Members of the New York Climate Action Council continued their debate over the future of natural gas at a New York Senate hearing last week on legislative and budgetary actions needed to implement the CAC’s final scoping plan.
More than two dozen witnesses testified at the Jan. 19 joint hearing of the committees on Finance, Energy and Telecommunications, and Environmental Conservation. Sen. Liz Krueger, chair of the Finance Committee, helmed the joint session, saying “this is the most important issue that New York State must get its arms around.”
CAC Member Testimony
CAC members shared their thoughts on protecting ratepayers and revising tax codes in addition to defining the role of natural gas.
Donna L. DeCarolis, president of National Fuel, said mandatory dates that “effectively mandate electrification of homes and businesses without the assurance of identified reliability milestones should be rejected.”
New York “should unlock consumer benefits of alternative fuels, particularly RNG in the near term for immediate emissions reductions and hydrogen in the longer term,” as well as conduct a “quantitative analysis of all costs associated with the various emissions reduction initiatives identified in the scoping plan,” DeCarolis said.
Raya Salter, executive director of Energy Justice Law and Policy Center, told lawmakers “we must, leading with justice and equity, act on climate now, and that means closing the state’s fossil fuel plants and moving away from the combustion of fossil fuels.”
Bob Howarth, a professor at Cornell University, argued New York should restore earlier deadlines from the draft scoping plan and repeal laws that subsidize natural gas utilities.
Gavin J. Donohue, CEO of the Independent Power Producers of New York, cautioned “against legislative action that would increase consumer costs, jeopardize the benefits they are receiving from competitive wholesale electricity markets, and harm the reliability of power supplies.”
Donohue told lawmakers to also heed NYISO’s reliability warnings and conduct a “comprehensive ratepayer cost impact analysis.”
Preserving “existing renewable energy facilities and retaining and expanding other non-emitting facilities” is as important as attracting new resources, he said.
Anne Reynolds, executive director of the Alliance for Clean Energy New York, shared recommendations aligned with the group’s recently released legislative priorities, including tax breaks for renewable developers, policies supporting a cap-and-invest program, and expanding transmission capacity. (See ‘Environmental Expectations,’ 2023 Preview of NY Legislature on Energy and Environment.)
Additional Testimony
Other stakeholders provided suggestions, including passing new decarbonization legislation, adjusting the tax code, and increasing the availability of clean energy development programs.
Brian Schultz, CEO of Central New York Regional Transportation Authority, advised legislators to “allow flexibility to consider renewable natural gas and hydrogen energy sources as alternative means for further decarbonizing” and asked that legislators “avoid overly prescriptive legislation with unfunded mandates and unrealistic timelines.”
The Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY) said policymakers should “prioritize creating a set of achievable, predictable, and efficient standards for the building sector.” Failing to do so, it said, would “add unnecessary compliance costs and make it less likely that the state’s goals are achieved.”
Next Steps for New York’s Scoping Plan | Climate Action Council
REBNY suggested the legislature “create a tax abatement and incentive program for investments in building greenhouse gas emissions reduction” to encourage greater investment in decarbonizing the building sector.
Consolidated Edison (NYSE:ED) said legislators should allow utilities to own and operate renewable generation assets, and “increase clean heat and energy efficiency programs and allow for accelerated depreciation of gas assets.”
The company also called for property tax changes, saying the current system is regressive and discourages electrification of heating and transportation.
Raziq Seabrook, government relations manager at National Grid (NYSE:NGG), said the utility identified four policies to help with implementing the scoping plan: accelerate electric system modernization; expand energy efficiency programs; decarbonize buildings and industry through innovative clean energy options; and promote energy affordability.
Avrielle Miller, policy coordinator at NY Renews told the committee members they need to pass the Climate, Jobs & Justice Package to ensure “40% of the state’s clean energy benefits go to disadvantaged communities, create unionized jobs, lower utility bills, and protect our air and water.”
Betta Broad, director at the Association for Energy Affordability, testified that implementation would be assisted by passing the New York Home Energy Affordable Transition (HEAT) Act — formerly known as the Gas Transition and Affordable Energy Act — and creating programs that expand clean energy career pathways.
Next Steps
The committees will now break into their respective sessions, using recommendations from the joint session to draft bills that will implement the scoping plan.
In October, CAISO, ISO-NE, MISO, NYISO, PJM and SPP filed reports with FERC on how their system needs are changing in response to decarbonization and their shifting resource mixes (AD21-10). Last week, 19 groups and companies filed comments responding to the RTO/ISO reports.
Below is a summary of how the grid operators say they are working to ensure reliability and what the commenters think of their plans.
CAISO
CAISO told FERC its system needs are changing in response to the state’s 100% clean energy by 2045 mandate under Senate Bill 100.
“CAISO is actively engaged in addressing the evolving resource mix, an evolving market, and a growing recognition that regional coordination is necessary to enhance efficiency and reliability,” it said, adding that “weather patterns affected by climate change have created extreme conditions beyond those anticipated by current planning standards.”
One way CAISO is addressing its needs is with large amounts of battery storage to provide power during hot summer evenings after solar goes offline but air conditioning demand remains high. The ISO ordered rolling blackouts in August 2020, and had near misses in the summers of 2021 and 2022, under such conditions.
“The addition of lithium-ion storage capacity has been an extremely positive development,” CAISO said. As of October 2022, the ISO had about 4,300 MW of storage capacity available for dispatch; the California Public Utilities Commission, which is in charge of ordering procurement by the state’s three large investor-owned utilities, has called for 10,000 MW of additional storage by 2024.
Another way CAISO plans to deal with changes in the resource mix and load variability is through its proposed extended day-ahead market (EDAM) for its real-time Western Energy Imbalance Market.
“The EDAM will build upon the proven ability of the WEIM to increase regional coordination, support states’ policy goals and meet demand cost-effectively by supporting the rapidly evolving Western resource adequacy landscape,” CAISO said.
Managing its “unprecedented transition requires us to look very carefully at both the short and the long term,” CAISO said: “short term because we must maintain reliability during the transition to a carbon-free grid, and long term because we must make sound decisions now to help us reach that destination in the most reliable and cost-effective way.”
In February 2022, CAISO published its first 20-Year Transmission Outlook, “a long-term conceptual plan” of the transmission grid based on input from the CPUC and the California Energy Commission.
Its new 5-Year Strategic Plan focuses on what the organization must do in the short term to strengthen reliability during the transition.
To ensure resource adequacy, CAISO said it would rely on the Western Power Pool’s Western Resource Adequacy Program and California’s efforts to evolve its resource adequacy program through advanced computer modeling. “Together with its partners, the CAISO is actively working to develop a multiple-year roadmap that relies on its markets to provide reliable system operations in light of the changing nature of resources and load patterns throughout the West,” it said.
In comments filed last week, the American Petroleum Institute cited CAISO’s experience during strained conditions as a reason natural gas generators’ fast-ramping capability are needed. California continues to rely heavily on gas generation, especially at times when solar is unavailable.
“CAISO, which has the highest share of solar generation of the six ISO/RTOs, has already observed an increase in uncertainty around its net load forecasts,” API said.
