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August 25, 2024

MISO Rolls Up Sleeves on Capacity Auction Alterations

MISO told stakeholders Wednesday that it plans to add a sloped demand curve in its capacity auction and will make a FERC filing in the second quarter of 2023. 

The RTO’s Mike Robinson likened a sloped demand curve to his attempt to make an avocado-and-jalapeño-based gazpacho, but not having enough avocados to make the soup. He said when he went to the grocery store, he found surplus avocados priced at a quarter apiece and bought extra for the next night’s poke bowls.

That behavior showed that extra items beyond what is necessary still hold value. 

“We’re trying to recognize the value of that additional capacity beyond the planning requirement,” he said during a Resource Adequacy Subcommittee (RAS) meeting. “The additional 100 MW have reliability value beyond the reliability target, and we should reflect that in a cost-effective manner.”

Robinson said a sloped curve will make the auction more “sustainable” in the long run, sending price signals to plants to keep operating or reflecting the additional risk if capacity doesn’t cover their requirements. He said staff and stakeholders must figure out how to translate marginal reliability into dollar values. 

MISO says the incremental value of capacity might consider the avoided value of lost-load pricing and avoided high-priced emergency purchases.

Robinson said that over the last 10 years, the grid operator has been experiencing a “significant decrement” in its supply, which could have been helped with “some elasticity” in the demand curve. 

“If we’re going to do this auction, let’s do it right with prices that value capacity,” Robinson said. “We can do better than having a straight line, vertical demand curve.” 

Staff in July committed to a series of discussions with RAS over how the RTO might restructure its capacity auction with a sloped demand curve, among other changes. Some stakeholders said MISO needs to issue more detailed supply and demand data on a regular basis ahead of capacity auctions. (See MISO Promises Stakeholder Discussions on Capacity Auction Reform.) 

The RTO is holding auction-reform discussions as it begins organizing its first seasonal capacity auctions. In late August, FERC approved the grid operator’s plan to hold four simultaneous auctions for the 2023-24 planning year using an availability-based resource accreditation that relies on the presumptive riskiest hours in a season. (See FERC OKs MISO Seasonal Auction, Accreditation.)

MISO’s Durgesh Manjure said “some of the parts and plans are evolving” in implementing a seasonal auction and accreditation. Staff plans to publish draft accreditation values — based on a unit’s availability over the past three years and filtered by the RTO’s preselected, predicted risky hours — in November, with final numbers by mid-December. The grid operator has also scheduled office hours to answer questions about the new auction process.

At stakeholders’ request. MISO will allow mid-year capacity accreditation for new resources that will serve as replacement capacity.

CONE Goes Up

MISO has upped its cost-of-new-entry (CONE) for generators heading into the 2023-2024 planning year.

The highest CONE value is in eastern Missouri’s Zone 5 at a little more than $300/MW-day, the first time it has crossed that threshold. The lowest value can be found in East Texas and Louisiana’s Zone 9, at $257.75/MW-day.

MISO said CONE values swelled on “significant increases in base project capital costs and the weighted average cost of capital.” It said it used actual and expected inflation estimates to calculate the estimates.

A New Path to Net Zero: High-performance Computing

Boston Metal has figured out a way to turn iron into steel without using coal, thanks in part to the Department of Energy’s high-performance supercomputers, which helped the Massachusetts-based startup model the superhigh temperatures — 1,600 degrees Celsius — needed for the decarbonized process.

“There are the electric chemical elements; there is the material fluid dynamics element. You have liquid metal; you have liquid electrolyte; you have oxygen bubbling through all of that,” said Adam Rauwerdink, the company’s senior vice president for business development. “This thermal modeling is a key element that you want to ensure you have all of your liquid metal and your liquid electrolytes in a molten form, that you’re not getting solid corners or freezing of the surface layers.”

Rauwerdink was speaking at DOE’s High-Performance Computing for Energy Innovation (HPC4EI) online workshop on Friday, where the focus was on the potential for high-performance computers (HPCs), and the ultrafast processing and simulations they offer, to overcome the challenges of decarbonizing heavy industry in the U.S. by 2050.

“We use computer simulations to short-circuit the usual Edisonian approach” — engineer-speak for trial and error, said Aaron Fisher, the HPC4EI project manager at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

In other words, researchers and technology developers can use the computers to simulate and test models of new equipment, new materials and new processes and iterate at warp speed through the trial-and-error phase of project development, without running up costs for repeated lab or field demonstrations.

U.S. manufacturing is in the midst of a technological revolution, Fisher said. “This revolution, instead of being powered by machinery, is being powered by the great expansion of our ability to [collect] data and process it and predict the outcomes, using that data. The data revolution is leading us to new ways of producing things … it’s allowing us to rethink how we develop manufacturing processes themselves.”

The HPC4EI program provides $300,000 awards to companies, allowing them to work with researchers at DOE’s national labs, which house a wide range of supercomputers. Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Summit system, for example, has been ranked as one of the fastest computers on Earth, capable of processing 200,000 trillion calculations per second.

Since it was started eight years ago, HPC4EI has funded close to 150 projects, working with more than 80 companies of all sizes, from startups to major corporations, Fisher said. The companies benefit from smarter product designs and faster time to market, while also improving efficiency and saving money, he said.

Researchers at the labs also benefit “by cutting their teeth on a new class of problems that they may not have thought of before. This leads to new thinking and computational methods.”

