Search
`
November 17, 2024

Carper Throws Progressive Bill into Senate Permitting Debate

In the ongoing congressional wrangling over how to streamline and accelerate permitting for energy projects and transmission, Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) has lobbed a new, largely progressive proposal into the mix, with a strong focus on clean energy and environmental justice.

Labeled a “discussion draft,” the Promoting Efficient and Engaged Reviews (PEER) Act incorporates some of President Joe Biden’s permitting priorities, such as using “programmatic,” regional environmental reviews to cut time frames and establishing chief community engagement officers at federal agencies involved in permitting. But it also goes several steps further. (See Podesta Lays Out Biden’s Priorities for ‘Permitting Reform’.)

While Republican lawmakers have advocated for a narrow interpretation of environmental impacts in reviews required under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), Carper wants these studies to look at the potentially positive environmental effects of a project, “including greenhouse gas reductions,” according to a summary of the bill. It would require that consideration also be given to indirect and cumulative impacts, as well as the “foreseeable adverse effects of not completing a project.”

NEPA reviews would also have to include “meaningful public involvement opportunities” and community impact reports to address environmental justice concerns, according to the summary. It would also allow a federal agency to require a developer to include a community benefits agreement as part of an environmental review.

Such agreements generally specify certain social and economic benefits, such as jobs and job training, that a community affected by a project will receive.

The bill also calls for $500,000 to be allocated for a feasibility study of setting up a single online permitting portal. An additional $20 million per year for five years would be authorized for the establishment of “linked interagency environmental data collection systems to standardize and facilitate the use of” data across agencies, project sponsors and the public to support environmental reviews.

To ensure adequate staff for permitting, the bill would provide $45 million per year, again for five years, “to fund scholarships, fellowships and research at institutions of higher learning relevant to the permitting process.” At the same time, federal agencies would be directed to “conduct human capital planning” and staff up to meet accelerated permitting processes.

In perhaps its most radical proposal, the bill would set up a process under which federal agencies could identify “commercially viable, nationally significant projects” and get them permitted and shovel-ready before opening competitive bidding for “nonfederal project sponsors” to develop them. The permitting process would also resolve any issues that might lead to litigation.

It would also promote development of clean energy projects on brownfield sites and authorize EPA to provide financial assistance to states to hire additional staff with the environmental and legal expertise needed to process them.

In a Thursday press release, Carper, who chairs the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, said the bill would improve permitting “without undermining our nation’s bedrock environmental protections.”

Pointing to the passage of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act, Carper said, “We need efficient permitting processes that allow our nation to meet our climate goals with the urgency that science demands. The PEER Act would help accelerate clean energy projects and create good-paying jobs across our country while ensuring that communities have a say in infrastructure projects.”

On Monday, Carper announced he will not run for reelection in 2024.

Five other Democratic senators joined Carper as cosponsors of the bill: Brian Schatz (Hawaii), Sheldon Whitehouse (R.I.), Tina Smith (Minn.), Chris Murphy (Conn.) and Alex Padilla (Calif.).

“It would be a huge, missed opportunity to let the transit and clean energy projects in the IRA and the [IIJA] get bogged down in our outdated and unwieldy permitting processes,” Murphy said in the press release. “If it takes a decade to get a permit to build offshore wind, expand passenger rail service or upgrade our electric grid, we won’t ever accomplish our climate goals.”

Opportunity for Bipartisanship

The PEER Act is the latest in a series of bills being offered from both sides of the aisle on the issue of permitting reform, which could become a major bargaining chip as Biden and House Republicans attempt to negotiate a package to raise the debt limit before a potential default.

The House of Representatives’ Limit, Save, Grow Act (H.R. 2811) includes the previously passed Lower Energy Costs Act (H.R. 1), with provisions that would accelerate permitting of fossil fuel projects, but without any mention of clean energy or transmission.

GOP bills sponsored by Sens. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) and Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) aim to accelerate fossil fuel permitting or undercut NEPA and the Clean Air and Clean Water acts. Under Capito’s bill, for example, if an agency failed to complete a NEPA review within two years, the project would automatically be considered as meeting all NEPA requirements.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), chair of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, reintroduced his Building American Energy Security Act, which drew some bipartisan support in the Senate in December but ultimately failed.

Points of agreement include limiting the time frames for NEPA environmental impact reports to two years, while less intensive environmental assessments would be capped at one year. A limit on litigation could also be part of any compromise: Carper’s bill would provide three years for legal challenges to an approved project — half the six years currently allowed — while Manchin’s would allow for 150 days and Barrasso’s and Capito’s 60 days.

Cross-agency coordination, with one federal agency leading the permitting on any one project and releasing a single environmental impact statement or assessment, also has general bipartisan support, as does expanding the use of programmatic reviews and categorial exclusions.

Programmatic environmental reviews can assess impacts in a specific region or a transmission corridor and then be used for multiple projects within the region or corridor. Categorical exclusions are waivers, finding that a project will have no significant environmental impacts. Carper’s bill would allow one agency to use another’s categorial exclusion after consulting with the other agency and providing an opportunity for public comment.

Flash Points

While Capito and Barrasso have both called for permitting reform to be technology- and project-neutral, their respective bills and H.R. 1 tilt heavily toward fossil fuels. Carper and the White House tilt toward renewables and zero-emission projects, as well as transmission.

Manchin’s bill goes for an all-of-the-above approach, with provisions that the president must draw up a list of 25 geographically and technologically diverse, high-priority energy projects that would also be a high priority for permitting. But his must-have is the completion of one of his own high-priority projects, the Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline.

A major sticking point may be the expanded role Democrats, including Manchin, want FERC to play in federal permitting of transmission projects, which so far the GOP has not supported. Two issues, FERC’s backstop siting authority and cost allocation, are key points in Manchin’s and Carper’s bills, as well as in ongoing debates between states and FERC. (See related story, FERC Backstop Siting Proposal Runs into Opposition from States.)

Manchin’s bill would streamline FERC’s backstop siting authority, which allows the commission to permit transmission projects of national interest in the event a state denies or does not permit such projects within a year. It also calls on the commission “to ensure project costs are allocated to customers that receive proven electricity benefits.”

Carper’s bill provides a more detailed vision of FERC’s role in transmission planning and permitting, including amendments to the Federal Power Act “to allow the United States to proactively plan and build the broad regional grid it needs.”