“As the share of non-dispatchable resources grows, it can become difficult to guarantee that generation will be available when needed — particularly when resources with flexible attributes are either forced into retirement or not developed in the first place due to market, regulatory or legislative headwinds,” it said. “California faced such an issue in August 2020, when insufficient fast-ramping resources were available to compensate for the evening decline in solar generation and CAISO was forced to shed load on consecutive days. As former FERC Commissioner Tony Clark concluded in a recent opinion piece, ‘On-demand resources may not run as often in a renewables-heavy future, but the value of their ability to run when called upon will be critical.’”
CAISO monthly trend of historical day-ahead imbalances, which can exceed 6,000 MW, requiring large amounts of reserved capacity | CAISO
Advanced Energy United (formerly Advanced Energy Economy) offered its thoughts last week on several parts of CAISO’s submission.
“CAISO predicts that ‘artificial intelligence and machine learning will play an increasingly important role as the energy industry continues its trend towards more complex and distributed systems,’” the group said. “Given the foundational role of software in supporting critical RTO/ISO functions, the commission should work to track RTO/ISO software needs and upgrades and look for ways to support expedited software upgrades and use of new and emerging tools and practices.”
Advanced Energy endorsed CAISO’s recommendation that the commission “continue to facilitate industry dialogue regarding the coordination between the transmission and distribution interface.”
“This is especially critical in light of the trend mentioned by multiple RTOs/ISOs toward increased electrification of transportation and heating; ensuring that these end uses can be leveraged as a grid resource rather than simply adding a new source of load for grid operators to balance will be essential to maintain affordability and reliability in light of shifting system needs.”
ISO-NE
ISO-NE said it recognizes its energy systems are in the “early stages of a significant shift” caused by electrification and decarbonization goals in the six states of New England.
Among the changes that ISO-NE is preparing for are increasing winter peaks in the next five years, and the potential for a full-blown shift to a winter-peaking system in the next 10.
The grid operator said it expects to need “additional resource physical capabilities, ISO informational capabilities and markets’ capabilities to incent the former,” over those time frames.
ISO-NE cited what CEO Gordon van Welie has called the “four pillars” of New England’s energy future: clean energy, balancing resources, energy adequacy and transmission investment. It stopped short of making any specific asks of FERC, but called on the commission to remain flexible in its approach to overseeing RTOs.
New England’s emission reduction goals | ISO-NE
“We look forward to continued efforts by the commission to remain responsive to the evolving resource mix and load profiles of individual RTO/ISO regions, and any related future market reforms that the evolving energy system may motivate,” the RTO said.
Four public power systems from Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont called on FERC and ISO-NE to continue to focus on reliability, saying, “New England today is facing profound winter reliability issues that require swift action.”
Specifically, the groups wrote that FERC should mandate the use of competitive processes in transmission development, take a closer look at New England’s rules for fuel procurement and consider creating a regional energy reserve. They also urged a major revamp of ISO-NE’s capacity market, calling for a seasonal auction to replace the existing annual one.
They also said ISO-NE should look at new market products to incentivize building balancing resources and commit to undertaking cost-benefit analyses as it evaluates changes to market rules.
MISO
MISO said adapting its markets to reliably meet future system needs has been “core to MISO’s mission and vision” since it introduced its energy market in 2005.
The grid operator cited its plan to use a seasonal accreditation of capacity, the opening of its markets to electric storage and the 2021 rollout of its short-term reserve product. It also said its long-range transmission portfolios and its ongoing market platform replacement are meant to keep the system nimble.
MISO also cited analyses such as its “Markets of the Future” report and annual regional resource assessment as ways to keep close tabs on its evolving resource mix and anticipate what new market products might be needed.
Policy drivers are accelerating the fleet transition and associated risks, MISO says. | MISO
The RTO said it considers market pricing “a powerful signal” to attracting resources. In its “ideal state,” it said, it would remove the requirement that it must declare an emergency to access its load-modifying and other “emergency only” resources and be able to commit and dispatch them “through more regular market operations.”
MISO has begun discussions with stakeholders on how to appropriately value and maintain resources that supply beneficial system attributes. It has defined six system reliability attributes as necessary, including resource availability, the ability to deliver long-duration energy at a high output, rapid start-up times, providing voltage stability, ramp-up capability and fuel certainty. (See MISO Considers Resource Attributes as Thermal Output Falls.)
NYISO
NYISO said it is simultaneously responding to more frequent extreme weather and higher temperatures caused by climate change and the renewable requirements of the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). Reaching the CLCPA’s targets — 70% renewable electricity by 2030; 100% emissions-free electricity by 2040 — “will require unprecedented levels of investment in both new supply and transmission resources.”
The ISO’s 2020 Climate Change Impact and Resilience Study said it could be facing one-hour ramp requirements of more than 10,000 MW and a six-hour ramp of more than 25,000 MW by winter 2040. In 2021, in contrast, the ISO’s maximum one-hour ramp was 1,800 MW, and the largest ramp was 8,800 MW.
NYISO said it faces uncertainties including “weather, net load forecasts, actual available energy from intermittent wind and solar resources, available energy from limited-energy resources, reduced availability of traditional flexible generation resources and higher probabilities that weather, or other factors, lead to correlated supply and transmission issues.” In July 2019, it experienced a 36-hour period when the state’s wind resources produced only 4% of their maximum output.
The ISO identified six time frames in which it must balance the variance in intermittent resources, ranging from six seconds (for regulation service) to decades — the time horizon over which investments in resources able to provide balancing will be made.
Progress toward New York’s “70 x 30” mandate | NYISO
NYISO told FERC its energy and ancillary services markets are “working efficiently,” citing its operating reserve demand curves, which were changed in 2021, and stakeholders’ recent approval of its constraint-specific transmission shortage pricing project. The latter project is intended to help its market software redispatch suppliers to alleviate transmission constraints and identify locations where new resources could provide the greatest benefits.
“The upcoming balancing intermittency project and the initiative to review real-time market features to enhance incentives to follow NYISO instructions directly respond to expected ramping and flexibility needs,” it said. The real-time project will consider lengthening the look-ahead capabilities of the ISO’s real-time commitment and real-time dispatch software.
It acknowledged that the low marginal costs of renewables will require changes to the markets to balance intermittency and improve price formation.
“Determining the quantity and location of operating reserves more dynamically will be instrumental in preparing the markets for the new grid risks as the resource mix evolves.”
Simultaneously co-optimizing energy and ancillary services requirements will increase revenues in those markets, the ISO said. “Absent ancillary services market changes or other wholesale energy market changes to improve incentives for flexible resource availability, market signals to retain and invest in flexible, controllable resources may not be sufficient.”
Another source of uncertainty is behind-the-meter solar PV. The ISO forecasts that 6,000 MW of BTM solar nameplate capacity will be installed by 2024, rising to 10,000 MW by 2030.
The ISO and its stakeholders are considering additional changes, including the implementation of reserve requirements within constrained load pockets; additional availability incentives for suppliers on Long Island; five-minute transaction scheduling; and separating up and down regulation service.
In response to Commissioner Mark Christie’s question on whether LMPs remain the best way to run energy and capacity markets, the ISO attached to its filing a report by economists Scott Harvey, of FTI Consulting, and William Hogan, of the Harvard Kennedy School.