Fisher cited a number of HPC4EI projects, such as working with ArcelorMittal to reduce the amount of natural gas needed to reheat steel slabs before they are rolled out into sheet metal. The program also paired up Raytheon and Oak Ridge National Lab for “microstructural phase field simulations” that resulted in the manufacture of lighter airplane parts, which could eventually help airlines save on fuel costs.

In the case of Boston Metals, DOE provided early funding and technical support for the company’s development of its molten oxide electrolysis process for making steel. As described on the company website, the process involves an electrolyte containing iron ore, which is electrified to 1,600 degrees Celsius, splitting off the oxygen from the ore to produce liquid metal.

The company is working toward its first commercial-scale plant in 2025, with investors that include Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy Ventures, utility-funded Energy Impact Partners and The Engine, a venture fund that, like Boston Metal, began as a spin-off from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The impact could be significant. According to Rauwerdink, the 2 billion tons of steel produced with coal worldwide per year pumps 3.5 billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere, or about 8% to 10% of all global CO2 emissions.

Scaling the technology on a global basis, which is part of Boston Metal’s long-term plan, will require even more sophisticated computer modeling, he said. “You just keep adding additional levels of complexity to your modeling.”

Scale up or Scale out?

DOE has recently intensified its focus on industrial decarbonization, for example, releasing an Industrial Decarbonization Roadmap last month, with plans and milestones laid out for the country’s five most carbon-intensive industrial sectors — iron and steel, chemicals, cement, food and beverage production and petroleum refining. 

These industries and other manufacturing and industrial sectors account for 33% of U.S. energy consumption and 30% of carbon emissions, the roadmap said, citing figures from the Energy Information Administration.

DOE’s Advanced Manufacturing Office (AMO) will also be split in two, with one office still focusing on advanced manufacturing and a second targeting industrial decarbonization, according to Robin Miles, HPC4EI director at the Livermore Lab.

“We now have a really unique time to be able to change the way we have been doing things for centuries or, in some cases, millennia, and really rethink what that means,” said Joe Cresko, AMO’s chief engineer. “We’re going to really need to do a lot of research and development, and expedite that, accelerate that, and have a deeper understanding about the options and impacts of making these changes.

“High-performance computing is a really important part of that,” Cresko said. Continuing business as usual could result in a 17% increase in U.S. carbon emissions by 2050, he said.

Supercomputers can analyze multiple paths and options for reaching net-zero — and the tradeoffs each may entail, he said. “We need to ensure reliable and electrified services, which means you need to be able to integrate into the grid intermittent energy sources. We need to consider the ability to use hybrid and dual-fuel sources [and] more efficient heat transfer at all scales.

“Modular approaches may be a way to really transform some of the operations that are done at very large economies of scale,” Cresko said. “Instead of scaling up, can we scale out? What [do] those processes look like as we begin to change?”

Next-gen CSP

Cresko and others at the workshop see HPC playing a central role in accelerating the scaling and commercialization of still emerging technologies — such as green hydrogen, carbon capture and sequestration, and concentrated solar power — that are increasingly seen as vital for achieving a net-zero economy in the U.S. by 2050.

While once considered a promising and possibly better technology than photovoltaic solar, concentrated solar power (CSP) lost momentum in the U.S. after a few large projects were completed in the Southwestern desert — most notably the 386 MW Ivanpah project near Las Vegas. PV was cheaper, easier to permit, simpler to operate and less environmentally disruptive.

Total global capacity for CSP currently stands at about 7 GW, according to Avi Shultz, DOE program manager for CSP. The technology uses large mirrors, called heliostats, to reflect and concentrate sunlight onto a tank at the top of tower, Fluid in the tank is heated to very high temperatures, 500 degrees or more, to produce steam that can then run a turbine or be stored for later use.

While no major CSP plants are under construction in the U.S., China is in the process of building 30 CSP projects, as a form of storage for larger installations combining PV and wind energy. Renewed interest in the technology has also surfaced in Australia.

DOE’s efforts to rebuild U.S. innovation and competitiveness in the technology, specifically as a potential source for process heat for heavy industry, could breathe new life into the U.S. market. The department recently released a roadmap for next-generation heliostat production and awarded $24 million in funding for a range of projects, such as developing CSP technologies to be used to decarbonize the production of cement and limestone.

Decarbonizing heavy industry could require CSP projects that can produce heat at 700 degrees Celsius, Shultz said. DOE also wants to cut the levelized cost of CSP, with 12 hours of storage, from its 2020 rate of 9.5 cents/kWh to 5 cents/kWh by 2030.

A team at NREL is “trying to model the field-level wind forces in the heliostat field, which … [can] become extremely complex and nonlinear,” Shultz said “This really calls out for computational analysis. The number of power metrics and variables in ways you can optimize these systems becomes very, very quickly unmanageable. So really clever computational approaches to solving and optimizing heliostat fields both at the component level and at the overall field and operational level really are necessary to hit our targets for cost and performance.”

ISO-NE Proposes Tweaks to Inventoried Energy Program

ISO-NE is proposing changes to its winter fuel security plan, the Inventoried Energy Program, to answer a court order and, more significantly, account for the swirling global natural gas markets.

The IEP is set to be in place for the 2023-2025 winter seasons and will compensate resources for the inventoried energy they hold on winter days that hit a certain low-temperature threshold.

Coal, biomass, hydropower and nuclear generators will no longer be eligible for the program, after the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals found that they would get $40 million in windfall payments for storing energy they would have kept anyway. (See Court Strikes a Blow to ISO-NE Winter Plan.)

In a presentation to the NEPOOL Markets Committee on Wednesday, ISO-NE Regulatory Counsel Kathryn Boucher laid out the grid operator’s relatively simple response to the court ruling and subsequent FERC order, which clarifies that those asset types can’t be included in the program.

