulemaking for our program and to really listen to tribes that are in the queues across the nation, to ask: ‘Are there better ways that the Loan Programs Office could design the program to help address that specific gap?’” he said.

Developers Must Invest in Relationships

While funding mechanisms are important, developers seeking to build clean energy resources on tribal lands must start with building a relationship, Blaser said. “If you’re going to work or partner with tribes — and there’s a ton of benefits to doing that — you really have to take the time to learn their culture, learn what they’re trying to do, and understand what their strategy is, even if their strategy is ‘we don’t know.’”

There is no single right way of working with tribes, Blaser said: “Because there are 576 or so federally recognized tribes, there are 576 different ways of doing it. There are all those bodies of laws; every culture is different.”

A long-term perspective and partner mentality is essential as developers work with tribes, said Dave Harper, head of tribal engagement at the Alliance for Tribal Clean Energy. “You don’t want to be an outsider; you want to come in as a partner mentality. What does being a partner mean? It means that we’re going to be fair with each other, we’re going to be respectful. We’re going to be able to have dialogue and to sit down.”

Tribes need to use those partnerships when they have limited internal knowledge or bandwidth, Dearhouse said. “For utility-scale projects, many times a tribe has a part-time environmental coordinator, so they really have to bring in trusted partners like the fellow panelists here that can really help fill in that piece.”

A relationship with the LPO also is important for tribes seeking to deploy renewable projects on their lands. “We are long-term patient capital. The path that we walk to get a tribal applicant in the door through to funding can be long, months to even a couple of years, because of the steps that we take, but for a really responsive applicant, it can be expedited two months, but not every tribe’s ready.”

MISO: Expect More Expensive Annual Transmission Packages

MINNEAPOLIS — MISO’s lead planners on Tuesday told their Board of Directors that more expensive annual Transmission Expansion Plans (MTEPs) will become the norm, saying MTEP 23’s $9.4 billion package is a sign of future scattershot load growth in the footprint.

MTEP 23 contains 578 projects at $9.4 billion, more than doubling MTEP 22’s investment. (See MTEP 23 Catapults to $9.4B; MISO Replaces South Reliability Projects.)

Senior Director of Transmission Planning Laura Rauch acknowledged that MTEP 23 is the largest MTEP cycle in MISO’s history that doesn’t include long-range transmission plan (LRTP) projects or Multi-Value Projects.

During a meeting of the MISO Board of Directors’ System Planning Committee on Sept. 12, Rauch said most MTEP 23 projects are needed for reliability amid “localized load growth rather than bulk increases to load.” She characterized the bump in load as “spot load growth.”

MISO Director Nancy Lange asked whether the RTO anticipates “these lumpy, large investments” in MTEP cycles into the future.

Rauch said MISO members have indicated large industrial and commercial load additions will persist. She said MISO planners are expecting more economic growth in the footprint and sizable demand from new data centers and green hydrogen facilities.

MISO Director Barbara Krumsiek asked if funds from the Inflation Reduction Act are behind the jump in transmission needs.

“It’s such a substantial leap. Has it been long in the making or recent?” she asked.

Rauch said the upswing in spending appears to be occurring independent of government funding.

MISO Director Mark Johnson said despite the billion-dollar costs of two MTEP 23 projects, the projects differ from LRTP projects because they’re meant to be in service within three years, not the approximate decade allotted for the long-term planning.

Rauch said MISO remains “firmly committed” to recommending LRTP projects in MISO South despite the large amount of MTEP 23 investment in the region. She said the MTEP 23 projects don’t “preclude” separate, future solutions for long-term transmission needs in the South.

MISO: Reliability Risk Upped by 49 GW in Approved but Unbuilt Generation

MINNEAPOLIS — MISO’s quarterly Board Week explored the reasons behind MISO’s growing number of generation projects that have the stamp of approval to connect to the system but remain unbuilt.

49 GW Greenlit but Unfinished

MISO said many of its new resources that have struck generator interconnection agreements are beset by delays and cancellations, “mostly driven by build-related issues.” It said those lost and paused resources increase risk for a “future capacity or reliability attributes shortfall.”