Harvey and Hogan rejected those who question whether LMPs still make sense in a world of low-marginal-cost variable resources. “The critical role for LMP was true in the past, is true today, and will be true and more important with the anticipated changing resources mix,” they wrote.
PJM
PJM aims to meet the challenges presented by growing renewable penetration and electrification by expanding its energy and ancillary services market to include pricing of flexibility attributes. In its report to the commission, the RTO said many of the characteristics of dispatchable generation will be crucial through the clean energy transition — such as the ability to ramp, cycling capability, quick start times and low minimum run times.
“A significant challenge PJM faces over the next five to 10 years is the disorderly retirement of resources that provide needed ancillary services,” the RTO said. “The limitations in how these resources are priced today could well add to the premature and disorderly retirement of these needed resources that are not priced accurately in today’s markets.”
While the RTO believes it has adequate flexibility in the near term, it said it must create defined values for attributes as quickly as possible to incentivize generation owners to keep their facilities online.
“The value in addressing this issue now is that prices for this additional flexibility will rise slowly as the fleet transitions and send early price signals on the increasing value of flexibility. This is critical to avoiding the disorderly retirement of resources,” PJM wrote.
Winter load shape with electrification | PJM
The RTO urged the commission not to take a “passive stance.”
“A policy statement outlining the commission’s expectations would help to focus RTOs and their stakeholders on these issues at a time when there are countless issues that could distract from their development,” it said. “Moreover, such a policy statement, if adopted on a bipartisan basis, could ensure a level of continuity in the commission’s direction that would further incent the industry to move proactively.”
PJM’s Independent Market Monitor argued that the RTO’s core market design elements already provide the flexibility it will need going into the future. It said the focus should be on removing existing barriers rather than creating new market products.
“Creating new ancillary services products and repeatedly revising the existing ones is a distraction from identifying opportunities to improve dispatch tools and enhancing basic market rules to unlock existing resource flexibility,” the Monitor wrote in response to PJM’s filing.
Current market rules often allow resources to avoid defining their flexible operating parameters outside of instances where they fail the market power test, or during weather alerts and emergencies, the Monitor said. For example, combined cycle units have the physical capability to be dispatched on and off for morning and afternoon peaks, and typically do not offer their start and down time parameters on their price schedules.
The IMM also said “inferior capacity resources” that are exempted from must-offer rules — namely intermittent generation, storage and demand response — are undermining the reliability offered by PJM’s capacity market.
The PJM Industrial Customer Coalition said that the RTO must ensure that load is not responsible for resources that cannot meet their obligations.
“Currently, load is fully responsible for the payments associated with the reserve products in PJM. If certain resources are not able to meet their reserve obligations due to the intermittency of those resources or for other reasons, those resources should bear an appropriate cost; the full risk and costs should not be borne directly by consumers,” the coalition wrote.
The ICC also argued that all generation types carry some physical flexibility and that they should be required to offer that capability to grid operators. Those resources that cannot provide a range for its flexibility or fail to follow dispatch instructions should be obligated to purchase flexibility from other resources or their respective RTO, it said.
“Resources that cannot provide desired flexibility and dispatchability attributes should appear more costly and less desirable than resources that can provide the desired attributes. As a result, the mantra of ‘reliability through markets’ would continue to be fostered through proper investment signals,” it wrote.
The PJM Power Providers Group (P3) noted that the RTO is forecasting strong load growth as thermal resources are scheduled to retire. It argued that the renewable resources expected to go online are not a “megawatt-for-megawatt” replacement for those going offline, particularly as risk moves to the evening hours.
To address the reliability challenges expected in the future, P3 said that an overhaul of the capacity market is necessary to undo “myopic regulatory decisions from the commission, illogical proposals from the RTO” and delays in running auctions. P3 said the current market is unsustainable, with resources exposed to nonperformance charges during extreme weather, no ability to independently evaluate risk and no protection from buyer market power.
SPP
SPP’s report documented the RTO’s response to the rapid growth in wind energy and its increasing peak demand.
The RTO’s 33 GW of installed and registered wind power capacity represents 29% of its total capacity and 38% of its total energy. It also has seen a continued drop in coal generation, although rising natural gas prices allowed its usage to rebound in 2021.
Because of rising high temperatures, the RTO said, its coincident instantaneous peak demand has risen more than 7% in two years, from 49,569 MW in 2020 to 53,243 MW in July 2022.
Share of SPP’s real-time, annual generation by technology type | SPP
It also reported increasing uncertainty in load forecasting because of demand response and behind-the-meter generation. “SPP receives load forecasts from its members that inform SPP’s own load forecasts, and these load forecasts may be performed differently,” it said.
It has also seen increased generation variability, which it manages through reliability unit commitment studies and manual operator commitments and its new ramp capability product.
“SPP’s primary source of uncertainty comes from generation, not from load,” it said. “With the balance between available flexibility and system variability expected to tighten in the future, efficient methods to assist in providing the needed flexibility with the available generation fleet will become increasingly important to economical and reliable operations.”
The RTO said its requirement is for resources that are “visible, forecastable and responsively dispatchable.”
It recently revised its balancing authority emergency operating plan to incorporate information on generators’ on-site fuel and the ability of the BA to allow resources to take actions to conserve fuel. The RTO is also tracking plant retirements based on owners’ plans instead of making assumptions based on plants’ age.
SPP said it will need more information from its 550 distribution utilities as additional resources interconnect on distribution lines.
Another concern is the increasing complexity of the system, which is making it more difficult for software to clear, solve and post the results of SPP’s market in a timely fashion.
“The SPP market clearing engine has to optimize an extensive mathematical model (greater than 1,000 resources, large amounts of transmission constraints over a large footprint, granular modeling),” it said. “The potential addition of thousands of distributed energy resources, storage, greenhouse gas logic and continued variable energy resource growth could require adjustments to how SPP clears the market.”
SPP said it has an increased need for visibility of resources. “This means knowing where resources are on the system and forecasting their output. Visibility concerns arise with increasing numbers of distributed energy resources and behind-the-meter generation. This generation may not be registered in SPP’s markets and may be accounted for differently in the load forecasts of distribution utilities connected to the transmission system operated by SPP,” it said.
“Another potential problem with resource visibility is the potential for mobile storage resources (both plug-in vehicle and commercial-size truck bed storage) within SPP’s footprint. This possibility may be more likely as new electric charging stations along interstate highways come online.”
“Renewables have not caused any new problems but have only highlighted the shortcoming of the market,” SPP’s Market Monitoring Unit said in its comments last week.
Net load volatility increases with wind production. | SPP
The MMU said the RTO needs to construct its rules with an eye to “flexibility, dependability, availability, resiliency and quality.”
“These attributes must be defined and incentivized, or they may not be provided in the future,” the MMU said.
The MMU noted that wind’s market share has nearly tripled from 2014 to 2021 to about 35% of total annual generation. Compounding the challenges, in about half of all real-time intervals, wind production moves in the opposite direction of load, it said.
“Although almost all weather-dependent renewables are dispatchable in the down direction, they were expected to follow dispatch instructions in less than 7% of resource intervals, compared to about 80% for non-renewables.
“When not following a dispatch instruction, weather-dependent renewable output varies irrespective of price, causing a need for rampable capacity separate from load.”