ISO-NE is planning to put forward a compliance filing in mid-November.

Tweaking the Program to Address Market Changes

On a separate track, the grid operator is looking to make longer-term changes to the IEP to try to attract more market participants to use the program and help increase the region’s reliability.

“Increased global competition for oil and LNG has changed these markets relative to when the IEP was first designed,” ISO-NE’s Craig Martin said in a presentation to the MC.

The grid operator is proposing to change how the IEP payments are calculated and how gas contract eligibility works under it. It is working with Analysis Group to recalculate forward and spot rates for the 2023/2024 winter, using updated energy market pricing and LNG contract structures.

It’s also calling for a change in the terms of the program that state that “no limitations” can exist on when gas can be called.

And ISO-NE is proposing modifying the price eligibility threshold, which was included to “prevent contracts with very high incremental costs to buying gas from being eligible.” The shift from a Henry Hub/Algonquin Citygate metric to a Dutch Title Transfer Facility metric will “reduce the risk of gas contracts unintentionally being rejected due to potential price deviations between the cost of procuring LNG and domestic gas markets,” Martin said.

ISO-NE is also looking at potentially changing the duration of inventoried energy required from 72 to 120 hours and increasing the temperature point that triggers the program.

“ISO believes these updates will increase the quantities of inventoried energy attracted to the region for winters 2023/24 and 2024/25,” Martin said.

The grid operator is looking to get to a final NEPOOL vote on the changes in January 2023.

NYC Proposes Rules to Implement Building Emissions Law

The New York City Department of Buildings (DOB) last week proposed new rules to carry out a 2019 local law aimed at reducing carbon emissions from the city’s largest buildings.

The agency also identified the 27,000 buildings that will be covered by Local Law 97 (LL97) and subjected to the first compliance deadline scheduled for 2025.

Enacted by the New York City Council three years ago as part of the NYC Accelerator program, LL97 established greenhouse gas emissions standards for most city buildings that exceed 25,000 square feet by requiring improved energy efficiency. The law also imposed stricter emissions reporting requirements on the covered buildings.

The rules proposed last week are intended to clarify and strengthen LL97 by setting building emission factors until 2050, simplifying administrative reporting processes, detailing formula for calculating a building’s annual emissions or energy usage, and setting up rules governing renewable energy credits (RECs) that property owners can buy to help meet targets.

The buildings subject to the rules range from government and military installations to religious centers, grocery stores and business offices, with the largest structures requiring initial compliance by 2024 followed by stronger limits in 2030.

LL97 was designed to cut emissions from the city’s largest buildings by 40% by 2030 and 80% by 2050. RECs, which were written into the law, could be bought by proprietors to help meet their emissions targets and would be used to help fund other renewable efforts or projects.

REC Rules ‘Far Too Weak’

Under the rules, the RECs can be generated by state renewable projects and are intended as economic tools to help building owners offset the emissions generated from electricity supplied by natural gas and avoid hefty non-compliance costs as they begin to bring their stocks into LL97 compliance.

Specifically, credits could be used to fund Tier 4 projects, such as the Clean Path New York and Champlain Hudson Power Express, which have seen recent implementation delays. (See NYSERDA Seeks 1-Year Delay for Tier 4 RECs)

In an email to NetZero Insider, DOB Press Secretary Andrew Rudansky said “this first batch of proposed rules” clarifies that building owners can only apply RECs to offset emissions from electricity use, preventing them from using RECs to offset other types of emissions associated with their buildings.

“The department will be releasing additional rules on how the use of RECs is limited in the future. Our rulemaking process will continue to be informed by careful study by the department’s Bureau of Sustainability along with close collaboration with our partner agencies, the Climate Advisory Board, the Local Law 97 Working Groups and also with state government officials,” Rudansky said.

Additionally, Rudansky said the DOB is “currently working with stakeholder partners to study RECs” and noted that credits have “always been part of the Local Law 97 equation,” pointing to language in the original law as evidence.

That language stipulates that a “deduction from the reported annual building emissions shall be authorized equal to the number of renewable energy credits purchased by or on behalf of a building owner.” It also requires that the resources generating eligible RECs be located in or directly deliverable to the New York grid operator’s New York City load zone; that the RECs be solely owned or retired on behalf of the building owner; and that they be generated in the same period as the reporting year.

“Covered buildings claiming deductions for renewable energy credits under this section must provide the department with the geographic location of the renewable energy resource that created the renewable energy credits. The [DOB], in consultation with the mayor’s office of long-term planning and sustainability, shall promulgate rules to implement this deduction,” the law states.

Despite the clarification, some environmental groups were still unsatisfied with the RECs provision.

In an online statement, a coalition of local organizations protested the new rules saying that although “Mayor [Eric] Adams is taking positive steps,” the current rules around RECs are “far too weak” and that moving forward the administration should “tightly limit RECs so they cover only up to 10% of a building’s total pollution.”

The DOB will be hosting an online public hearing on the proposed rules on Nov. 14. Public comments can be submitted to DOBRules@buildings.nyc.gov, while stakeholders can learn more about how to meet emissions targets through the NYC Accelerator program.

Study: NYISO Dynamic Reserves Could Lower Congestion, Costs

NYISO’s proposed dynamic reserve requirements could result in significant changes in transmission flows and reduced costs, according to the findings that FTI Consulting presented to the NYISO Installed Capacity Working Group (ICAPWG) last week.