On cost allocation, Carper’s bill would direct FERC to “account for the full scope of benefits from transmission investments, such as renewable energy transmission and connection, reliability and resiliency improvements, and meeting decarbonization goals,” according to the summary. “Rules must require portfolio-based cost allocation and prioritize interregional cost-benefit considerations over regional ones.”

At a recent ENR hearing and in a Saturday op-ed in The Intelligencer, Manchin urged senators to put politics aside and work toward the difficult but necessary compromises needed for a bipartisan bill. He also said he would be scheduling “more sector-specific energy permitting hearings in the weeks ahead to learn more about the issues these projects face and [that] inform our work.”

But as long as permitting reform is tied to the debt ceiling debate, the possibility of finding more substantive common ground and compromises appears less likely, according to ClearView Energy Partners.

“Both sides have rolled out rhetorical postures that we regard as nonstarters,” ClearView said in a recent rundown of the permitting bills now in play. “A bigger challenge may be the limited overlap between both sides’ maximalist aspirations, as this leaves little room for a consensus mini-deal before the early June debt ceiling [deadline]. …

“If permitting reform were inevitable, its proponents would not be looking for a ‘must-pass’ bill like the debt ceiling, and if its momentum were insurmountable, it would not require a forcing event like imminent default to propel it.”

Mass. Climate Advocates Want Polluters to Pay for Resilience

BOSTON — Massachusetts legislators and climate advocates called for a billion-dollar fine on the country’s largest carbon-polluting companies at a meeting of the legislature’s Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources on Wednesday.

The committee took public testimony on 44 bills from both houses concerning climate and energy policy. A large portion of the testimony focused on several bills that would fund and support climate resilience.

Prior to the hearing, climate activists rallied in front of the Statehouse in favor of Senate Bill 481 and House Bill 3581, which would create a “climate change superfund” by imposing fines on the largest carbon-emitting companies in the country based on their proportional shares of historic emissions. The fine would impact entities responsible for more than 1 billion tons of carbon-equivalent emissions and is designed to generate $75 billion over 25 years.

The fund would support projects such as seawalls, stormwater management upgrades, adaptation improvements to transportation and grid infrastructure, ecological restoration projects, and cleanup projects after storms.

“The question now is who is going to pay for the damage caused by climate change,” said Jon Grossman of SEIU local 509, which represents nearly 20,000 educators and service workers in the state. “If we don’t take appropriate action, this will come to a significant cost to taxpayers and also a significant cost to Massachusetts residents who rely on public services. …

“As we in the labor movement know, when we look around, we can see that there is money out there, and it seems that the folks that caused this crisis have a lot of it; fossil fuel companies are among the most profitable in the world,” Grossman added.

Similar legislation was proposed in 2021 by Democrats at the federal level and has been introduced at the state level this year in New York and Maryland. Representatives for groups, including the Massachusetts Youth Climate Council, Communities Responding to Extreme Weather, Massachusetts Climate Action Network, 350 Massachusetts, Elders Climate Action and the Mass Power Forward coalition, spoke in favor of the bills, highlighting the responsibility of major fossil fuel companies in driving the climate crisis and blocking climate action.

“It is well documented that at least Exxon hired scientists more than 30 years ago to study the effects of their product, found it was detrimental to all living species and then lied about it,” said Cabell Eames, political director of the Better Future Project. “The level of deceit is of epic proportions, and at this point to allow the fossil fuel industry to continue business as usual without holding them accountable is enabling an industry that has proven criminal in its wanton fraud and disregard for the human race.”

Youth Climate Coalition Activists (Mass Joint Committee on ENR) FI.jpgActivists from the Massachusetts Youth Climate Coalition call on the committee to advance Senate Bill 481, which would impose a fee on the state’s largest climate polluters. | Mass. Joint Committee on Energy and Natural Resources

Another bill focused on addressing climate fallout, filed as House Bill 750 and Senate Bill 472, would fund climate resilience projects by imposing a fee on property insurance, which advocates said would avoid financial burdens for low-income residents. Representatives of the Conservation Law Foundation, the Nature Conservancy, Mass Audubon, the North Central Climate Change Coalition and My Brother’s Table spoke in favor of the bill.

“While the funding proposed in this bill is only a small portion of what’s needed, its aim … is to turbocharge programs in Massachusetts that support, enhance and supplement climate adaptation and mitigation programs that have equitable goals and outcomes,” said Sam Anderson of Mass Audubon.

Advocates also testified in support of a bill that would open the door for advanced research into nature-based solutions to dealing with climate effects.

Representatives of the University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston Harbor Now and the Boston Children’s Museum spoke in favor of House Bill 3581 and Senate Bill 458, which would ease regulatory hurdles for research and demonstration projects looking at nature-based mitigation approaches to rising sea levels and severe storms. These could include projects mimicking natural coastal marshes, dunes and bluffs.

“These nature-based systems can offer many advantages over concrete sea walls, such as decreasing erosion, not increasing it. They are less expensive to construct, and they also provide many environmental and social co-benefits that promote social justice and equity,” said Paul Kirshen, professor of climate adaptation in the School for the Environment at UMass Boston.

Lawmakers and advocates also testified in support of a variety of bills focusing on ocean acidification, carbon sequestration in marine ecosystems, increasing staffing of climate agencies in rural municipalities and mitigation of ecosystem impacts from offshore wind development.

Addressing Embodied Carbon Emissions

Climate advocates also spoke to the committee about the importance of addressing the lifecycle emissions associated with building materials, from concrete to petroleum-based insulation. Frequently referred to as embodied carbon, these emissions account for about 11% of global emissions, according to data from the Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction and the International Energy Agency.

“When it comes to embodied carbon, we’re really talking about the elephant in the room,” said Logan Malik of the Massachusetts Climate Action Network. “In order for us to build and decarbonize our buildings holistically, we have to incorporate embodied carbon. But at the same time … very, very little is being done in our state to actually do that.”

House Bill 764 would establish an expert advisory board on embodied carbon, commission a report to inform additional legislative action, incorporate embodied carbon into the state’s stretch code and require the Department of Energy Resources to issue recommendations for reducing embodied carbon emissions.

Banning Fossil Fuel Extraction

Legislators also presented bills to the committee that would ban fracking and offshore drilling in the state, citing climate, environmental and public health concerns.

Rep. Carmine Gentile (D), who sponsored House Bill 815 to ban all forms of fracking in the state, highlighted the risks of groundwater contamination, as well as the link between fracking and children born with congenital heart defects.