Almost 36% of capacity in SPP is more than 40 years old, most of it gas and coal.
RTO stakeholders last week presented FERC with a cornucopia of suggestions for dealing with electrification and the increasing penetration of variable resources, some supportive of grid operators’ actions, others calling them discriminatory.
On Thursday, 19 groups and companies filed comments responding to the RTOs’ reports, which were filed in October (AD21-10).
Most of last week’s responses supported FERC’s position that it would not propose a “generic solution” across the RTOs/ISOs because of the diversity of the regions’ generation mixes. But several commenters said the commission should provide guidance to RTO efforts to develop new products and market rules.
After four technical conferences in 2021 and dozens of comments, the commission has built a large record in the wide-ranging docket, which included discussions of resource adequacy, interregional planning, NERC reliability standards and distributed energy resources.
The only commission actions to come out of the fact-finding thus far have been orders to essentially eliminate the minimum offer price rule in PJM and ISO-NE. Those votes came with a 3-2 Democrat-controlled commission. With the Jan. 3 departure of Chair Richard Glick, Acting Chair Willie Phillips and Democrat Allison Clements will be unable to approve any rule changes without winning over Republican James Danly or — more likely — Mark Christie.
Deference vs. Standardization
The Edison Electric Institute said FERC should defer to the RTOs. “It is critical that RTOs and ISOs be allowed to identify issues and propose solutions to changing system needs through their stakeholder processes,” EEI said. “It is especially important that the commission allow the existing reform efforts described in the RTO/ISO reports to play out.” EEI also urged the commission not to consider action on interregional transfer capability in the docket, saying docket AD23-3, the subject of a FERC workshop in December, was a more “appropriate” venue. (See FERC Considers Interregional Transfer Requirements.)
In contrast, the American Clean Power Association, American Council on Renewable Energy and the Solar Energy Industries Association — filing jointly as “Clean Energy Associations” — called for standardization across RTOs. “Competition in the markets will be improved if the RTOs/ISOs adopt common terms, products, protocols, and review measures,” they said.
Constellation Energy (NASDAQ: CEG) said ISO-NE could use FERC guidance in designing operating reserves and related products, citing the RTO’s statement that it is difficult for RTOs and their stakeholders “to make progress … in the absence of proactive guidance from the commission.”
Shell (NYSE:SHEL) — which owns Shell New Energies U.S., developers of the Atlantic Shores and Mayflower Wind offshore wind projects, and Savion, a utility-scale solar and energy storage developer — said FERC “must provide an overall framework to both ground and discipline RTO/lSO efforts to ensure reliability is maintained” in light of state actions to address climate change.
Revenue stack comparison: Most of solar resources’ revenues comes from environmental attribute markets and energy markets. | Shell
“Addressing one-off questions on a stand-alone basis — such as whether locational-based marginal pricing for energy markets can continue; whether co-optimized ancillary service markets with opportunity cost pricing will deliver the right resources; or even whether capacity markets serve as the right platform for providing the ‘missing money’ needed to meet resource adequacy challenges — will be woefully insufficient,” it said. “Issuing a policy statement that defines general principles without prescribing set solutions will provide cohesion but permit the necessary flexibility for each RTO/ISO to efficiently and effectively meet its respective regional needs.”
Advanced Energy United, formerly Advanced Energy Economy, said FERC should “engage critically” on the issue of capacity accreditation and “proactively engage on flexibility” through new energy and ancillary service products and evaluation of existing market rules.
The group also called for the commission to finalize its rulemakings on transmission planning, cost allocation and generator interconnection; complete rulings in Order No. 2222 dockets on removing barriers to DERs and look for ways to increase the roles of DERs and flexible demand; and improve wholesale-retail coordination.
Generation Dispatch
Constellation said RTOs should be more transparent about their out-of-market actions.
“There is little understanding — by the market participants who are most affected — of RTO out-of-market actions such as manual unit commitments, posturing and load biasing; the frequency or magnitude of these activities; the circumstances that necessitate them; or, importantly, how these ‘practice[s] … affect … rates,’” it said. “Most of these out-of-market actions are taken in control rooms and are hidden from market participants.”
The Clean Energy Associations called for increased use of probabilistic unit commitment, saying it would produce more efficient, lower-risk operations. “For example, if forecasts indicate a significant chance of both very high load and very low renewable output, operators will likely want to commit more resources. However, because those risks are not reflected in the median value for either forecast, current deterministic methods do not automatically incorporate them into commitment decisions, forcing operators to attempt to subjectively incorporate them.”
Capacity Markets, Ancillary Services
R Street Institute called for less reliance on capacity markets and more demand-side participation, which it said is “chronically underutilized.”
“The most efficient and accurate price signals come from energy and ancillary service markets, where the reflection of actual conditions occur on a granular basis, unlike the more administrative constraints at broader estimation of transmission constraints in capacity markets,” it said.
ISO-NE’s markets for ancillary services represent only $110 million in 2021, compared to $8.4 billion of overall wholesale electricity market costs that year. | ISO-NE
Environmental groups, including Earthjustice, Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, Sustainable FERC Project and the Environmental Defense Fund, also called for more demand-side solutions. “Resources such as demand response, electric storage and distributed energy resources can go a long way to ameliorate the resource adequacy shortfalls that some of the RTOs/ISOs complain of in their reports.”
The Clean Energy Associations cited PJM in calling for “reducing over-procurement of capacity,” and urged the commission hold a dedicated technical conference on capacity accreditation.
Groups filing as the “Clean Energy Associations” complained PJM’s capacity market has resulted in over-procurement caused by overestimates of load growth, unduly conservative assumptions about imports during peak demand periods and an assumed net cost of new entry that is too high. | PJM
They also said energy market price caps should be increased to reflect the true value of lost load. “CAISO, MISO and PJM all have relatively low price caps in their energy markets, which can mute the incentive for performance during periods of extreme scarcity and result in under-investment in flexible generation that contributes to resource adequacy,” they said. “Low price caps can also cause unintended consequences in energy markets. For example, energy market price caps in CAISO caused many storage resources to prematurely discharge during early afternoon periods in the September 2022 heat wave because once prices hit the $2000/MWh cap, storage resources had no incentive to retain their state of charge even though it was known that net load would be even higher later in the afternoon and evening.”
They said FERC should also consider making planned generator and transmission outages transparent “so they are priced in the market.”
RTOs could also play a greater role in coordinating transmission and generation outages to reduce congestion costs, they said. MISO’s Independent Market Monitor has recommended such a change, noting that: “ISO-New England does have the authority to examine economic costs in evaluating and approving transmission outages, which has been found to have been very effective at avoiding unnecessary congestion costs.”
Broaden the Inquiry?
The Electricity Consumers Resource Council (ELCON), which represents large industrial energy users, was among commenters that called for FERC to broaden its inquiry.
“This proceeding is a perfect opportunity to explore whether — and if so, how — the policy goals outlined by the Commission 23 years ago in Order No. 2000 have been achieved,” ELCON said. “At this point, the track record with existing institutions is nothing if not sufficiently long. FERC has employees on staff who were born, raised and earned graduate degrees in the time since Order No. 2000 was issued.”