FTI’s Scott Harvey described how each element of the dynamic reserve design, first published in a white paper in December 2021, could result in reduced costs of meeting load, while maintaining reliability and meeting reserve targets.  

The ISO’s project was conducted to see if dynamically scheduling reserve requirements or procurements for generators could support New York’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) by allowing more economic clean energy to be imported into the state, which would better align market outcomes with system operations. (See NYISO Exploring Dynamic Reserves.)

New Dynamic Reserve Project (FTI Consulting) Content.jpgSummary of FTI Consulting examination of new dynamic reserve project | FTI Consulting

 

NYISO’s existing operating reserve requirements are static; the white paper argued that a dynamic approach would “allow for appropriate reserves to be procured to cover the largest contingency,” while also allowing “for more reserves to be scheduled in cost-effective areas to meet the reliability needs,” which has become increasingly important as more intermittent generators are installed.

FTI’s study highlighted how dynamic reserve requirements can save money by replacing imported megawatts during periods of constraint with those directly from generators in load pockets.

Mark Younger, president of Hudson Energy Economics, commented how the proposal “is a pretty significant change from how things are currently done,” as it would “make contingency based on the actual loading of the unit rather than its capacity,” which he believes the ISO should make “very clear to stakeholders.”

FTI plans to return later in the year to share more examples of how dynamic reserve requirements will impact the system, including instances where intermittent resources are in load pockets.

Tariff Revisions on CRIS

NYISO also continues to work on proposed tariff revisions that would modify its rules for deactivated facilities with unexpired capacity resource interconnection service (CRIS).

The ISO’s Juan Sanchez told the ICAPWG that stakeholder feedback received on the tariff revisions discussed at previous meetings were mostly requesting additional “clarification around the rules.” The project is investigating ways to tighten the rules for CRIS retention where it is not fully utilized, while also increasing capacity deliverability headroom and potentially lowering the cost of market entry for future facilities. (See NYISO Proposes Changes to CRIS.)

Tariff Revisions for CRIS (NYISO) Content.jpgSummary of proposed tariff revisions for the CRIS expiration evaluation project | NYISO

 

NYISO wants to modify the rules and processes for deactivated facilities with unexpired CRIS by allowing them to voluntarily relinquish their full CRIS at any point in time simply by notifying the ISO. It would develop a standardized notification form, which, once received, would prompt it to stop including the facilities in future deliverability studies.

The revisions would also expire partial CRIS rights for transmission facilities limited from using their full CRIS because of physical limitations in neighboring control area systems. This provision would apply to transmission facilities that are not meeting ISO procedures because their net megawatt output is not reaching full capability, reducing their CRIS to the maximum monthly amount of energy demonstrated during a consecutive three-year period starting from initial synchronization.

They would also allow for same-location CRIS transfers to have the same flexibility as those between different locations. Units in the process of shutting down, or mothballing, would be allowed to transfer part or all their CRIS to a same-location facility even while the unit is deactivating.

Doreen Saia of Greenberg Traurig raised the point that the revisions need to take physical withholding rules into account because there will be facilities “not necessarily retiring until some future point” but are remaining on the grid for the near future and requesting CRIS transfers.

Saia argued that a challenge will emerge when the ISO “puts their marker in the sand to do a physical withholding assessment” and there will be units whose reliability status is unclear but are requesting an “ex ante determination,” making forecasts unclear for stakeholders.

NYISO will return to a future working group meeting to share any additional feedback it receives from stakeholders concerning the new tariff language. It asks that all comments be emailed to Sanchez (jsanchez@nyiso.com).

TVA Receives Federal Assist on Future Nuclear Plans

The U.S. Department of Energy on Monday granted the Tennessee Valley Authority a voucher from its Gateway for Accelerated Innovation in Nuclear to study future sites for advanced nuclear reactors.

The DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy’s announcement gives TVA access to the expertise and research resources of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. TVA and the lab plan to find candidate sites appropriate for future nuclear reactors, using the Oak Ridge Siting Analysis for power Generation Expansion (OR-SAGE) tool to explore suitable locations.

South Carolina-based Elementl Power also received a similar voucher for siting assessment.

“As part of TVA’s ongoing exploration of advanced nuclear technology, we look forward to working with the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and other partners to help lead the nation toward a decarbonized future,” TVA said in an emailed statement to RTO Insider.

TVA did not elaborate beyond the DOE’s press release on potential sites or their size.

TVA has a goal to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. CEO Jeff Lyash has said decarbonization efforts will require license extensions at its three existing nuclear plants, adding small modular reactors, and considerable investments in energy storage and carbon capture and sequestration. TVA said earlier this year it will add a GE Hitachi small modular reactor by 2032 at the Clinch River Nuclear site near Oak Ridge, Tenn. (See TVA Defends Rates, CO2 Reduction Plans in House Inquiry.)

Empire Building Challenge Seeks to Decarbonize NY High-rises

The New York State Energy Research and Development Agency (NYSERDA) last week selected six real estate partnerships to join a $50 million effort “to help advance a climate-friendly building stock” in the state.

Gov. Kathy Hochul announced the selections, saying the partnerships will improve building efficiency across New York by implementing heating and water decarbonization systems in 5.6 million square feet of existing high-rise stock, part of the $50 million Empire Building Challenge (EBC).

According to a statement, the EBC promises to “usher in a new era for high-rise buildings” by retrofitting 131 buildings that have signed up to be carbon-neutral and publishing playbooks with best practices for other building owners to replicate and retrofit the 70% of state’s buildings constructed prior to existing energy codes to low-carbon standards.