By MISO’s count, 49 GW approved through its interconnection queue are awaiting construction, with an average delay to commercial operations of more than 650 days.

Scott Wright, MISO | © RTO Insider LLC

“That’s nearly 50 GW. This is pretty sizable. … This is a very pressing situation. We need to get iron in the ground. That’s what needs to happen,” Executive Director of Resource Planning Scott Wright said during a Sept. 12 System Planning Committee meeting of the Board of Directors. He added that MISO is negotiating new GIAs all the time and the postponed gigawatt amount is certain to rise by year’s end.

Wright said MISO’s plan to place an annual megawatt limit on project proposals, collect higher entry fees, enact escalating penalty charges and require developers to prove they have secured land will make for more certain generation projects that ultimately will mitigate long-term risk. (See MISO Sticks with MW Caps, Higher Fees to Pare Down Queue Requests.)

“With all the capital flowing in, it’s not hard to imagine a queue that’s 500 GW,” Wright said. He added MISO needs to be more selective about the projects it allows in to produce good network upgrade studies and approve projects that are a sure thing.

But Wright said incoming, mostly renewable generation likely won’t fare well in terms of accredited capacity. He also said EPA’s proposed carbon rule stands to pull the plug on “tens and tens” of gigawatts.

MISO has said EPA’s proposed emissions rule for fossil plants would supercharge retirements so they outpace the commercialization of new technologies like green hydrogen and carbon capture. (See EPA Power Plant Proposal Gets Mixed Reception in Comments.)

“Thank you so much for that very calming discussion,” MISO Director Mark Johnson joked.

MISO members at a Sept. 13 meeting of MISO’s Advisory Committee were light on answers as to how to get the 49 GW online sooner.

“These are not speculative projects. We ran into the pandemic and supply chain issues,” Invenergy’s Arash Ghodsian said.

Wisconsin Public Service Commissioner Tyler Huebner seconded that view. He said developers ran headlong into the pandemic, and then a federal investigation into solar panels hampered new capacity.

“It has been a compounding of issues on the solar side in particular,” Huebner said.

“It’s incredibly challenging to build out new infrastructure, new power plants,” Invenergy’s Eric Thoms added.

North Dakota Public Service Commissioner Julie Fedorchak suggested MISO and members simply allow more time to develop generation. She said special interest groups and landowners are getting more vocal in proceedings at state commissions and commissioners are having to extend timelines to hear them out.

“I think we need to just bake in more time. Not to give up, but just be realistic,” she said.

Ameren’s Jeff Dodd seconded that longer timelines probably are the new reality. He said there’s more “fatigue” these days among landowners who are asked to host infrastructure.

Clean Grid Alliance’s Beth Soholt asked MISO for more data behind the delays on new build capacity, including locations and whether local communities are opposing projects. However, Soholt said transmission construction must catch up to meet the needs of generation developers.

“We have a transmission problem — we’re working on it — but we did have a 10-year lag between the multivalue projects and [the first long-range transmission portfolio]. So, we have a backlog in some of the generation projects that want to connect,” she said.

Solholt said it’s important the nearly $2 billion Joint Targeted Interconnection Queue (JTIQ) portfolio of 345-kV lines is built to ease the queue backlog. She also said MISO’s Environmental Sector prefers members not simply leave fossil generation operating on the system for “longer and longer.”

WEC Energy Group’s Chris Plante said though MISO can complete scores of generator interconnection agreements, some projects still are “conditional until the transmission reinforcements are there.”

“I want to make sure we have a heightened sense of urgency,” MISO CEO John Bear said a day later at the MISO board meeting. He said MISO is up against a wave of generation retirements and similarly tapering reserves at PJM and SPP, which means MISO won’t be able to rely on imported power from neighbors in the future.

“We’re going to have to take care of ourselves,” he said.

Bear said while MISO can export on windy days, it often runs into trouble when wind drops off. He advocated for “dispatchable, long-duration assets” on the system. He said though MISO remains fuel neutral, “we’re big fans of reliability.”

NERC Seeks Comment on IBR Registration Proposals

NERC is seeking comment from industry stakeholders on proposed changes to the organization’s Rules of Procedure (ROP) intended to meet FERC’s order from last year to identify and register the owners of grid-connected inverter-based resources (IBRs).