The Clean Energy Buyers Association, which represents 89 Fortune 500 companies, said it agreed with Commissioner Christie that the commission should expand the scope of its inquiry beyond E&AS markets, “including requiring RTOs/ISOs to address whether intermittent and hybrid resources are compensated appropriately to ensure reliability.”
Advanced Energy United said the commission should require the RTOs to update their reports on modernizing electricity market design annually. “Having year-over-year data and insights from the RTOs/ISOs will give the commission insight into emerging grid and market changes and a deeper understanding of long-term trends.”
R Street Institute challenged the presumption that RTOs will continue in their existing form, reiterating its request, with ELCON and others, for a congressional study of the electric power industry and its regulation. “The benefits of wholesale competition have not always been clear for retail consumers, sometimes because of unmitigated market power but more often because of faulty retail regulation,” R Street said.
Gas-electric Coordination
The Electric Power Supply Association asked FERC to redouble efforts to improve gas-electric coordination, warning “we are approaching a precipice in terms of system reliability which must be acknowledged.
“The need to reform power markets to address planning parameters, operational issues and flexibility needs is no longer a theoretical exercise but an imminent concern that must be addressed. Additionally, the lessons of Winter Storms Uri in 2021 and Elliott just a few weeks ago shine a bright and unavoidable light on ongoing coordination problems between the electricity and natural gas systems, which are likely to intensify as the system becomes increasingly dependent on dispatchable resources including natural gas-fired generation,” EPSA said.
Electric-gas coordination has been an issue in PJM since at least the 2014 polar vortex, when the RTO saw more than 20% of its gas-fired generation unavailable. The high outage rate was supposed to be solved by PJM’s Capacity Performance rules, yet the RTO saw similar rates of natural gas plant outages over the Christmas holiday. (See PJM Gas Generator Failures Eyed in Elliott Storm Review.)
“The issues raised by the challenges of gas-electric coordination are complex and implicate long-held practices in both industries, contributing to the reluctance to change or reform from either side. There are reforms that can be undertaken in electricity markets to address natural gas supply issues and availability. Notably, however, those power market reforms likely need to be matched in some manner by either reforms or adjustments on the natural gas side.”
Days per month of natural gas supply risk under deep decarbonization in New England | ISO-NE
EPSA said the discussions should go beyond weather to also ensure sufficient gas-fired capacity to respond to ramping needs. “The broader discussion must evaluate the need for additional supply and transportation capacity to ensure units can run when called and not be restricted by a system that is not expanding with the increase in demand,” it said.
EPSA said solutions could require “reimbursement for the cost of fuel in a manner not provided for today.”
EEI suggested the commission convene a technical conference to discuss the issue.
Barriers to Entry
Environmental groups including Earthjustice, Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, Sustainable FERC Project and the Environmental Defense Fund said the RTO/ISO reports “fail to address barriers to entry that resources face in attempting to gain access to markets.”
“The commission should require that each RTO/ISO focus on improving existing ancillary services prior to identifying new services or expanding the scope of market,” they said. Among the improvements the groups would like: shortening the durational requirements for eligibility to provide ancillary services and identifying stacking techniques for battery storage and hybrid resources. They also called for development of new ancillary services such as market-based fast frequency response and primary frequency response products and for splitting regulation services into upward and downward ramping products.
They said FERC should open proceedings under Section 206 of the Federal Power Act over MISO’s refusal to let dispatchable intermittent resources (DIRs), such as wind and solar, sell ancillary grid services in the operating reserves markets. They said MISO’s report “understates the ancillary services contributions of inverter-based resources while overstating the contributions of legacy resources.”
“It is well-accepted that DIRs and hybrid resources are technically capable of providing these services, and often more quickly and accurately than traditional thermal resources. However, MISO’s blanket prohibition is locking these resources out of the market, unnecessarily removing tools at MISO’s disposal to lower ancillary services costs while simultaneously increasing reliability,” they said. (See MISO Plans to Bar Intermittent Resources from Ramp Capability.)
The Clean Energy Associations said RTOs/ISOs should not interfere with market participants’ use of their commitment and dispatch preferences, including giving battery storage operators the option of managing their state-of-charge at all times.
“Today wind and solar may or may not be the most cost-effective resources to provide certain services given the opportunity cost of curtailing renewable generation,” they acknowledged. “However, as the renewable penetration increases, curtailment will increase, and the opportunity cost of foregone energy production will decline so that renewables may increasingly become cost-effective sources of ancillary services and flexibility in the upward as well as downward direction.”
Saving Coal
Coal industry group America’s Power asked the commission to require RTOs pay coal generators to keep operating to reflect the reliability benefit of their dispatchability and on-site fuel storage. “We respectfully urge the commission to require RTOs to value the needed attributes to mitigate the impacts of further retirements until global reforms can be developed and implemented,” it said.
Tom Stacy and George Taylor, who have consulted with America’s Power, filed comments calling themselves “Independent Ratepayer Advocates,” in which they said variable energy resources should not be granted interconnection rights unless their sites also include a dispatchable resource or storage. “The commission should resist the desire of VER investors — or anyone else — to continue to expand their market share while avoiding costs their resources create,” they said.
Below is a summary of the agenda items scheduled to be brought to a vote at the PJM Markets and Reliability Committee and Members Committee meetings Wednesday. Each item is listed by agenda number, description and projected time of discussion, followed by a summary of the issue and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.
RTO Insider will be covering the discussions and votes. See next week’s newsletter for a full report.
Markets and Reliability Committee
Consent Agenda (9:05-9:10)
The committee will be asked to endorse:
B. proposed revisions to Manual 2: Transmission Service Request, to clarify changes made to the internal network integration transmission service process, as well as administrative cleanup. (See “Streamlining Internal NITS Process Under Consideration,” PJM MRC/MC Briefs: Sept. 21, 2022.)
C. proposed revisions to Manual 14A: New Services Request Process and Manual 14B: PJM Regional Transmission Planning Process, addressing the generator deliverability test. (See Stakeholders Endorse Changes to Generator Deliverability Test,” PJM PC/TEAC Briefs: Jan. 10, 2023.)
D. proposed revisions to Manual 28: Operating Agreement Accounting, addressing conforming clarifications and corrections to support the implementation of reserve price formation expanding on the revisions endorsed by the MRC in September 2022.
E. proposed revisions to Manual 38: Operations Planning, resulting from its periodic review.
PJM’s Brian Chmielewski will review a proposal addressing capacity interconnection rights for effective load-carrying capability resources, endorsed by the Planning Committee during its Jan. 10 meeting. (See PJM Planning Committee Endorses Capacity Accreditation for Renewables.) The committee will be asked to endorse a solution and corresponding manual, tariff and Reliability Assurance Agreement revisions.
PJM’s Scott Baker will review proposed revisions to the Emerging Technology Forum charter. The committee will be asked to endorse the charter revisions.
3. Hybrid Resources Phase II (9:50-10:10)
PJM’s Danielle Croop will review the package detailing the Hybrid Resources Phase II solutions. (See “MIC Endorses Proposal on Hybrid Resources,” PJM MIC Briefs: Nov. 2, 2022.) The committee will be asked to endorse a proposed solution and corresponding tariff and Operating Agreement revisions.