“There’s no fracking at the moment in Massachusetts, but there’s a real potential of future oil and gas development that could take place in the Hartford Basin, which stretches into Western Massachusetts,” Gentile said.

Meanwhile, Senate Bill 464 would ban offshore drilling infrastructure, exploration and development in Massachusetts state waters, along with any onshore infrastructure to support offshore drilling. Sen. Julian Cyr (D), the bill’s sponsor, said that while the Biden administration does not plan on opening up the East Coast for offshore drilling, “the threat of an administration that would open up the Eastern Seaboard to coastal drilling is very real.”

ACP Finds Renewable Deployments Slowed in Q1

New renewable deployments were down in the first quarter this year as the industry continues to face headwinds, the American Clean Power Association said Monday.

The Inflation Reduction Act’s historic incentives helped to grow the development pipeline to 140 GW by the end of the first quarter of 2023, up 11% from the same time last year, the group said in its Clean Power Quarterly Market Report. But those developments are too early to impact installations, which have slowed for the first time since 2017.

“The clean energy revolution is underway,” ACP CEO Jason Grumet said in a statement. “We have the technology, financial capital and workforce to power our economy with clean, affordable and secure energy. There is broad bipartisan support for American energy innovation. But the clean energy transition will not succeed unless Congress and Governors enable the siting and construction of new energy facilities and support the build out of transmission that is required to bring clean power to the people.” 

The first quarter saw 95 projects come online, totaling 4,079 MW of capacity, which was down 36% from the first quarter of 2022 and the lowest first-quarter total since 2020. Those installations included 2,200 MW of solar, 1,418 MW of wind and 461 MW of storage.

Florida was home to the most installations in the quarter with 974 MW, knocking Texas — with 701 MW — off the top spot that it had occupied “quarter after quarter.”

Wind installations were down the most, falling 50% from the first quarter last year, while storage and solar were down by 32% and 23%, respectively.

The decline can be attributed, in part, to the large quantity of projects that experience delays in the first quarter, with ACP saying 12 GW reported delays in the first three months of 2023, including 6.4 GW that had already experienced previous delays. That compares to just 6.9 GW of delays reported in the first quarter last year.

“Seesawing regulations due to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s ongoing anticircumvention investigation delayed or forced changes to solar module delivery plans,” ACP said. “Furthermore, long release timelines for modules detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection further pushed back delivery timelines for some major solar projects too.”

When added to capacity that is still delayed from the previous two years, some 63.3 GW of projects are facing delays now, and two-thirds of the delayed projects are solar power.

New projects might be down, but the clean power industry continues to have a very healthy development pipeline with 81,509 MW of solar, 20,176 MW of wind and 19,621 MW of storage all under development. Hybrid projects with storage paired with wind or solar make up 61% of the storage pending development.

A total of 406 projects are under construction across 44 states, totaling 48,957 MW. Florida appears unlikely to repeat as the number one state in the future as it is home to just 774 MW of new construction, compared to 12,684 MW in Texas, 6,564 MW in California and another five states with more than 2,000 MW under construction.

Projects in advanced development total 89,850 MW in 48 states, with Texas home to 11,272 MW, New York at 8,678 MW, California at 8,196 MW, Virginia at 6,214 MW and Indiana at 5,289 MW.

New York Fine-Tuning its Market for Energy Storage 

ALBANY, N.Y. — The state with the highest goal for installed energy storage also has some market structures that make it hard for the private sector to pursue those goals.

The 2023 Capture the Energy Conference & Expo featured ideas on moving past the challenges in an environment where storage is expected to become indispensable to vehicles, structures, the grid and society itself.

Storage is boosted by favorable government policy, tax incentives and intensive research. It is hampered generally by some of the same challenges that face other renewable energy sectors: rising costs, still-evolving technology, workforce and supply chain shortages and interconnection delays.

In New York, there is the added barrier of a wholesale power market that is not favorable for storage. But the state, its ISO and the industry are working on these things.

“We have an industry that is really at the center of the transition,” William Acker, executive director of the New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium (NY-BEST), said as he welcomed the crowd to the expo Wednesday. “This conference is going to delve into those opportunities … we’re going to hit head-on some of the key challenges, also.”

Batteries get attention because they are an available technology, but as its name indicates, NY-BEST advocates for all other forms of energy storage, too.

Doreen Harris, CEO of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, emphasized how important storage will be to a future grid where intermittent wind and solar provide a sizable percentage of the state’s electricity.

“When we think about how we get from here to there, storage is, full stop, critical to enabling the decarbonization that we are talking about,” she said.

The state’s strategy relies on storage in three ways, Harris said: to serve as a power source for peak demand; to make the grid more flexible; and to be an avenue for developing new technology.

The state has set a goal of 6 GW installed by 2030, but it may need 12 GW by 2040 and up to 21 GW by 2050, she said.

“Those are really big numbers, but they’re also very necessary numbers. That’s why we’re all here today, to drive toward that outcome.”

Developing a viable form of long-duration storage — days-long rather than hours-long — is essential to meeting those goals, Harris said, and is a focus area for the research support NYSERDA provides.

Barriers

Large-scale deployment of storage in New York has not kept pace with the ambitions set for it.

NYSERDA attributes this to two primary factors: the slow interconnection process and the structure of the wholesale energy market.

Interconnection delays are universal, but energy storage faces some unique market challenges in New York.

“As identified in the 2022 Energy Storage Roadmap, current wholesale market revenue is insufficient to support energy storage deployment,” a NYSERDA spokesperson said, explaining that this includes “market uncertainty, market pricing not fully representative of system needs, and the fact that market prices are based on current system conditions.”

Beyond this, the market is not particularly volatile: There aren’t the price swings that allow storage operators to make a steady profit by charging batteries with low-cost power and selling the power back into the grid for a significantly higher price.

The state’s response has been to propose an index storage credit mechanism for storage projects larger than 5 MW. It is being drawn up by NYSERDA and the Department of Public Service; the Public Service Commission will have final approval.

NYISO President Rich Dewey told the audience that the ISO is developing ways to enhance energy market products such as a hybrid pricing scheme for co-located storage and generation resources and a ramping product that would incentivize a rapid response capability to replace the gas turbine peakers that are targeted for retirements.

Attorney Adam Conway, a partner at the Couch White law firm who specializes in energy project development, touched on some of these issues when he spoke at the conference.

He told NetZero Insider that the proposed credit aims squarely at the problems facing storage development and is similar in concept — but not details — to the well-received renewable energy certificate system.