The ERO posted the proposal for a 45-day comment period Wednesday, citing the commission’s November order directing NERC to describe its plans for registering IBRs (RD22-4). (See FERC Addresses IBRs in Multiple Orders.) NERC submitted its registration strategy in February, and FERC approved the work plan in May. (See FERC Approves NERC’s IBR Work Plan.)

FERC’s order was motivated by concerns over the ongoing transition from conventional generation resources to IBRs like wind and solar facilities. Currently, the ERO’s rules defining which resources must register with NERC, follow its reliability standards and respond to its alerts do not apply to many smaller IBRs. Updating the ROP is the first step in NERC’s work plan. The next stages are identifying candidates for registration, to be done by May 2025, and carrying out the registration process, to be finished by May 2026.

The changes before industry will apply to Appendices 2 (Definitions), 5A (Organization registration and certification) and 5B (Compliance registry criteria) of the ROP.

In Appendix 2, NERC proposes to add two new definitions — generator owner-IBR (GO-IBR) and generator operator-IBR (GOP-IBR) — to the registry criteria, while also updating the definition of “reserve sharing group” (RSG) to be consistent with that proposed by Project 2022-01 (Reporting ACE definition and associated terms).

The addition of GOP-IBR represents a change from the work plan NERC submitted in March, which included only GO-IBR. NERC staff said at the time that it felt GO-IBR could be used in reference to both owners and operators of IBRs, but at FERC’s prodding, it pledged to consider using additional terms.

Proposed changes to Appendix 5A include adding the GO-IBR, GOP-IBR and distribution provider-underfrequency load shedding (DP-UFLS or UFLS-DP) functions to the registration functions list. The DP-UFLS term indicates entities that own, control or operate UFLS-protection systems needed to implement grid protection programs but do not meet any of the other criteria for registering as distribution providers. NERC also proposes to clarify the Compliance Committee’s process for reviewing registration appeals.

The revisions to Appendix 5B would specify that entities registered as GO-IBRs or GOP-IBRs must own and maintain, or operate, inverter-based generation resources with an aggregate nameplate capacity of at least 20 MVA, which deliver their capacity to a common point of connection at a voltage at least 60 kV. Additional revisions will further clarify which entities should be considered candidates for registration, remove dated information and add the RSG function to ensure consistency with Appendix 2 and Project 2022-01.

The ERO will accept comments on the proposed changes through Oct. 30. After the comment period is over, NERC plans to submit the changes for approval at the Board of Trustees’ next meeting in December and then to FERC for final approval.

Efficiency and Reliability are Debated at House Energy Hearing

The partisan divide on energy efficiency and other policies was on display at a hearing Wednesday of the House Energy and Commerce’s Energy, Climate and Grid Subcommittee.

The panel examined a series of bills from Republicans, including the Guaranteeing Reliable Infrastructure Development (GRID) Act from Subcommittee Chair Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.), which would require any federal agency implementing a rule that affects reliability to bring it before FERC. Other legislation would delay a DOE proposal to implement new efficiency standards for distribution transformers for five years and limit the department’s ability to issue new efficiency standards across the board.

Duncan cited the recent NERC report that listed energy policy as threatening reliability as a reason to support his bill requiring more oversight by FERC. (See ERO Adds Energy Policy to Risk Priorities List.)

“There’s a looming resource adequacy crisis. We all need to take this morning seriously and do more to ensure reliability and affordability of the energy system,” Duncan said. “FERC has allowed the distortion of market incentives such as state and federal subsidies aimed at promoting the deployment of renewables to interfere with electricity price formation. This has contributed to the early retirement of reliable generation assets like nuclear and natural gas.”

EPA’s proposed power plant rule would add to the problem as it would limit the amount of time fossil plants can operate, he added.

The GRID Act is a broad proposal that would cover many potential government actions, making it hard to determine just how much work it would give to FERC, said David Ortiz, director of the commission’s Office of Electric Reliability.