4. Day-ahead Zonal Load Bus Distribution Factors (10:10-10:30)
PJM’s Amanda Martin will review a proposed solution package to revise PJM’s zonal load bus distribution factors methodology to look at all hours of a given day. (See “Manual Revisions for Day-ahead Zonal Load Bus Distribution Factors Endorsed,” PJM MIC Briefs: Dec. 7, 2022.) The committee will be asked to endorse revisions to Manual 11: Energy and Ancillary Services Market Operations, Manual 28: Operating Agreement Accounting and tariff section 31.7.
C. endorse proposed tariff and OA revisions addressing the alignment of PJM’s authority in event of a default. (See “1st Read on Proposal to Allow Flexibility for Market Participation During Defaults,” PJM MRC Briefs: Nov. 16, 2022.)
D. endorse proposed clarifying tariff and OA revisions as endorsed by the Governing Documents Enhancements and Clarifications Subcommittee (GDECS).
Endorsements (1:25-2:00)
1. Manual 34 Revisions (1:25-1:40)
Adrien Ford, of Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, will move — and Jim Benchek of Monongahela Power will second — a main motion for proposed revisions to Manual 34: PJM Stakeholder Process, addressing motions for new issues at the Members Committee. The new language would allow for issues that are best addressed by the MC to be brought as a problem statement and issue charge directly before the committee. The committee will be asked to approve the proposed Manual 34 revisions.
2. CIRs for ELCC Resources (1:40-2:00)
See MRC item 1 above. Following potential same-day endorsement at the MRC, the MC will be asked to endorse the corresponding tariff and RAA revisions.
A financial consulting firm has concluded that MISO’s auction revenue rights and financial transmission rights market needs updating to keep it relevant to the changing grid.
London Economics International (LEI) said during a Market Subcommittee meeting Thursday that the grid operator’s process needs a refresh, saying it is becoming increasingly outdated because its auctions rely on a 2004 benchmark rights allocation in the MISO Midwest region.
“The ARR entitlement process, though valuable, has not kept pace with new entries and resource retirements, limiting transmission customers’ ability to hedge their day-ahead energy market congestion risks,” LEI consultant Victor Chung told stakeholders.
MISO contracted LEI last spring to evaluate its ARR and FTR markets. The grid operator hopes the firm can make recommendations to help it address gaps in its market design and ensure the ARR/FTR market’s health. (See “Concerns Develop over FTR Market,” MISO Market Subcommittee Briefs: Oct. 7, 2021.)
LEI recommended MISO re-evaluate its basis for determining ARR entitlements and “move away from a fixed historical reference year to better track actual usage of the transmission network.”
Chung said ARR megawatts tied to paths with retired generation have increased from about 1% to 3% in recent years.
“Entitlements don’t track network use,” LEI Managing Director Julia Frayer said, noting that entitlements should “better reflect the system today, where load and generation are.”
MISO has become increasingly concerned over the congestion-hedging market’s underfunding. It has said there’s a growing discrepancy between awarded ARRs and the footprint’s actual congestion patterns. As a result, load-serving entities hold a historically smaller share of FTRs, and the ARRs’ congestion value has fallen.
The grid operator issues the financial instruments based on transmission capacity; they are used by load-serving entities and other market participants as financial hedges against congestion charges in the day-ahead market. MISO funds FTRs through day-ahead congestion costs; an ARR is the LSE’s entitlement to a share of revenue from FTR auctions because of its historical use and investment in the transmission system.
LEI noted that there have been “very few” new ARR paths allocated to LSEs and the new paths “appear to be insufficient in providing a hedge” against congestion risk. The firm said MISO should allow its LSEs to nominate more variations of paths.
The firm also recommended staff tailor their FTR products to the RTO’s evolving supply mix and load patterns by offering morning, afternoon, evening and night options that could also account for weekdays or weekends. However, it acknowledged that selling FTR products by time periods would make for more complex monthly auctions.
MISO’s regulated and more risk-averse LSEs have “limited participation” in the monthly FTR auctions, LEI said, so most profits go to financial traders. The firm suggested staff create an entitlement FTR product for LSEs when additional network capacity is available in the monthly auctions.
“This may help motivate LSEs to participate … without necessitating LSEs to take on any additional risk,” LEI said.
The firm urged MISO to also monitor trends among pivotal suppliers and participants with large market shares competing in the FTR market and track the number of LSEs versus financial traders. It also recommended staff keep a more public tally of the amount of congestion revenue lost by transmission customers because of ARR allocation curtailments.
Finally, LEI said the grid operator should consider incentivizing more accurate reporting of transmission outages, so outages modeled in the FTR auctions match planned transmission outages and the actual outages that ultimately impact the day-ahead market.
MISO said increasing wind generation has cut down on the volume of ARRs. Wind-related ARRs tend be about one-third of those associated with retiring baseload generation.
Stakeholders agree that staff must revisit ARRs. Multiple stakeholders said state-regulated utilities cannot participate because of the market’s speculative nature.
MISO’s Independent Market Monitor reported that FTRs were fully funded this fall and that the grid operator collected more than $47 million in surplus. The Monitor said the surplus “indicates that some paths were significantly undersold after both the annual and monthly FTR auctions.”
Monitoring staffer Carrie Milton said the quarterly surplus “would have been higher but for large shortfalls on paths that were over-allocated in MISO’s ARR process.”
Milton said a single transmission owner’s failure to report a known transmission outage before the annual auction caused a $15 million shortfall. MISO’s FTR surplus collections are used to fund shortfalls, so that the costs of over-allocations are subsidized by all other transmission customers.
Monitor David Patton is asking MISO crack down on transmission owners not reporting outages to MISO before AARs/FTRs are issued.
Patton said in a footprint that racks up billions of dollars in congestion, an unreported outage can have “tens of millions of dollars” in ramifications when a TO sells property rights to its lines but doesn’t disclose planned outages.
Washington lawmakers have introduced a bill to require a study on disposing and recycling blades from wind turbines.
Senate Bill 5287, which calls for such a study by the Washington State University Extension Energy Program to be turned in to the legislature by Dec. 1, drew no opponents during a hearing before the Senate Environment, Energy and Technology Committee on Friday.
Three people testified in favor of the bill, while another 29 signed up in favor but did not testify. No one signed up in opposition. The bill has co-sponsors from both parties.
“There is currently not any facility in the United States that recycles wind turbine blades. … We think this will be someday mandatory in the future,” Jeff Gombosky, a lobbyist speaking on behalf of Renewables Northwest, told the committee.
“We need to be concerned with the total life cycle infrastructure,” said Ann Murphy, representing the League of Women Voters.
The average lifespan of a wind turbine blade is 20 years, said a Senate committee memo. The average length of a blade is 170 feet. Washington’s wind turbines produce 3,400 MW of power.
“Landfilling these giants is not green nor sustainable,” said the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Jeff Wilson (R). He added that roughly 8,000 blades have been removed from turbines nationwide.
“We’ve talked about industries being responsible for the life cycles of their projects,” Sen. Lisa Wellman (D) said.
The bill calls for the study to include the costs, feasibility and environmental impacts of disposal methods for the blades. The study would also look how a state-managed disposal program could be managed and at the possibility of recycling blades made of steel, plastic and fiberglass.
James Colombo, interim director of the WSU Extension Energy Program, said the research would include looking at the potential market for recycled wind turbine blades and at whether any current recycling operations in Washington could handle the blades.