Hochul’s announcement also noted that energy startup accelerator The Clean Fight was selected as administrator for the $10 million dollar Empire Technology Prize program, which will support entrepreneurs developing technologies that disrupt the energy industry and increase the deployment of low-carbon retrofits in tall commercial or multifamily buildings.

The real estate teams were selected through a competitive solicitation that sought developers who will advance eight showcase buildings as part of the EBC.

The six partnerships chosen last week represent the second group of real estate businesses selected for the program, following a first cohort of 10 selected in April 2021 to achieve carbon neutrality in their building stock, with Vornado, Empire State Realty Trust and Rudin Management Company committing their entire portfolios to reaching neutrality.

The program has received strong support since, allowing New York to retrofit older buildings with green technologies instead of demolishing them.

Barriers and Challenges

New York has struggled to weatherize the more than 90% of buildings in the state that are expected to still be standing by 2050.

The state’s Climate Action Council (CAC) recently found that buildings are the largest source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in New York, responsible for one-third of annual emissions statewide.

Furthermore, New York’s building stock tends to be inefficient.

Due to poor insulation and energy efficiency codes, buildings leak heat during winter and cold air in the summer months. It will be particularly difficult to decarbonize sectors of the built environment that are high-rises in cold climates, such those that dominate New York City’s skyline, since they both cover lots of ground and interact with extreme weather significantly more than smaller neighboring structures.

GHG Emissions by Sector (Climate Action Council) Content.jpgCLCPA estimations of GHG emissions by sector with buildings representing more than 25% | Climate Action Council

These challenges became clear during Superstorm Sandy in 2012, which caused approximately 35,000 housing units to lose power, heat or hot water for extended periods, if not permanently. More recently, a snowstorm in April caused power outages across the state, leaving more than 150,000 utility customers in the cold.

An analysis by rental consultancy RentHop found that the number of winter 311 heat or hot water complaints was 25.6% higher this past winter than last.

Meanwhile, NYISO predicts more extreme heat waves will occur with each subsequent summer, meaning even higher cooling costs. (See “Summer Highs Test System,” NYISO OC Discusses NOPR Comments, High Temps, EDS Results.)

These challenges became particularly acute after the three days of heavy rain last week that exposed flaws in many New York buildings.

Specifically, the impact of the rain forced Councilwoman Julie Won from District 26 of Western Queens to join residents of Woodside Houses to demand permanent heating fixes to their development because residents immediately lost heat and hot water in the deluge and are now worried about freezing during what is expected to be a frigid winter with higher average energy costs.

The issue has become so important that Hochul has promised that New York will initiate the nation’s first gas ban in new construction by 2027, while the state Senate has gone a step further and proposed implementing the ban in 2024 for small buildings and 2027 for larger buildings.

But there are significantly fewer new buildings being constructed than the total existing stock within New York, making it critical to weatherize the millions of currently emitting buildings.

Heat Pumps a Priority

One notable method of decarbonizing the building sector would be use of retrofitted heat pumps, heating plants and connected water delivery systems.

Conventional heating and cooling systems account for 37% of energy consumption and 32% of greenhouse gases in New York, but clean heating and cooling systems — such as heat pumps — could significantly reduce the state’s carbon footprint.

Heat pumps are up to four times more efficient than conventional heating systems because they transfer heat rather than generating, making them cleaner, cheaper and healthier. More specifically, heat pumps move heat from the cool outdoors into the building during the heating season and then out of the building to the outdoors during the cooling season.

Air-source heat pumps operate via ducts that connect to an indoor unit that vents compressed outdoor air throughout the house in a controlled manner.

Ground-source — or geothermal — heat pumps extract heat from the ground or a nearby water source into the home during freezing weather through underground piping systems, then reverse the process during warmer months.

Compared to conventional systems, heat pumps have longer life expectancies, supply more consistent and steady outputs, allow for weather adaptability, can connect to intermittent or on-site storage systems, and produce fewer emissions.

New York has invested heavily in heat pumps, as seen in its NYS Clean Heat program, which emphasizes using the devices to increase building energy efficiency and reduce emissions compared with natural gas heating.  State assembly members, such as Sandra Galef (D), have been hosting public meetings specifically devoted to heat pumps to promote their energy efficiency to constituents.

Despite the benefits, heat pumps suffer the disadvantage of having high upfront costs, requiring special planning permissions, and being sometimes difficult to install.

However, the CAC estimates that 1 to 2 million efficient homes will need to be electrified with heat pumps by 2030 to achieve CLCPA mandates, which does not consider taller high-rise buildings, the subject of the governor’s recent announcement.

EBC Benefits

The EBC is working to develop long-term capital plans that achieve carbon neutrality, while devising scenarios to scale the solutions within their partners’ portfolios.

A recent analysis from the Urban Green Council estimated that EBC partners could invest more than $250 million, which would bring the total funding to $300 million flowing into the energy-efficiency retrofit market, creating 2,600 high paying jobs, cutting 175,000 tons of carbon from New York’s emissions, and expanding improvements in almost 50,000 NYC buildings.

Furthermore, the CAC’s Just Transition Working Group found that the building sector will account for more than half of the jobs added in the clean energy subsectors from 2019 to 2030, and estimated that building sector employment will rise to roughly 366,000 by 2040, which would double the 2019 total workforce.

The CAC also estimated $9 billion in health benefits from energy efficiency interventions in low- and moderate-income homes, on top of the benefits from reduced fossil fuel combustion. Among those benefits is the reduction in carbon monoxide poisonings; leaking home heating systems are the primary cause of these poisonings the U.S., accounting for 1,500 emergency department visits and 160 hospitalizations in New York alone.