“What they’re proposing is really a brand-new compensation scheme,” Conway said. “My understanding is that it’s not one that has been used elsewhere yet.”

Other obstacles face storage development, including local opposition that is often based in ignorance of the technology, he said.

But he said it is important to remember that these are the early days of energy storage. He said he is reminded of the early years of community solar, which Couch White was heavily involved in.

“It felt like at the time it was taking a lot of time to get the program off the ground,” Conway said. “I think you can draw some parallels to battery storage.”

Extensive community education helped build public acceptance of solar, and NYSERDA is mounting the same effort with storage, he said.

“My sense is this is just going to take time.”

Infrastructure

Bart Franey, vice president for clean energy development at National Grid (NYSE: NGG), spoke of the upgrades being made to prepare for renewable energy and storage. New York’s power grid was designed a century ago, he said, and is not optimized to support repeated large-scale charging and discharging of batteries.

“We see that short- and long-term storage are essential to overall reliability of system operations,” Franey said. “However, short-duration storage works best to address transmission security, while long-duration is needed for supply security.”

“A four-hour battery works very well in addressing transmission security,” he said. “However, we need hundred-hour dispatchable resources to address supply security.”

Venkat Srinivasan, who heads the Argonne National Laboratory’s Collaborative Center for Energy Storage Science, said the United States lags in developing a domestic manufacturing ecosystem and needs to not just catch up with China but leapfrog ahead of it.

“You really want to go beyond what is happening in the rest of the world,” Srinivasan said, and that means moving beyond lithium battery technology as the market matures, and beyond batteries.

There is much interest and activity in the non-lithium battery pace, he said, but no clear front-runner yet among those alternative technologies.

Key strategies for the United States developing a leadership role in batteries are maximizing attractiveness for investments; supporting research, innovation and commercialization; helping industry secure access to critical minerals and low-carbon infrastructure; developing education and training curricula; and most of all, establishing a workforce development pipeline.

“The one big topic that kept coming up is workforce,” Srinivasan said. “Everybody is worried about the workforce. This is probably one of the biggest challenges they’re going to face in the energy transition.”

Necessity

New York Public Service Commission Chair Rory Christian reiterated the importance of getting it right. “Storage is going to offer a degree of flexibility that is only going to become more valuable over time.”

The PSC and NYSERDA are developing a roadmap for the buildout of grid-scale storage in New York state, he said, but the technology has many behind-the-meter applications as well, particularly when combined with smart meters.

“I believe through the proper alignment of incentives, through proper establishment of markets, battery storage in a residential setting can completely transform our relationship with energy at a level not previously imagined,” Christian said.

NYISO President Dewey spoke of the balance the grid operator is trying to maintain as dirty-but-steady fossil fuel generation assets are retired in favor of clean-but-intermittent renewables.

The first tranche of peaker retirements was May 1, he said, and there needs to be caution about prematurely shutting down the others.

NYISO has changed its annual reliability study to a quarterly study because the rate of change has accelerated so much.

“When you think about the promise that storage brings to that transition, and the facilitation of that transition, it gives us so many more options, and it’s such a valuable tool,” he said.

NYISO is proud to have developed the first set of integrated energy storage rules, Dewey said, and is looking at how to fine-tune the market signals that are needed to attract the right mix of development.

He acknowledged a common complaint at this conference and elsewhere: the slowness of the interconnection process.

“I know it’s viewed as a barrier and a pain point,” Dewey said, but NYISO has a lot of work to do. On Thursday morning there were 520 projects in the bulk system interconnection queue. Among them there were 178 storage proposals rated at a combined 28 GW.

“That is a phenomenal increase from where we were even a couple of years ago,” he said, and he only expects the numbers to grow.

NYISO has added personnel and is looking at revising its processes and procedures to streamline the interconnection process, Dewey said.

“It’s not quite as simple as just throwing resources and manpower at it. But I want you to know that we recognize how important this is, and you have our commitment that we’re going to very aggressively approach that.”

NY Office of Renewable Energy Siting Survives Court Challenge

An appeals court has rejected an attempt to derail New York state’s streamlined permitting process for large renewable energy projects.

Several upstate New York towns and ornithological organizations argued in a June 2021 petition that the state Office of Renewable Energy Siting violated state law as it drew up the set of uniform standards and conditions it adopted earlier in 2021.

A county-level judge ruled in favor of ORES later in 2021 and an Appellate Division court rejected the petition in a ruling issued Thursday. Because the ruling was unanimous, there is limited avenue to appeal to the state’s highest court.

New York codified renewable energy goals through its landmark Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act in 2019. The Accelerated Renewable Energy Growth and Community Benefit Act of 2020 established ORES to speed up the buildout of renewables by creating a standardized environmental review and permitting process for projects with capacity of 25 MW or larger.

Developers of projects sized 20 to 25 MW can also opt in.

After ORES determines an application to be complete, it has one year to issue a final decision on a siting permit, or six months if the project is on a brownfield.

Local government and community groups are allowed to provide input and participate, but ORES leads the process. Local ability to delay and thwart projects has contributed to New York’s reputation as a slow, expensive place to develop renewables.

New York has a strong home-rule tradition, and an indeterminate but vocal percentage of its residents are opposed to utility-scale wind and solar installations. ORES’ ability to override local laws does not sit well with them.

In their court challenge, the six towns and seven organizations sought annulment of the regulations through which ORES accomplishes its mission.

They said the state had given power plant siting authority to an understaffed and inexperienced new agency that outsourced the writing of its regulations to an energy industry consultant that represented 25 wind and solar developers in New York at the time.

In drawing up the regulations, the petition charged, ORES disregarded the requirements to avoid or minimize adverse environmental impact and to allow meaningful involvement of citizens.

ORES gave itself the power to authorize clear-cutting of forests, level hilltops, destroy wildlife habitat, kill birds and bats, interfere with bird migration and eliminate farmland, the petition states, and in so doing, to degrade the character of rural New York.

Thursday’s appellate ruling rejected the towns’ and organizations’ challenge and most of the arguments on which it was based.

It found that ORES did classify the rule-making process incorrectly, as the petition alleged, but said that was not cause to invalidate the result of that process.

The ruling also rejected the claim that ORES had not fully considered the environmental implications of its rule making or followed the correct procedure with them. “A review of the vast record reveals that ORES took a thorough and hard look at the potential negative environmental impacts associated with the proposed regulations,” the judges wrote.