NYISO updated the Operating Committee on the December snowstorm’s impact on grid operations, highlighting a particularly sharp shortfall in scheduled generation on Christmas Eve.
ISO Vice President of Operations Aaron Markham said that at one point that day 2,600 MW of generation scheduled in the day-ahead market failed to show up in real-time. (See FERC, NERC Set Probe on Xmas Storm Blackouts.)
He also said that Dec. 24 saw the winter season’s peak load to date, reaching 22,004 MW.
Regionally, conditions were tight, particularly in PJM, which experienced significant outages, resulting in NYISO having to facilitate emergency energy purchases and deliveries from both ISO-NE and IESO in Canada to PJM.
NYISO staff plan to return to the OC in March with a comprehensive report on Winter Storm Elliot’sfull impact on the New York Control Area, focusing on what caused outages, where production was reduced and what corrective actions need to be taken.
Howard Fromer, who represents the Bayonne Energy Center, asked whether the storm caused load to significantly deviate from ISO forecasts.
Markham responded that about 500 MW of committed resources may have underperformed in real-time but that was not significantly impactful.
ICAP Demand Curve Updates
Stakeholders approved final results for locational minimum installed capacity requirements (LCRs), net cost of new entry curves and transmission security limit (TSL) floors for the 2023/24 capability year. (See ‘Final LCR Results,’ NYISO Stakeholders Still Concerned About DER Participation Model.)
Yvonne Huang, NYISO resource adequacy manager, said updates to the modeling and methodology from last year included adopting GE’s dynamic energy limited resource functionality, maintaining 350 MW of operating reserves during load-shedding events, adopting new load shapes based on data from more recent years and considering generator outages in the TSL calculations to better align with methodology used in ISO planning studies.
Roger Clayton of the New York State Reliability Council (NYSRC) informed stakeholders at Thursday’s Transmission Planning Advisory Subcommittee (TPAS) that the council is developing interconnection reliability rules for inverter-based resources (IBRs).
Clayton said there is an “urgency” for the project because there is no standard interconnection process for IBRs, save for IEEE 2800, which, although approved last February, has yet to be adopted by any authorized agency responsible for regulating interconnection requirements.
Additionally, NERC has only released guidance documents. Although helpful, they “are not standards and only recommendations,” Clayton said.
Therefore, NYSRC is “taking action now” to get ahead of the anticipated influx of IBR projects in NYISO’s interconnection queue.
The IBR standards will be based around IEEE 2800 but tailored to the New York market. NYSRC is looking to get them in place as soon as possible, with the goal of having them be applicable to the Class Year 2023 slate of resources.
Clayton admitted this will be challenge, because NYSRC lacks relevant modeling and validation expertise; IBRs are new technologies that NYSRC has not extensively handled; and the timing will be tight, as CY23 starts Feb. 13.
NYSRC, however, has been working on the project since last year, and Clayton was confident that even if it misses its self-imposed deadline, it would still work to get the rules in place.
Clayton emphasized the project’s importance, calling attention to ERCOT and CAISO, which have both seen upticks in IBR interconnections but have experienced difficulties.
Gillian Coats, director of interconnection at Boralex, asked whether NYSRC was “putting the cart before horse” by trying to implement these new rules without a clear procedure in place.
“In a way we are,” said Clayton, “but if we wait, then there will be a bunch of projects that are interconnected without an objective standard, so there is definitely a tradeoff.”
Clayton, who is also chair of the council’s Reliability Rules Subcommittee, told stakeholders that NYSRC will host a meeting in two weeks to discuss the IBR draft rules and solicit additional stakeholder feedback.
Queue Reform
Thinh Nguyen, senior manager of interconnection projects, told stakeholders that NYISO continues to work on the interconnection queue to make it more responsive, transparent and expeditious.
Nguyen said that the queue has expanded from 120 projects in 2018 to 475, which has placed a tremendous workload on NYISO staff.
After initial stakeholder consultations, NYISO came away with several modifications. These included improving the interconnection portal; creating and hiring a dedicated stakeholder interaction liaison who can provide inquiry service to allow engineers to focus on technical issues; adding more project managers to handle collaborative utility processes; and eliminating certain evaluations.
Nguyen said the ISO will solicit further stakeholder feedback for the next two months, requesting comments be sent to stakeholder_services_IPsupport@nyiso.com. It will then spend spring addressing feedback and refining tariff proposals before seeking approval votes in the third quarter to ensure changes are filed with FERC before the end of the year.
Class Year Updates
NYISO Manager of Facility Studies Wenjin Yan updated stakeholders about the current status of Class Year projects.
CY21 was completed Jan. 11, and NYISO sent a notice to developers about the CY23 start date, noting that developers had until Jan. 20 to inform the ISO if they wanted to enter CY23. (See NYISO Completes Class Year 2021 Projects.)
NYISO also informed stakeholders that the next expedited deliverability study would start Feb. 23.
NYISO last week presented the Installed Capacity/Market Issues Working Group (ICAP/MIWG) with the anticipated schedules for its Installed Capacity market, energy market and new resource integration projects for this year.
The ISO plans to return to stakeholders each quarter to share status updates on each project. (See “Four Projects in 2023 Budget from Consumer Impacts Analysis,” NYISO Details 2023 Budget & Compensation Updates.)
Maddy Mohrman, NYISO capacity market design specialist, overviewed the capacity market design projects, including their anticipated first-quarter schedules and deliverables for this year.
The first project is modeling improvements for capacity accreditation, necessitated after NYISO discovered limitations within its resource adequacy analysis software, GE MARS.
2023 capacity market project overview | NYISO
NYISO will work with stakeholders and the New York State Reliability Council to improve the software by the fourth quarter. The updates should enable more accurate calculations for resource adequacy requirements, capacity accreditation factors and capacity accreditation resource classes.
The ISO will also work to improve the methodology for its LCR Optimizer software, which establishes the locational minimum installed capacity requirements (LCRs). It will spend the first quarter investigating the need for and developing any necessary enhancements to the software to improve the stability and transparency of LCRs, with an anticipated completion in the third quarter.
Another project relates to the 2025-2029 demand curve reset (DCR), a comprehensive review to determine the necessary assumptions for developing the ICAP demand curve. The project will be ongoing until 2025, but NYISO plans to post the DCR schedule in the first quarter of this year, select an independent consultant to conduct the study during the second quarter, and spend the rest of the year defining the inputs and methodology for the study.
Other software updates are needed to implement NYISO’s new capacity accreditation procedures and capacity resource interconnection service (CRIS) expiration rules.
Amanda Myott, NYISO energy market design specialist, detailed the energy market projects, including a project to rethink how to balance system needs as more intermittent renewables, energy storage resources (ESRs) and distributed energy resources come online.
The ISO anticipates proposing a market design concept by the end of the year based on previous studies of grid characteristics, resource attributes and new market products necessary to reliably maintain system balance.
Another project includes developing potential software and market rules that would enable NYISO to dynamically schedule reserves or procurements, which would better align market outcomes with system conditions by determining reserve requirements within a given region (See Study: NYISO Dynamic Reserves Could Lower Congestion, Costs.)