Potential health and cost benefits could be even more vital for disadvantaged communities, which are disproportionately affected by asthma and contain homes that may be more likely to have unvented or piloted gas stoves. The CLCPA has explicit provisions committing to target the electrification of environmental justice communities.

In an email to NetZero Insider, NYSERDA Vice President of Clean and Resilient Buildings Susanne DesRoches said “the Challenge will improve the building façades, increase ventilation, and deploy modern heating systems that will directly benefit the approximately 800 families that currently live in these showcase buildings.”

EBC partners “provide affordable housing to tens of thousands of New Yorkers, so the potential impact of carrying these lessons through their portfolios is huge,” DesRoches said. She added that, given the number of New Yorkers who live in aging structures, “each and every one of these buildings can learn from the solutions being advanced through Empire Building Challenge and, when the time is right, apply these solutions.”

Next Steps

Hochul has committed to achieving two million climate-friendly homes by 2030 and the EBC public-private partnership between NYSERDA and its real estate partners is expected to aid in that endeavor.

DesRoches said the “Empire Building Challenge is about moving from planning to action in addressing harmful emissions from the existing building stock in New York State in support of Gov. Hochul’s commitment.”

NYSERDA said its plans to release a competitive funding opportunity in which the real estate partners can submit proposals for up to $3 million for projects that showcase highly replicable approaches to decarbonize heating and hot water systems in existing buildings. Meanwhile, the first-round cohort have begun implementing their demonstration projects and are sharing updates online, while actively working to develop long-term plans for carbon reduction.

Additionally, NYSERDA said it is working with The Clean Fight to launch the Empire Technology Prize, which it views as a way to bring new technologies to market and accelerate the pace of building decarbonization.

PG&E Slow to Replace Old Equipment, Monitor Says

Supply chain delays have hindered Pacific Gas and Electric’s progress replacing aged infrastructure, increasing the risk of equipment failure and wildfires, according to the independent monitor hired to keep tabs on the utility’s fire-prevention efforts.

The global pandemic’s supply chain slowdowns have hit U.S. electric utilities such as PG&E with “lengthened lead-times associated with ordering and receiving various goods,” Denver-based Filsinger Energy Partners said in its first report on the utility, issued Monday. “For example, due to the effects of global supply chain issues, lead times for certain transformers have increased from 38 weeks to approximately 38 months.”

That’s a problem because much of PG&E’s equipment has outlived its useful lifespan, it said.

Across the utility’s transmission, distribution and gas divisions, Filsinger, the independent system monitor (ISM), “has observed numerous PG&E asset ages that are significantly older than the related industry average useful life and the related PG&E average age of asset failure.”

“For example, PG&E reported having certain [substation] equipment with an average age of 60 years and an average industry service life of 40 years (i.e., 20 years older than the industry average),” it said. “Further, PG&E reported an average age of failure for this equipment as 70 years with 47% of this equipment exceeding this average age of failure.”

Two other types of assets have exceeded average service lives and industry standards by years or decades, it said.

“If only utilizing asset age to determine an asset’s useful life, PG&E would have to purchase and install over 2,000 components of the aforementioned equipment in order to bring the asset age of the equipment in these three categories down to the PG&E average age of failure for each equipment type,” it said. “A significantly higher investment would be required to get each asset category reduced to the industry average.”

Global supply chain problems, however, are delaying the utility’s equipment replacement programs.

“The emerging risk relates to the volume of assets that have the potential to fail within close time proximity to one another,” the report said.

The ISM

The California Public Utilities Commission required PG&E to pay for an ISM as a condition of approving its bankruptcy reorganization plan in May 2020. The CPUC selected Filsinger, which started work after PG&E exited probation and the oversight of a federal monitor in January. (See PG&E Ends Probation as a ‘Menace to California,’ Judge Says.)

Filsinger is expected to file reports every six months under its five-year contract. Its first report broadly cataloged the problems and progress of PG&E in trying to prevent its transmission and distribution systems from igniting more wildfires.

Catastrophic blazes blamed on PG&E equipment failures included the 2018 Camp Fire, the state’s deadliest and most destructive wildfire that began when a century-old C hook broke on a high-voltage line, causing the jumper conductor to fall onto the steel tower. The resulting electric arcs rained molten steel and aluminum, which sparked the grass and brush below.

The fire destroyed the town of Paradise in hours, killed 84 people and led to PG&E’s January 2019 bankruptcy filing and its guilty pleas in June 2020 to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

State fire investigators have found that PG&E equipment caused massive and highly destructive fires in 2017, 2019, 2020 and 2021. The utility is now under investigation by the U.S. Forest Service for its possible role in igniting the Mosquito Fire, which started Sept. 6 and burned through 77,000 acres of forestland in the Sierra Nevada foothills east of Sacramento.

“The USFS has indicated to Pacific Gas and Electric [in] an initial assessment that the fire started in the area of the utility’s power line on National Forest System lands and that the USFS is performing a criminal investigation into the 2022 Mosquito fire,” PG&E told the Securities and Exchange Commission Sept. 26. Two days earlier, “the USFS [had] removed and took possession of one of the utility’s transmission poles and attached equipment,” it said.

The utility has made progress in some areas, the monitor’s report said, including its use of “enhanced powerline safety settings,” which increase fault-detection sensitivity and quickly de-energize lines that experience problems such as changes in current. The EPSS protocol also disables the automatic reclosing of circuit breakers.

PG&E said the expansion of EPSS in high-risk fire areas has greatly reduced potential ignitions from lines contacting trees and other fire dangers.