The judges also rejected the assertions that ORES had exceeded its statutory authority and that ORES’ ability to pre-empt local laws violates the home rule provision of the state constitution.

“Unreasonably burdensome local laws would thwart the ultimate goals of the legislation,” they wrote.

ORES did not return a request for comment for this story.

On Thursday, the same day the ruling was issued, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced the latest siting approval by ORES — a 94-MW solar farm proposed by EDF Renewables North America in a rural area of southwest New York.

It was the 13th permit ORES has issued since 2021. Those 13 projects have a combined nameplate capacity of more than 2.1 GW.

The case was brought by the American Bird Conservancy, Save Ontario Shores, Cambria Opposition to Industrial Solar, Clear Skies Above Barre, Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, Genesee Valley Audubon Society, Rochester Birding Association, and the towns of Cambria, Copake, Farmersville, Malone, Somerset and Yates.

Named as defendants along with ORES were its director, Houtan Moaveni, the state itself and the state Department of State.

NYISO Operating Committee Briefs: May 20, 2023

Summer Operating Study

NYISO’s Operating Committee on Thursday approved the results of an ISO operating study showing New York’s bulk power system can operate reliably this summer based on transfer capabilities.

Prepared by NYISO’s Operating Studies Task Force, the study estimates internal and external thermal transfer capabilities for the summer based on forecast load and dispatch assumptions, as well as any generation or transmission changes occurring since last year. The external analysis covers the ISO’s adjacent balance areas of ISO-NE, PJM and Ontario’s IESO.

The study showed notable changes in internal thermal transfer limits, including a 300-MW increase for the Dysinger East interface and a 400-MW decrease for the Central East interface.

Dysinger East increased due to the redistribution of flows attributed to changes in load pattern in the West and Genesee areas, while the Central East interface decreased due to the modeling of Segment A’s December in-service date. The Segment A project refers to the alternating current transmission projects identified as being needed to increase the Central East transfer capability by at least 350 MW and unbottle the congested region.

A change to external transfer limits was seen in the NYISO-to-Ontario and Ontario-to-NYISO interfaces, which both increased by 100 MW or more due to thermal rating changes for the Niagara–Beck (PA27) 230-kV direct tie line.

NYISO reported that 1,007 MW of fossil-fuel based generating capacity was deactivated and that 1,045 MW of renewable generation was added since last year’s study.

Utility Loss of Gas Studies

The OC approved loss-of-gas-supply study results from Consolidated Edison and PSEG Long Island, which verified loss of gas or minimum oil burn requirements for the coming summer capability period.

Both utilities found that dual-fuel generation would remain necessary during periods of above-average demand, but based on anticipated dispatch conditions, the two studies results remain largely the same as last year.

April Operations Report

NYISO told the OC that 104 MW of land-based wind and 101 MW of solar resources were added in April, and that load peaked for the month at 18,915 MW on April 14.

NYISO also included a new detail in its report: that the month’s minimum load of 11,742 MW occurred April 9. The ISO will be including this data point in its future monthly operations reports to show the impact of increasing behind-the-meter solar generation on loads.

SPP Briefs: Week of May 15, 2023

RTO Expects ‘Normal’ Summer Operations

SPP said last week it expects “normal” operations in its balancing authority and reliability coordinator areas this summer, with no forecast for extreme operational situations.

According to the grid operator’s summer seasonal assessment, SPP estimates a 99.5% probability that it will have sufficient resources available to serve region-wide load during peak hours. The study found that if load increases by 5% above forecasts, the RTO still has a 95% likelihood that it will maintain resource sufficiency and serve all load.

“We’re expected to be normal this summer,” SPP’s Garrett Crowson said during a May 18 summer preparedness workshop. “It’s possible that we might be tight on certain days, but there are a lot of different avenues that we can use in order to mitigate those issues. We expect to be able to address anything in the near-term horizons, but if there are any high levels of alertness that we need to notify our members, we’re definitely going to be utilizing those existing processes.”

Staff began a seasonal assessment in February and incorporated all capacity and planned outage plans that had been submitted by that time. They included additional outages based on historical experience and other available unknown variables.

“We did a couple of different things in order to stress the system to see if we needed to identify potential mitigations for the summer,” Will Tootle, manager of operational planning, told stakeholders.

That included additional imports and exports with neighboring RC regions and drought conditions that might affect water levels in different rivers. Weather forecasters are predicting extreme to exceptional drought conditions developing in the Central U.S., with low soil moisture increasing daytime surface heat.

“That’s definitely going to have an impact on how different generated resources are going to produce,” Tootle said.

Staff expects transmission constraints and mitigations to be manageable in maintaining required operating criteria.

The grid operator already has issued two resource advisories in May for its 14-state BAA, elevating one of those to a conservative operations call. SPP recorded its highest peak load for May when it reached 34.2 GW, with 2 GW of total reserves, on May 8.

The operating staff has conducted seasonal assessments and presented the results in summer and winter preparedness workshops. The workshops now include the Emergency Communications User Forum, which was created after the February 2021 winter storm.

MMU to Host Market Report Webinar

SPP’s Market Monitoring Unit will host a webinar May 25 at 9 a.m. (CT) to discuss its recently released 2022 market report.

The report identified increasing wind generation, uplift and resource adequacy challenges as continuing issues that deepened last year and played a significant role in the market. It said wind generation has produced many challenges, including increasing variability and supply uncertainty, requiring out-of-market actions to ensure system reliability.

High natural gas prices last year led to increased energy prices in SPP’s markets. Gas prices at the Panhandle Eastern hub rose 69% to $5.83/MMBtu, driving day-ahead and real-time prices to averages of $48/MWh and $43/MWh, respectively, up 80% and 75% from 2021. (See “MMU Report: Energy Prices up,” SPP Board/Members Committee Briefs: April 25, 2023.)

FERC Accepts NYISO’s 17-Year Amortization Period Proposal

FERC on Friday approved NYISO’s proposed 17-year amortization period when calculating the annual costs for hypothetical fossil fuel peaker plants, a key parameter in its capacity market demand curve (ER21-502).

The order reversed its two previous rejections of the ISO’s proposal, including one on remand from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The amortization period is now the assumed length of time over which a hypothetical gas-fired power plant is expected to be operational and is used to calculate the net annual cost of new entry (CONE), itself used to calculate the demand curve.

