Attendance was light last Thursday at a hearing on a bill to allocate funds to deal with probable upcoming droughts in Washington, but participants were unanimous in supporting the measure.
The state Senate’s Agriculture, Water, Natural Resources and Parks Committee held the hearing on the bipartisan Senate Bill 5746, introduced by Sen. Judy Warnick (R).
If passed, Warnick’s bill would allocate $2 million every two years to a new drought preparedness fund. Also, if Washington’s governor declares a drought emergency, another $3 million would be automatically transferred from the state general fund to a drought response fund.
This bill was prompted by Gov. Jay Inslee declaring a drought emergency in July 2021 for most of Washington. That declaration caught the legislature off guard with no money set aside for dealing with a drought emergency. Inslee’s declaration activated a special legislative drought committee, which was mostly helpless because it first met a few months after the legislative session — with accompanying appropriations— ended in May 2021. (See Drought Catches Wash. Officials Off Guard.)
“It was logistically very frustrating. … We need to be prepared next time,” Warnick said at last week’s hearing. In 2021, she was the chairwoman of the Joint Legislative Committee on Water Supply During Drought.
Last Thursday, representatives from the state Ecology and Agriculture departments testified in favor of the bill, saying a new drought is expected to be declared this year. State officials expect a drought to re-emerge in 2022 because Washington would require 150% of its regular rainfall through this spring just to recover the water lost in 2021 in the agricultural breadbasket of the Columbia River Basin.
Representatives from the Washington Farm Bureau and the Washington Association of Wheat Growers also supported the bill.
“Agriculture was especially impacted by heat and the drought,” testified Farm Bureau lobbyist Tom Davis. “We’ve had some growers with total crop loss,” testified Diana Carlen, representing potato and wheat growers’ associations.
Last year’s wheat crop was 46% of 2020’s harvest, the state’s lowest harvest since 1964. In 2021, the March-to-August temperatures were the third warmest in Washington history — 2.1 degrees Fahrenheit above average. Fifteen of Washington’s 39 counties posted their driest conditions ever. The easternmost quarter of the state underwent drought conditions that normally show up once or twice every 100 years.
SPP last week laid out the clearest explanation yet of its plan to expand its presence and establish an RTO in the Western Interconnection.
“We’re currently … seeking opportunities to expand existing services in the West,” Bruce Rew, SPP’s senior vice president of operations, told the Strategic Planning Committee during a discussion of its new five-year strategic plan Wednesday. “If you look at a couple of years from now, our goal is to be viewed as an attractive market service provider in the West.”
Under its five-year plan, SPP will first grow its existing services in the West, which include its real-time Western Energy Imbalance Service (WEIS) market, its role as a NERC-certified reliability coordinator and its RTO West proposal, which has attracted nine entities and is expected to become operational in 2024.
By then, SPP plans to be operating the Western Resource Adequacy Program, evaluating commitments to its Markets+ service and developing a strategy for the best expansion of transmission markets and transfer capability between the Western and Eastern Interconnections. Markets+ offers centralized day-ahead and real-time unit commitment and dispatch and “hurdle-free” transmission service to those not ready for full RTO membership. (See Implementation Underway for NWPP’s Western RA Market.)
In 2026, SPP plans to have an established RTO in the West, with business development and market initiatives ongoing in the Desert Southwest, Basin and Northwest regions.
David Kelley, director of seams and tariff services, said the plan is a living document, noting “themes are evolving quite rapidly.”
“As that continues to play out in the West, we’re going to need to be able to adapt, so this is certainly not written in stone,” Kelley said.
Board Chair Larry Altenbaumer said the plan’s metrics should focus on value created for both legacy members and the Western members. “I think it is certainly equally important that we focus on the value that our existing membership is deriving from the expansion in the West,” he said.
Several SPC members pointed out the challenges SPP may encounter in the West from entities leery of RTO membership. They also warned staff to counter fears that the Board of Directors will favor its Eastern members over the West.
“Certainly, there are concerns and challenges [in the West] and it’s dependent upon each party that you talk to and what their position is,” Rew said. “Part of the overall strategy and approach is to work through those challenges as we move forward, whether it’s the RTO expansion to expansion of the existing WEIS market or even working with the WRAP.”
Counterflow Optimization on Hold
Committee members sided with stakeholders and staff in deciding to keep the current market construct, rather than adding counterflow optimization to the congestion-hedging process, as recommended three years ago by the Holistic Integrated Tariff Team (HITT). (See SPP SPC Takes on Congestion Hedging Issues.)
The HITT’s recommendation to add counterflow optimization — limited to excess auction revenue — to SPP’s market mechanism that hedges load against congestion charges has become an issue with no solution since its board approval in 2019. The proposal, which would essentially keep system transmission flows between two points balanced, was meant to address stakeholders’ and staff’s concerns about how congestion rights instruments are awarded and the current process’s efficiency.