NYISO will spend the first quarter overviewing the project plan, looking through scheduling and pricing examples in the day-ahead-market and examining if updates are required to the posting of reserve requirements. It anticipates completing the market design by the third quarter.
2023 energy market project overview | NYISO
Another project centers on creating more transparency around emissions data, which the ISO believes will help end users and other market participants optimize their electricity usage. It expects to finish the necessary functional requirements and start publishing emissions rate data by the end of the year.
Mark Younger, president of Hudson Energy Economics, asked if this effort would be impacted by the cap-and-invest program proposed by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, but NYISO said the project was an independent initiative. (See Hochul Highlights Cap and Invest in State of the State Address.)
William Acker, executive direct of the New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium, said that there’s a strong need for the project because it will help New York City buildings comply with Local Law 97 by better understanding how they can shift their energy consumption based on their emissions profile. (See NYC Proposes Rules to Implement Building Emissions Law.)
NYISO’s energy market team will also work to enhance the software for internal bilateral transactions, which currently does not enable ESRs to be a sink.
Stakeholders had indicated this project as a priority as the demand for ESRs to use bilateral transactions to contract output from specific resources has increased. The ISO expects software design specifications to be completed by the end of the year.
NYISO will also conduct a fuel and energy security study, which stems from a recognition that New York’s fuel supply mix is rapidly evolving and extreme weather events have become increasingly disruptive. This study is expected to be completed by the fourth quarter and will be a refresh from a similar 2019 security study, which examined future reliability standards, resource mix and load patterns, and resource requirements.
Chris Wentlent, of the Municipal Electric Utilities Association of New York State, asked if the study would be New York-specific or also investigate neighboring grid operators, including in Canada.
Myott replied that NYISO is considering including their neighbors in the study.
The last planned energy market project focuses on creating an operating protocol for the Long Mountain phase angle regulator (PAR) installation, a planned 345-kV intertie between NYISO and ISO-NE. The plan is to complete and vote on a joint operating agreement by the end of this year, though if discussions with ISO-NE extend beyond the third quarter, the project could be delayed.
An ongoing project relates to updating software to implement constraint-specific transmission shortage pricing, which would help NYISO to alleviate short-term constraints by dispatching suppliers more efficiently. The ISO plans to deploy these updates in October, after the relevant DER updates are finalized, and will file the previously approved project modifications with FERC in the first half of the year.
New Resource Integration Projects
Finally, Harris Eisenhardt, NYISO market design specialist, presented an overview for the new resource integration projects.
2023 new resource integration project overview | NYISO
By the end of this year, NYISO anticipates delivering a market design concept that will enable its DER participation model to be fully compliant with FERC Order 2222 requirements by incorporating any additional market features that were not included in the deployment scope.
Howard Fromer, who represents the Bayonne Energy Center, sought confirmation that FERC approved NYISO’s request to extend the deadline for DER deployment until 2026, which Eisenhardt confirmed, saying the ISO would spend the next three years scoping out the DER software, getting the market design finished and building out the deployment plan.
Another project that concerns the demand side to identify new ways that demand response and DER programs can be improved to increase consumer engagement in NYISO’s markets. The ISO believes that improving demand-side programs will enable consumers to assume greater control of their energy use and push New York toward zero emissions by better balancing increasing penetration of intermittent generation.
The ISO anticipates presenting a final report, which summarizes both external and internal stakeholder feedback and identifies gaps in existing programs, in the fourth quarter.
James W. Brew, principal at Stone Mattheis Xenopoulos & Brew, and Kevin Lang, partner at Couch White, both emphasized the importance of NYISO soliciting feedback from experienced individuals and talking directly with end-use consumers.
Finally, Eisenhardt discussed the project to assess whether storage resources can be considered transmission assets.
NYISO expects to share its findings during the fourth quarter, spending the earlier part of the year reviewing how other grid operators treat storage resources and discussing operating rules for market participation.
New York is moving to cut the cost of electricity supplied to commercial charging stations for electric vehicles.
The Public Service Commission on Thursday approved a multiphase package of incentives, tariffs and programs to reduce the impact of demand charges.
As an immediate solution, all investor-owned utilities are directed to implement a 50% rebate against traditional demand charges for public direct current fast charger (DCFC) sites.
Customers qualify if their charging station accounts for at least 50% of their maximum on-site electrical demand.
The order also implements commercial managed charging program with use-case-specific adders in the territories of the two downstate utilities: Consolidated Edison (NYSE:ED) and its subsidiary Orange & Rockland Utilities.
In the upstate territories of Central Hudson Gas & Electric (NYSE:FTS), National Grid (NYSE:NGG), New York State Electric & Gas (NYSE:AGR) and Rochester Gas & Electric, the 50% rebate is extended to all commercial EV charging use cases. The four utilities are also required to file commercial managed charging program proposals within 180 days.
As a near-term solution, the PSC order requires the utilities to file within 180 days a proposal for a phased-in rate solution that will replace the demand charge rebate and use-case-specific adders.
Additionally, the order directs the utilities to implement standby rate exemptions for customers who install energy storage systems to help manage their EV charging load.
The order also imposes semiannual reporting requirements on the utilities and creates a biennial review of the effectives of the cost-relief programs and tariffs contained in the order.
The PSC’s order stems from a 2021 change to state Public Service Law. A September 2022 white paper written by Department of Public Service staff, with comments submitted by the utilities and other stakeholders in response, form the basis for much of the order.
The aim is to reduce the operating cost barrier to rapid expansion of public EV charging infrastructure that would be posed by traditional demand charges.
The PSC order notes the inherently conflicting goals at play: The demand charge is a powerful incentive for customers to manage the load they impose on the electrical grid and also potentially a disincentive to wider public acceptance of EVs. But if the incentive is removed and customers do not manage their demand, utilities will have to pay for expensive infrastructure upgrades to accommodate it, and customer prices will rise as a result.
Also, it is impossible to predict when drivers will pull into a public charging station or how much of a charge their vehicles will need. So, planning or managing load is impossible, as well as antithetical to the very point of having public chargers.
Other utility customers will bear the expense of reduced-cost electricity to public charging stations via a surcharge with a one-year lag.
“Our determination to allocate costs among service classes using the transmission-and-distribution revenues allocator reflects the fact that all customers will benefit from the environmental and societal benefits of the transition to electric vehicles, which this order seeks to accelerate,” the PSC said in its order.
The commission will cancel the existing DCFC Per-Plug Incentive (PPI) program and use its unspent funds for a new program to incentivize EV charging demand management technologies. The order calls PPI an “unpopular … series of foibles” and says that “onerous eligibility requirements” similar to those of the program would undercut the demand charge rebate.
The order refers to the “chicken-and-egg” problems of this stage of EV deployment, in which more people need to buy EVs to fund the buildout of public charging infrastructure, and more public chargers need to be built before New Yorkers have confidence to purchase EVs in larger numbers.
“It is clear that the electric vehicle charging industry faces challenging economics under today’s market conditions, particularly in areas where electric vehicle adoption does not yet generate a sufficient level of sales to offset the utility costs,” PSC Chairman Rory Christian said in a statement. “Electric vehicle deployment will play a key role in meeting the dramatic carbon-reduction goals set forth in the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, and our decision today provides the industry with a level of operating cost relief that will accelerate investment.”