NYISO proposed to move from a 20-year amortization period to 17 years because New York’s enactment of the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), which set strict net-zero emission and energy requirements by 2040, will, according to the ISO, force fossil plants to retire sooner.

The proposal was part of a larger set of changes collectively called the demand curve reset (DCR), which altered the parameters and assumptions for capability years 2021/22 through 2024/25. The DCR was approved by FERC on April 9, 2021, though it rejected the 17-year amortization period. (See FERC Approves NY Demand Curve Reset, Rejects 17-Year Amortization.)

The commission had said the proposed period was “speculative and may result in unnecessarily high net CONE estimates” and “fails to consider that the CLCPA does not require that power generators retire in order to satisfy the 2040 zero-emission requirement.”

The Independent Power Producers of New York (IPPNY) appealed FERC’s ruling to the D.C. Circuit, which vacated and remanded the order on Aug. 9, 2022, saying the commission had failed to properly explain its reasoning. (See “DC Circuit Ruling,” No Consensus on PJM Capacity Parameters.)

In response, FERC in December affirmed its earlier rejection with more explanation. It continued to emphasize that the CLCPA did not require plant retirements, as new fuels or retrofits could enable zero-emission dispatchable resources to meet the 2040 zero-emission target.

IPPNY filed a rehearing request, saying the commission “largely recast” the same arguments found insufficient by the D.C. Circuit, ignored the “plain language” of the CLCPA and failed to provide evidence showing NYISO’s proposal is unjust and unreasonable.

The court had said that because NYISO had filed under Federal Power Act Section 205, it was only required to show that its proposal was just and reasonable in and of itself — not whether it is more or less reasonable than alternative designs.

IPPNY also argued that FERC’s reliance on evidence from NYISO’s Market Monitoring Unit and the New York Public Service Commission, which both wanted to maintain the 20-year period, was inappropriate because neither could know “which resources or technologies will be feasible, economically viable or eventually permitted by the state to meet the goals of the CLCPA.”

“Upon further consideration, we set aside the prior determination and conclude that NYISO’s proposal reflects a reasonable interpretation of the CLCPA,” FERC said Friday. “NYISO had to make certain assumptions, which NYISO made based on the currently effective laws and regulations. Given the information available, NYISO’s choices were reasonable. … NYISO’s decision to not consider the potential for new fuels and technologies enabled NYISO to avoid speculating about future technological development and costs.”

NYISO must now submit compliance filings within 21 days of Friday’s ruling that show how the ISO will adopt the new 17-year amortization period for the remainder of the 2021-2025 DCR.

Commissioner Mark Christie dissented against the majority’s decision, arguing that FERC’s reversal not only undermines the commission’s original decisions but disregards expert consensus from the PSC and MMU, whose support for the 20-year period was based on existing knowledge of New York’s energy markets.

Christie said evidence presented suggests that the 17-year proposal would result in “higher costs borne by consumers” and “unnecessarily high net CONE estimates for the proxy peaking unit.”

By the PSC’s own admission, “continuing a 20-year amortization period follows the plain reading of the [CLCPA], which explicitly provides for these implementation processes to be developed over many years and does not require all generation currently running on fossil fuels or the hypothetical proxy unit to retire by 2040,” Christie said.

Moore Doubles Energy Conservation Goals for Maryland State Buildings

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) wants state-owned buildings to up their energy conservation from the 10% goal set by former Gov. Larry Hogan (R) in 2019 to 20% over a 2018 baseline by 2031.

Moore set the new target in an executive order Thursday, calling on state agencies to green up new buildings and major renovations to ensure that they “align with the state’s goal to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2045.”

The order sets out three strategies for reaching the new conservation target:

  • updating the state’s High-Performance Green Building guidelines;
  • identifying buildings that could be “potential candidates for energy savings performance contracts”; and
  • conducting an annual audit of a certain portion of state buildings to zero in on facilities with the highest energy use per square foot and recommend low-cost measures for increasing their energy efficiency.

“This administration is taking unprecedented action to address climate change, and our state agencies will lead the way,” Moore said in a press release announcing the order. “Achieving more ambitious greenhouse gas emissions-reduction goals is a means to promote the health and wellness of Marylanders not only for tomorrow, but for generations to come.”

According to Nick Cavey, public information officer for the Department of General Services (DGS), the order will apply to Maryland’s 8,000 state-owned buildings, which have a total floor space of 90 million square feet. A state dashboard tracking energy use and costs shows that in the past 12 months, the actual power consumption of those facilities has remained flat, but their electricity bills have gone up 23%, to just under $170 billion.

“These facilities include small, state park campground structures to large government office complexes in Annapolis and Baltimore,” Cavey wrote in an email to NetZero Insider. “They range in age from the Old Treasury Building on State Circle [in Annapolis], which was built in 1736, to facilities currently under construction.”

Moore’s executive order parallels GHG-reduction goals for buildings set in the Climate Solutions Now Act of 2022 (S.B. 528). The law requires buildings of more than 35,000 square feet to reduce their emissions 20% below 2025 levels by 2030 and achieve net zero by 2040.

How Green is Your Building Code?

The update of the state’s high-performance green building guidelines falls to the Maryland Green Building Council, a state body with five members appointed by Moore, along with representatives from DGS and other state agencies.

Last updated in March 2022, the current guidelines require new construction or major renovations to meet the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards for energy-efficient and sustainable construction.

The guidelines call for new state buildings to achieve at least a LEED silver certification, the second of four levels (basic, silver, gold and platinum) a building can achieve.

Other green building standards may be used, including the International Code Council’s International Green Construction Code or Canada’s Green Globes protocol.

The high-performance guidelines define a major renovation as “a project in which the building shell is to be reused for the new construction; the heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC), electrical and plumbing systems are to be replaced; and the scope of the renovation is 7,500 square feet or greater.”

LEED-certified buildings use on average 25% less energy than conventionally built facilities, according to USGBC.

However, reliance on green building codes does not, in and of itself, guarantee more energy-efficient buildings. The LEED system has long been criticized because its focuses on construction, rather than long-term performance. A recent analysis of a group of 27 LEED-certified buildings in New York City found that less than half were scoring in the median range of the city’s own energy efficiency rating system.

In addition to the high-performance guidelines, Maryland’s building energy performance standards (BEPS) and benchmarking regulations are being updated. The draft of the proposed regulations would update Maryland’s energy conservation code to the most recent, 2021 version of the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), which is used as the basis for state energy codes around the country. IECC is updated every three years, but Maryland is using the 2018 version.