“As a general matter, FERC and the ERO, NERC, have the necessary expertise to understand and comment on the potential effect of proposed regulatory actions on the reliability of the bulk power system,” Ortiz said. “However, fulfilling the goal of the GRID Act would require detailed, interconnection-wide modeling and analysis beyond FERC’s capability.”

FERC might not have access to the data needed to perform the studies required under the proposed bill, he added. Other organizations could do the analysis, with Ortiz pointing to DOE’s national laboratories.

Ranking Member Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) said everyone in the room agreed reliability is important and will be even more so in a warming world where summer power outages threaten lives.

“It’s clear, a reliable source of electricity is paramount to our nation’s health and well-being,” DeGette said. “I think that one of the ways to ensure we have reliable electricity is through energy efficiency.”

Increasing energy efficiency helps to stretch out the current energy supply to serve more consumers reliably, while also saving them money.

The Biden Administration has been implementing efficiency standards at DOE that would save up to $570 billion after DOE under President Trump missed dozens of deadlines under the law to either issue a standard or explain why none was needed. DeGette argued the bills before the committee do not deal with reliability.

“Instead, what I see is bills that in the name of reliability, would gut energy efficiency standards that are saving Americans money, and that are cutting down on our energy use,” she added.

Mid-Carolina Electric Cooperative CEO Bob Pauling in testimony came out against a proposed DOE standard that would require the industry to stop using standard “grain oriented electric steel” distribution transformers at a time when supply chains for the vital infrastructure already are stressed.

“The utility industry needs manufacturers to be 100% focused on increasing output, not adapting to new, government mandated efficiency requirements that are not technologically feasible nor economically justified,” he said in written testimony.

DOE Assistant Secretary for Electricity Gene Rodrigues noted that the transformer standard still is just a proposal, which the agency was required to take up under a consent decree, and said the department takes the issue of electric reliability and the need for more transformers seriously.

“That is why DOE expressly asked stakeholders for comment on timelines required for compliance with the proposed standard, as well as comments on the availability of key components,” Rodrigues said.

The efficiency standard is just part of DOE’s work on transformers. It also is working with the rest of the government and other stakeholders to help bolster the domestic supply chain for key grid components for decades to come, he added.

“We have provided national projections of the long-term demand growth for distribution transformers to provide America’s manufacturers with investment certainty that will help them to expand capacity,” Rodrigues said. “We have connected manufacturers with suppliers of difficult-to-source grid components. We have utilized legislation passed by this Congress to provide funds for distribution transformers, such as the $10 million in transformer rebates and $10 billion in 48C tax credits.”

NYPSC Continues Legal Battle Over NYISO’s 17-year Amortization

The New York Public Service Commission on Tuesday petitioned a federal court again to reconsider FERC’s approval of NYISO’s proposed change to the timeline for demand curves in its installed capacity market auctions (ER21-502).

This is the third time the PSC has asked the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule on NYISO’s proposal to implement a 17-year amortization period when calculating the net annual cost of a hypothetical peaking power plant in its capacity markets and comes after FERC declined the PSC’s request for a rehearing on Monday. (See NYPSC Seeks FERC Rehearing on NYISO’s 17-Year Amortization.)

NYISO is mandated to update the assumed operational lifetime of a hypothetical fossil fuel plant in its capacity market auctions every four years, but, in response to aggressive state climate and energy legislation, the ISO proposed reducing that assumed lifetime from 20 to 17 years.

The ISO argued the 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act imposes such strict net-zero standards for fossil fuel plants that their operational use would be dramatically reduced; however, the PSC contended the adjustment to a shorter period hurts New York ratepayers and is speculative.

The PSC reiterated previous arguments when requesting the court review FERC’s decisions and its denial for a rehearing, including that a 17-year period could cost consumers $400 million, claiming FERC should have waited to rule until addressing other pending rehearing requests related to NYISO’s compliance and asserting that FERC’s decision departs from precedent.

The petition also cites a dissent submitted by Commissioner Mark Christie, who expressed concerns about the May approval of the 17-year timeframe, which reversed previous rejections by FERC. Christie opted to not elaborate, citing pending rehearing requests related to that approval order.

Despite the legal wrangling, NYISO already has implemented the 17-year amortization period as part of its demand curve reset.