“From the implementation of EPSS in late July 2021 through October 2021, PG&E reports a 40% reduction in ignitions as compared to the past three-year average, and an 80% reduction in the CPUC-reportable ignitions as compared to the past three-year average for the same period,” the report noted.

The downside is that use of EPSS and the intentional blackouts known as public safety power shutoffs have significantly increased the number of outages and affected customers in high-threat fire areas, it said.

In a statement Monday, PG&E said “we welcome the oversight provided by the Independent Safety Monitor team. We agreed to this structure when we emerged from Chapter 11 in 2020, believing it would bring additional transparency to our critical safety work.”

The utility’s revamped “leadership team has intensified its focus on fostering an environment that encourages coworkers to raise concerns on any topic, especially around safety and risk, so that we can address things that need to be fixed or made safe,” it said. “The monitor team helps to build upon this culture and brings an enhanced level of openness and transparency to our efforts to provide safe and reliable energy in the face of evolving climate and wildfire risk.”

The company repeated its intent to underground 10,000 miles of power lines in regions at greatest risk of wildfires. The CPUC’s approval of that effort and billions of dollars in ratepayer funding remain uncertain, however.

NERC’s Gugel Says Action Ahead for Renewable Integration

ATLANTA — At the first day of the North American Generator Forum’s Annual Compliance Conference, held at NERC’s headquarters, NERC Vice President of Engineering and Standards Howard Gugel jokingly complained that because he worked for the ERO, most attendees probably automatically thought of him as “the standards guy.”

“Unfortunately, [for] a lot of people, when you mention the name NERC, your mind immediately goes to standards and compliance. And of course, that’s what we do,” Gugel said. “But we do things other than standards, right? We do reliability assessments. … We also monitor the bulk electric system. … And so when things occur on the system, when reliability coordinators alert us to things, we’re able to go in and look to see how things are evolving in the system and keep folks appraised of how things are evolving.”

Gugel was at the conference to discuss NERC’s response to what he called “the brave new world of resilience,” which is being brought about by the interconnected trends of “decarbonization, decentralization and digitization.”

The first of these refers to the growth of carbon-free generation sources like wind and solar, whose energy output is dependent on the weather and must be managed in a completely different way than traditional generators. Decentralization, which refers to the spread of behind-the-meter resources, is linked to the growth of rooftop solar panels, as well as battery energy storage systems. Meanwhile, digitization — the reliance on the internet to facilitate the management of these new technologies — underpins each of these developments.

Howard Gugel 2022-10-11 (RTO Insider LLC) FI.jpgHoward Gugel, NERC | © RTO Insider LLC

A major challenge in the management of these new resources, Gugel said, is that because they do not belong to the BES, they do not actually fall under NERC’s reliability standards, even though they make up a significant fraction of the asynchronous generation on the bulk power system: 16.2% as of 2021. By comparison, only 3% of synchronous generation connected to the BES did not fall under NERC’s standards last year.

Even renewable resources that are connected to the BES pose major challenges for grid operations because of their very different behavior patterns. Gugel said that unlike inertial generators, whose output declines gradually in the event of a problem, giving operators a bit of time to respond, solar facilities in particular behave more like a “step function” with output falling right away.

“You can see 1,000 [to] 2,000 MW come off immediately, and then five minutes later when that momentary cessation is done, it all comes back at the same time. That causes the operators to really be concerned about how they control that system,” Gugel said.

The theme of digitization creates challenges related to the cutting-edge nature of many new generation resources, which means they need constant internet connectivity to monitor, troubleshoot and deliver software updates that in some cases come from their manufacturers overseas. This makes these facilities an attractive target for hackers, especially because a relatively small amount of companies are responsible for a large proportion of grid-connected hardware. If an intruder can break into one manufacturer’s systems, they could be in a position to conduct a major operation against the North American power grid.

Returning to the topic of standards, Gugel assured the audience that NERC is taking the challenge posed by the grid’s evolution seriously. The organization’s efforts range from standard development projects aimed at revising the facility interconnection requirements, to potential moves to re-evaluate the definition of the BES itself so that NERC’s standards can apply to behind-the-meter resources that they currently don’t cover.

“It’s obvious that we can’t just stay where we’re at; the status quo is just going to make us farther and farther behind [on] this reliability issue,” Gugel said. “The time to act is now, so you’ll hear more about [the] evaluation of the definition of BES and possible changes to registration criteria as we go forward.”

MISO Insists it can Handle Record-setting Interconnection Queue

MISO on Monday assured stakeholders that it has the means to study the 170 GW of new generation requests that were added to its interconnection queue in September.

However, stakeholders seemed unsure whether the grid operator is up to the task, bolstered, perhaps, by Berkeley Lab’s analysis showing it’s more expensive than ever for generation to connect to the footprint’s grid.

MISO said last month it must sort through a record 171 GW of proposed generation projects across 956 interconnect requests for the 2022 cycle. The requests could bring the queue to the brink of 300 GW, triple what was there just two years ago. (See MISO: Record 1,000 Interconnection Requests in 2022.)

Phil Van Schaack, manager of resource utilization, said the 2022 cycle almost doubled the requests received in 2021.

“MISO saw nearly 100% growth year over year,” Schaack said during Mondays’ Interconnection Process Working Group (IPWG) teleconference. He said the megawatt value of this year’s queue entrants is “greater than all the installed capacity in the MISO commercial model.”

Five years ago, the RTO’s planners said processing what was then a 60 GW queue was a tough proposition. (See MISO Works to Address Unprecedented Queue Volume.)