More than half of the states in the continental U.S. are using residential energy efficiency building codes from 2009 or earlier, according to the Business Council on Sustainable Energy’s 2023 Sustainable Energy Factbook. (See BCSE Factbook: Clean Energy Transition ‘Hardwired’ in US Economy.)

A comment period on the proposed BEPS regulations runs through June 5.

Performance Contracts And Audits

Under energy savings performance contracts, a third-party provider analyzes a building’s energy use and installs energy-efficient technologies and systems, which are guaranteed to provide a certain level of savings. The building owner pays nothing upfront for the upgrades and pays off the investment only if the guaranteed energy savings are delivered.

The executive order’s energy audit provisions are similarly designed to monitor energy savings at buildings determined to have high energy use per square foot. Agencies in such buildings will be required “to the fullest extent practicable, [to] implement the [energy-saving] measures identified in the audit,” and DGS will track actual savings and record them in a state database.

Maryland’s new energy efficiency goals will also be included in requests for proposals for space to be leased by the state, in which the state would pay the associated utility bills.

FERC Backstop Siting Proposal Runs into Opposition from States

FERC’s proposal to implement its new backstop transmission siting authority from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act ran into some opposition from states in comments filed last week (RM22-7).

While they acknowledged that FERC is required to implement the new law, many states complained that its proposal would go too far in allowing for a simultaneous federal siting process while theirs is ongoing — pushing it beyond being a backstop to usurping their siting authorities.

“We’re talking about a process that would require FERC to essentially step in the shoes of the states if they’re unable to agree, or unable to act, within a certain time period,” acting Chair Willie Phillips said after last week’s open meeting. “This process will take time; we will have to have our own environmental reviews; we’ll have to have our own permitting process. And I’m sure, because this is FERC, there will be appeals. I want to be clear: This is not a silver bullet. I do think this is a tool in our toolbelt.”

The commission issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking at its meeting in December detailing how it would implement the provision in the IIJA that grants it the authority to overrule states when they deny a certificate for a line that is in a National Interest Electric Transmission Corridor (NIETC). (See FERC Moves to Implement New Backstop Transmission Authority.)

The commission also proposed a new, albeit voluntary, code of conduct for certificate applicants to show that they have made “good-faith dealings” with landowners. It would require three new reports to be filed with any application: an Air Quality and Environmental Noise Resource Report, a Tribal Resources Report and an Environmental Justice Report.

Backstop siting authority goes back to the Energy Policy Act of 2005, but the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found in 2009 that FERC could not overrule a state that denied a line under that law. The IIJA provision is intended to fix that.

DOE is also working to implement its side of the IIJA, which involves designating corridors. (See DOE Rolls out New Process for Designating Transmission Corridors.)

When FERC initially proposed how to implement its backstop authority, it had considered allowing applicants to file with it concurrently with the states. It ultimately decided against that in 2006’s Order 689, saying it would try the process of giving states a year on their own to deal with NIETC lines, at least at first. After the 4th Circuit decision, however, none of those proceedings got off the ground.

States Explain Opposition to Prefiling Proposal

“Simultaneous federal and state transmission permitting processes are a poor use of limited public resources,” said the North Carolina Utilities Commission and its Public Staff. “Applications to site transmission facilities in National Interest Electric Transmission Corridors under [Federal Power Act] Section 216 are likely to explode in number in light of changes to the statute and regulatory implementation. Strategic deployment of the time and money of transmission owners, federal regulators, state regulators, local government, community members and ratepayers is critical.”

The new NIETC designation proposal being considered by DOE has the potential to lead to a massive influx of such cases at FERC and will be much larger than anything it has dealt with before, as the first round never even saw a completed application filed, they added.

Many states argued that they would not deny a transmission line a certificate unless that action was warranted.

The Public Utility Commission of Texas said it has a legal requirement to rule on all proposed transmission within a year, and legislation is pending that would cut that to 180 days. While most of the PUC’s job involves regulating ERCOT, it oversees transmission siting in parts of the Eastern and Western interconnections.

“Retaining the one-year waiting period before beginning the federal prefiling process is consistent with the commission’s prior recognition of the states’ jurisdiction and the principle of comity,” the PUC said. “Commencement of a federal proceeding before a state’s application process has been afforded a reasonable opportunity to be completed without federal intrusion is inconsistent with FERC precedent on comity.”

The New York Public Service Commission said it has extensive experience in siting transmission in its jurisdiction; FERC should only usurp that authority in very limited circumstances.

“The commission should not allow applicants to file deficient and incomplete siting applications with the state just to start the one-year clock,” the PSC said. “The imposition of an arbitrary one-year time frame would allow applicants to ‘game the system’ and avoid state review altogether, in an effort to obtain more favorable review from the FERC.”

To the extent FERC does move forward with the proposal, its one-year “pre-filing process” should only start once a state deems an application filed with it complete in order to minimize the chance for gaming the system, the PSC said. FERC should also have to review what was filed with the state so it can ensure applicants are not submitting different applications, it said.

“The PSC believes this proposed rule is based on the false presumption that a state is acting inappropriately, where it should be starting from the presumption that a state is acting in the best interest of its citizens,” it said. “Decisions made by the PSC are challenged on the basis that they are arbitrary and capricious. Due to this high burden, siting decisions are reached in a logical and reasonable manner and should therefore be entitled to deference.”

Support for the Parallel Processes

The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities supported the prefiling process, saying it would streamline transmission siting, but it echoed some of the same concerns as its neighbor. It said FERC should ensure the process does not start until states get a full application and avoid overruling states when they make a denial in good faith and based on the evidence.

“There should be a well-defined process for how the commission will consider a state commission’s reasoning and determination in its decision-making,” the BPU said. “While transmission siting authority varies among state jurisdictions, and New Jersey does not have full oversight of permitting and siting transmission, the board maintains that state regulators have unique insight into the myriad local concerns associated with the site permitting process.”

The California Public Utilities Commission also supported the NOPR, but it argued FERC needs to pay attention to delays from other federal agencies in the West and not run the “one-year” clock when applications are delayed by them.

“FERC should not initiate its backstop siting authority when state permitting processes are delayed by coordination with federal lead agencies. Coordinating concurrent environmental review in compliance with both [the California Environmental Quality Act] and [the National Environmental Policy Act] with federal agencies after an application has been received generally requires increased review times to design and complete studies to the satisfaction of both the CPUC and the applicable federal agencies.”