UN Report Calls for Quicker Global Emissions Reductions

While the Paris Agreement has led to some climate progress, the world is not on track to meet its goals, and deeper cuts to emissions need to start happening soon as midcentury approaches, the U.N. said in a report released last week.

The report — the first “global stocktake” by the U.N., released Sept. 8 — is meant to assess the global response to climate change and inform the discussions at the next Climate Change Conference, to be held beginning Nov. 30 in the United Arab Emirates.

“I urge governments to carefully study the findings of the report and ultimately understand what it means for them and the ambitious action they must take next,” U.N. Executive Secretary of Climate Change Simon Stiell said. “It’s the same for businesses, communities and other key stakeholders. While the catalytic role of the Paris Agreement and the multilateral process will remain vital in the coming years, the global stocktake is a critical moment for greater ambition and accelerating action.”

When the Paris Agreement was adopted in 2015 — with the goal of limiting the increase in the global average temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2050 — the forecasts suggested the temperature would rise by 3.2 C by the end of the century, World Resources Institute’s Jamal Srouji said on a web conference Wednesday. Forecasts dropped last year to 2.4 to 2.6 C, with the possibility of reaching 1.7 to 2.1 if countries’ net-zero-emissions targets are fully implemented.

“While progress has been made, the report makes clear that the world is not on track to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement and that much more action is needed now on all fronts,” Srouji said.

The report underscores that “system transformations” are needed to hit the midcentury goals, which would avoid some of the worst consequences of climate change but still require some adaptation measures. The last decade saw temperatures average 1.1 degrees Celsius higher than the pre-Industrial Revolution average, while concentrations of CO2 hit 410 parts per million in 2019 — a level higher than in the previous 2 million years.

Global emissions need to peak before 2050 to stay on track to keep warming at 1.5 C or lower. While the report said that needs to happen as soon as possible, peaking will take longer in developing countries than it will in the developed world.

In the energy industry, system transformation involves eliminating the use of unabated fossil fuels and scaling up renewable energy and other clean sources, the report said. Phasing out unabated fossil fuels will be a hotly contested topic at climate negotiations going forward, said Rachel Jetel, co-director of WRI’s Systems Change Lab.

“But without tackling the primary source of the problem — burning and, importantly, financing fossil fuels — we will not be able to solve the climate crisis,” she added.

Energy system mitigation measures could account for 74% of total global mitigation in reaching net-zero emissions, the report said.

Even the head of the International Energy Agency recently said new large-scale fossil fuel projects now carry not only climate risks, but also financial risks, Jetel said. Economics and the urgency around climate change are coming together, she said.

“In addition to transitioning away from fossil fuels, annual renewable energy capacity additions should more than triple by 2030,” Jetel added.

Renewable energy trends have been promising recently, with the unit costs for solar and batteries both falling by 85% from 2010 to 2019, while the cost of wind was down 65% over the same period. That has led to a significant increase in solar deployment, with growth rates of more than 10 times, and electric vehicles by 100 times.

Strengthening power grids and storage is critical to unlocking the potential of renewable energy sources and to providing clean power as transport, industry and buildings electrify, the report said.

ISO-NE Recommends Delaying FCA 19

ISO-NE is recommending a one-year delay of Forward Capacity Auction 19 (FCA 19) to implement resource capacity accreditation (RCA) changes and determine whether to move to a prompt and seasonal capacity market, the RTO told the NEPOOL Markets Committee on Tuesday.

Since June, the RTO has been taking stakeholder feedback on the best path forward for FCA 19 following a delay caused by a software issue in the RCA process, as well as on a potential move to a prompt and/or seasonal market. (See NEPOOL Debates Options for FCA 19.) FCA 19, scheduled for February 2025, corresponds with Capacity Commitment Period 19 (CCP 19), which runs from 2028 to 2029.

After laying out a series of options in previous meetings, ISO-NE endorsed “option 2A,” which would provide some extra time to finish the RCA process for FCA 19 and further discuss the merits of capacity market changes.

Chris Geissler of ISO-NE said this option “recognizes the importance of simultaneously implementing a revised capacity accreditation framework that coincides with the elimination of the minimum offer price rule (MOPR) for FCA 19.”