Van Schaack said solar generation is dominating the queue and a record number of requests came from first-time developers in MISO. If all the interconnection requests are realized, the queue would be composed of more than 95% renewable and storage resources.

“Not all of these projects will make it to the end, but still, record setting-numbers,” he said. “We appreciate everyone working with us as we work through these requests.”

Staff is reviewing the projects to validate whether they have secured site control, Van Shaack said.

Invenergy’s Arash Ghodsian asked whether there’s a plan to handle the technical challenges in studying the huge volume of requests. “Will MISO be able to solve the models with the magnitude of generation in the queue?” he asked.

WEC Energy Group’s Chris Plante suggested the RTO might need to change its study strategies, given the generation additions.

Van Shaack said staff is prepared to solve models with the best available information and bring on additional people to help, if necessary.

“We’re going to do our best to meet the timeline,” he said. “The need to scale and augment the internal process is ongoing … We do anticipate being able to handle this.”

NextEra Energy’s Aaron Bloom asked whether MISO plans to revisit its three 20-year futures used for transmission planning in light of the generation plans. Staff responded they will internally discuss refreshing the futures’ assumptions.

Stakeholders also requested MISO lead workshops for updates on the queue.

Stakeholders Ask About Odds of IC Agreements

As MISO normally sees about 80% of interconnection requests withdrawn from the queue, stakeholders asked whether staff expects a similar result with the 2022 round.

“We don’t know what the dropout rate is going to be. Historically, the number has been a 20% success rate. But two big things happened that drove the numbers we saw,” Andy Witmeier, director of resource utilization said, pointing to the Inflation Reduction Act’s renewable energy tax credits and the 18 new 345-kV lines from MISO’s long-range transmission plan (LRTP).

The grid operator’s board of directors approved a $10 billion LRTP portfolio of projects in MISO Midwest this summer, partly to integrate more renewable energy. It also intends to stand up $1 billion in projects on its western seam through its Joint Targeted Interconnection Queue study with SPP.

“Those could affect the dropout … But this is still a historic amount of generation,” Witmeier said. “You could see a lot of upgrades coming out of these. First off, there’s just not enough people to buy this capacity.”

Van Schaack said staff could still find prohibitively expensive network upgrade assignments among the latest generation hopefuls.

“That economic trend has definitely continued into 2022,” he said, referencing projects from earlier queue cycles that were unviable because they were paired with pricey upgrades.

Berkeley Lab Focuses on Snowballing Upgrade Costs

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory observed last week that MISO’s interconnection environment has led to “rapidly growing” interconnection costs over the past four years.

The national laboratory said in an Oct. 7 study that RTO’s average network upgrade cost of $102/kW for recently completed projects is nearly double that of historical costs from 2000 through 2018. The lab also said that projects still actively moving through the queue faced estimated interconnection costs that have tripled in just four years to about $156/kW.

The cost analysis was funded in part through the U.S. Department of Energy’s Interconnection Innovation e-Xchange.

“The capacity associated with [new] requests is more than twice as large as MISO’s peak load in recent years — about 120 GW — and, if substantial amounts are built, will likely exert competitive pressure on existing generation,” Berkeley said. “However, most projects have historically withdrawn their applications, often in response to high interconnection costs: only 24% of all projects requesting interconnection between 2000 and 2016 have ultimately achieved commercial operation at the end of 2021.”

The lab said 366 GW of projects have left the queue, while just 62 GW have been interconnected. It said the most recently withdrawn interconnection requests confronted the highest average upgrade costs of about $452/kW.

Berkeley also said that the potential interconnection costs on recent submittals for storage, wind and solar generation are more expensive than for natural gas-fired generation. It found that wind generation has $399/kW in network upgrade costs, storage $248/kW and solar $209/kW; natural gas is expected to pay a more modest $108/kW.

MISO Adamant on Narrower DFAX Cutoff 

MISO still plans to reduce congestion by instituting a lower system-impact threshold on interconnecting generation that will likely prompt more network upgrades.

The RTO’s proposal might dim the prospects for some of the new interconnection requests.

The RTO suggested this summer to halve new generation’s allotted distribution factor (DFAX) impact on transmission from 20% to 10% for its basic and unguaranteed level of interconnection service, called energy resource interconnection service (ERIS). (See MISO Recommends Lower Distribution Factor to Address Congestion.)

At the behest of some MISO South members, the grid operator studied a DFAX limit down to 5% but decided that the threshold would be too drastic. Staff said 10% provides a good balance without being too aggressive.

Generation developers maintain that a tighter DFAX threshold would be punitive and place even more responsibility for system planning on interconnection customers, who are trying to get sorely needed generation on the system.

Sustainable FERC Project’s Lauren Azar said during the IPWG’s Monday meeting that lowering the threshold will “exacerbate and result in more transfer of costs to generators.”

Some stakeholders argued that MISO was conflating transmission reliability with real-time congestion costs.

“Interconnection is about reliability and not addressing congestion. What’s resulting is congestion in real-time, which is an economic issue. ERIS generators are energy-only and should expect to be curtailed,” Clean Grid Alliance’s Natalie McIntire argued.

Staff contended that the binding constraints interconnections cause are a reliability issue. They said potential constraints are currently being ignored in the interconnection process, only to crop up later on the system.

Stakeholders said that it’s premature to lower the DFAX threshold across the board when MISO hasn’t yet put together an LRTP portfolio for its southern region. The current and upcoming LRTP portfolios are marketed as being able to support more generation interconnections on the grid.