Industry was much more supportive of the proposal to have concurrent prefiling processes because it would help get the ball rolling on much needed transmission infrastructure that much quicker.

“Electricity is an essential service, and nearly all aspects of modern life depend on a robust and reliable power grid,” said Americans for a Clean Energy Grid. “But the existing U.S. grid is insufficient to meet current needs. Generation shortfalls resulting from severe weather and other threats are occurring with greater intensity and frequency, and these events tend to be at their most extreme in areas lacking fully interconnected power systems.”

In the last decade, new regional lines built were down 50% and no new interregional lines have been proposed. Even when they do move forward, it can take five to 10 years to build them, and in some cases, it has taken major projects 15 years to even start construction, ACEG said.

No silver bullet is going to fix those issues, but FERC’s proposal can help when transmission development runs into an impasse before a state commission, such as when those regulators cannot approve a line under their authority or are not authorized to consider interstate benefits, ACEG said. “It is important that the commission make clear that its siting regulations apply in certain instances where there has been no state denial or failure to act.”

The Edison Electric Institute and transmission trade association WIRES said FERC was right to highlight the need for efficient and timely processing of projects under its backstop authority.

“However, in setting parameters around the timing of the prefiling process, the commission should be careful not to undermine state regulatory processes that are designed to enable the permitting and siting of transmission projects,” the groups said. “State regulators are important stakeholders in the transition to a clean energy future, and the commission’s backstop authority should not unduly impinge on their ability to provide input on the siting of transmission projects.”

FERC should also ensure that none of the lines up for its backstop authority are duplicative of other proposed transmission projects, they said. It could do that by consulting with relevant planning entities to ensure the project before it will boost reliability.

Earthjustice, the National Wildlife Federation, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Sustainable FERC Project and the Union of Concerned Scientists also supported concurrent prefiling processes.

“FERC may not issue a permit within one year after DOE establishes a National Corridor and an applicant seeks a permit for a specific transmission project,” the groups said. “But nothing in that language restricts FERC’s ability to prepare for the possibility that it might issue a permit or to engage in a prefiling process to establish an appropriate factual foundation for permit issuance.”

Both the FPA and IIJA include language that encourages timely prefiling procedures, which increases efficiency, they said. The environmentalists also argued that the 90-day comment period carved out for states in FERC’s process is enough to ensure that their views are heard.

“Per the statutory language, the states’ primacy in the permitting process should be respected for the full year that state processes are given to operate,” the environmentalists said. “And nothing about this proposal changes the hard-and-fast rule that no federal permit may be issued for at least a year after an application is filed. But a state’s first cut at the permitting process need not act as a muzzle on any federal action for the entire time period.”

Process Must Respect Landowners and Other Impacted Citizens

But the environmental groups’ filing mostly focused on what will be a new issue under the FPA: dealing with landowners and others impacted by federally sited transmission lines that are granted eminent domain.

“Meaningful community engagement is a central focus of our comments,” they said. “These comments are grounded in the idea that getting transmission permitting right the first time through correctly implementing the various laws and policies that apply to infrastructure permitting, and through early and consistent engagement with communities that allows them to provide meaningful input, will ultimately result in a win-win-win. Developers will face less legal risk and more certainty; communities will have fair opportunities to participate and have their concerns heard and weighed in decision-making; and transmission needed to usher in the clean energy transition can be built without compromising environmental values.”

The good-faith requirements in the rule are only for landowners who might be impacted by eminent domain, but the environmentalists said that should be extended to other stakeholders who will be impacted by new transmission.

“Transmission projects are large projects with a substantial impact on surrounding landscapes and communities,” the groups said. “Electric transmission projects’ visual impacts are usually expected to extend 5 to 10 miles from the project.”

The Niskanen Center said that despite the high stakes, landowners in Natural Gas Act siting cases often face obstacles from FERC with little guidance or legal assistance.

It agreed that FERC needed to ensure that any backstop siting proceedings involve outreach to more impacted citizens than currently contemplated. The center argued that any customers within a quarter of a mile of a right of way, or residents within 3,000 feet of a construction work area, be contacted.

FERC also needs to ensure that any code of conduct also apply to “land agents,” who are third parties often hired by infrastructure developers to get landowners to sign easements. FERC’s Office of Enforcement is familiar with their more notorious conduct, Niskanen said.

“Land agents acting for pipeline companies are known for their intimidation tactics to push landowners into signing easements, especially against the elderly,” it added. “Unless proper measures are formally put into place, it will be no different with the siting and permitting of transmission lines under the backstop authority.”

Niskanen said that FERC should treat any Native American tribes impacted by transmission development differently from other stakeholders as they have more in common with governmental entities such as states and municipalities.

Some tribes did intervene in the proceeding, including the Yurok Tribe, whose reservation is along the banks of the Klamath River in Northern California, which is also home to some FERC-regulated dams.

“For any transmission buildout affecting tribal resources — whether for connection of land or offshore resources, and whether on tribal land or not — FERC must consider the full range of effects and mitigation measures for tribal impacts,” the tribe said. “To be consistent with U.S. and international policy, FERC must not permit projects without free, prior and informed consent through consultation with affected tribes.”

Transmission lines that cross tribal territory should at least offer some local benefits, with the Yuroks’ filing noting that “hundreds of homes” on the reservation still lack access to reliable sources of electricity.

Is FERC Overstepping its Authority?

While agreeing that it is important that FERC reach out to all those impacted by its transmission siting decisions, a few commenters questioned whether the commission had the authority to require additional reports on environmental justice and other issues.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce argued those reports go beyond the statute’s requirements and thus could invite litigation that will only further delay new transmission lines. The chamber argued that transmission is not a real source of pollution in and of itself, with it only impacting emissions upstream; often it will be connecting emissions-free generation to consumers.

“The commission does not regulate electric generation planning, construction or such facilities’ associated emissions, with the latter reserved for the Environmental Protection Agency,” the chamber said. “Thus, the commission cannot use its limited authorities under FPA Section 216 to determine from what types of facilities such transmitted electrons should originate.”

The Electricity Consumers Resource Council agreed that some of the FERC language around extra reports goes beyond its authority and invites litigation.

“Properly addressing environmental justice concerns is important to achieving a level of equity in burden and benefit,” the group said. “However, adding this to legal scrutiny in this manner under the context of statutory authority could risk both the effectiveness of the order as well as the opportunity to address environmental justice concerns in the future.”