The RCA project is intended help the organization “more accurately reflect resource contributions to resource adequacy.” ISO-NE has expressed its desire to time the implementation of these changes with the scheduled elimination of the MOPR. (See FERC Accepts ISO-NE’s MOPR Transition Plan.)

“While some stakeholders prefer maintaining the status quo (FCA 19 without RCA), the ISO is concerned it may not adequately prepare the region for the changing resource mix and expected clean energy system,” Geissler said.

Clean Energy Stakeholders Weigh in

A range of clean energy stakeholders outlined questions, comments and concerns about the potential capacity market changes. The comments highlight the lack of consensus among various renewable energy groups, along with uncertainty about how a prompt seasonal market would affect resources.

Deepwater Wind Block Island, a subsidiary of Ørsted, supported implementing RCA changes and moving to a prompt and seasonal capacity market for CCP 19, writing that the move would limit uncertainty for long-term investments while helping reliability. The company added that ISO-NE’s preliminary analysis of the RCA design indicated it would enable offshore wind resources to clear more capacity.

“The combination of incorporating RCA and the removal of the MOPR in CCP 19 will enable offshore wind resources the opportunity to compete with other existing resources on a more even playing field,” wrote Eric Wilkinson of Ørsted. “Ratepayers will benefit from these changes by increasing the amount of capacity being provided from clean energy resources.”

In contrast, representatives of New Leaf Energy and SYSO Inc. expressed their opposition to delaying the auction and supported holding it under the current rules without RCA changes. The companies argued that any delay of the auction would introduce uncertainty and hurt new resources looking to connect to the grid, because new generators rely on the forward capacity market to secure capacity rights.

“Postponing the FCA without a replacement process for generators to secure these rights will prevent new resources from knowing whether they can access the capacity market, threatening the financial viability of these projects, as well as the pace of the clean energy transition,” the memo said.

The companies added that delaying the auction could lead to a backlog of projects in the interconnection queue once a new process is implemented.

ISO-NE told the Markets Committee it might need to separate the interconnection process from the capacity market to comply with FERC Order 2023 no matter which capacity market design ultimately is chosen (RM22-14). (See FERC Updates Interconnection Queue Process with Order 2023.)

“To address FERC Order 2023, the ISO will be required to migrate to a single annual cluster process, with equal queue positions and shared upgrade cost allocation within the cluster, for studying new interconnections,” ISO-NE noted.

In an August letter to ISO-NE, Advanced Energy United, which advocates for clean energy policies on behalf of its member companies, wrote that there are significant “information gaps” surrounding the effects of ISO-NE’s stated options for CCP 19 on new resources, retirements, the RCA process and subsequent capacity commitment periods.

“We do not feel stakeholders can make informed decisions without further explanation addressing these information gaps,” Advanced Energy United wrote. “While we appreciate the time constraints driving ISO to move quickly to land on a preferred path forward, we believe the significance of the decision necessitates a fulsome exploration of the implications of each pathway, and we are not yet satisfied that ISO-NE and NEPOOL have completed such an exploration.”

Aleks Mitreski of Brookfield Renewables expressed concerns in a presentation to the Markets Committee on Tuesday relating to the entry and exit of resources, along with transmission upgrades. Mitreski added that some of the issues with the forward capacity market likely could be fixed without overhauling the entire market design.

Next Steps

ISO-NE proposed making an initial FERC filing by the end of this year to delay the auction, followed by another filing next year to either finalize the one-year delay including the RCA changes or to create a new schedule to implement a prompt auction for FCA-19, which would be held in 2028.

ISO-NE will present the detailed tariff revisions at the October MC meeting, followed by a November MC vote and a Participants Committee vote in December.

Also at the October MC meeting, ISO-NE will resume discussion on the RCA proposal, which likely will extend into next year. The RTO is targeting an August 2024 vote on the proposal.

ISO-NE also has commissioned the Analysis Group to conduct a qualitative and quantitative analysis of the potential effects of moving to a prompt and/or seasonal market. The consulting firm will need to work on a tight schedule, as ISO-NE expects it to present to the MC the scope of its work in October, the methodology in November and results in December.