The Market Working Group was tasked with developing a policy paper. Education workshops were held for the board and SPC, which created an advisory team to move the recommendation forward. Last year, consulting firm Nexant was charged with providing a root-cause analysis that found it to be the “latitude and pattern of nominations submitted to the annual allocation.”
An SPP 2025 future study found market participants’ hedging positions will change in coming years thanks to new topology, HITT initiatives and the changing generation mix. The study indicated a net positive value for all load-serving entities with counterflow optimization.
SPP’s Market Monitoring Unit weighed in during the MWG discussions, saying it does not endorse counterflow optimization and the grid operator and stakeholders should identify alternatives to congestion-hedging issues that carry less risk.
“There are other options that are less complex, less risky, and easier to unwind to address counterflow optimization,” MMU Executive Director Keith Collins said.
The Monitor said the proposal doesn’t give participants a say in the amount of counterflow they receive and there is no way for them to avoid being affected by optimization even when they opt-out. It also said auction participants will adapt to the market changes, which will affect auction revenue. It also said auction participants will adapt to the market changes, which will affect auction revenue.
Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corp.’s Andrew Lachowsky recalled an MWG meeting at which the MMU’s John Luallen referred to the proposal as “a risky, expensive redistribution of wealth.”
“I hope I [got] the quote verbatim,” Lachowsky said.
In the end, the MWG was unable to reach consensus to approve counterflow optimization and voted in 2020 to keep the current market construct. Although they acknowledged that counterflow optimization would benefit LSEs, staff also recommended keeping the current construct, noting some market participants want to review the transmission service process for efficiencies.
Although the HITT recommendation was brought back to the MWG “time and time again,” SPP’s Micha Bailey said staff were unable to gather membership support.
“We can’t get the majority there, so that’s why we said we need to keep the current market construct,” Bailey said. “We need to move on and see what other efficiencies we can garner.”
“It was a pretty tough, complex subject,” the Nebraska Power Review Board’s Dennis Grennan, a member of the advisory group, told the SPC.
“This process is a stream of different processes,” Nexant’s Joseph Bright said.
SPC Chair Mark Crisson called for a “cooling-off period” to rethink counterflow optimization.
“I would request [that] sometime this year, we put our heads together … to talk about how we consider examining this issue again, and whether there are issues besides or in addition to counterflow optimization that we consider,” he said.
“We see the issues there. We just haven’t seen where the organization over the last couple of years has been able to coalesce around a solution or a change that would be agreeable to the organization,” Rew said. “We’ll probably be [able to reach consensus] at some point a year from now because that’s what the goal for this was.”
The SPC endorsed two other HITT recommendations: an effectiveness study of SPP’s new three-phase generator interconnection process that began in 2019, and a working group’s tariff language establishing cost allocation and rates for energy storage resources (ESR).
The new GI process addresses overwhelming demand for service by providing incentives to accelerate the study process and avoid multiple restudies. (See FERC OKs New SPP Interconnection Process.)
However, staff said only one cluster study of interconnection requests has been partially completed after restudies of previous clusters delayed full implementation. A second cluster is expected to finish its first phase this month.
Staff compared the three most recent clusters that went through the legacy process with the three-phase process’s first two studies. Principal engineer Steve Purdy said multiple restudies were avoided, with 41% of the IC requests remaining after two iterations, compared to 65 to 77% in the three legacy clusters.
“It appears the three-stage process had the desired effect,” Purdy said. “We were able to get a more stable group of requests in the cluster quicker, and we were able to move on to these later studies more efficiently.”
That said, the two studies currently being evaluated may be the only ones that go through the three-stage process. Purdy said the GI queue backlog mitigation procedure docket before FERC and SPP’s transmission-planning improvements will eventually supersede the three-phase study.
The Regional State Committee is reviewing tariff language for ESRs’ cost allocation and rates developed by the Cost Allocation Working Group
The Markets and Operations Policy Committee earlier approved a revision request (RR476) that will treat ESRs as transmission assets. The SPC conditioned its endorsement upon the RSC’s approval of RR476 in July.
Task Force Addressing Winter Storm Recs
COO Lanny Nickell told the committee that a task force has begun working on recommendations from SPP’s report on last year’s winter storm, when thermal plant outages forced the grid operator to order its first-ever load sheds. (See “Grid Operator Releases Report on Performance During Winter Storm,” SPP Board of Directors/Members Committee Briefs: July 26-27.)
The Improved Resource Availability Task Force (IRATF), comprising members and state regulators, is working to recommend policies that address the report’s 26 Tier 1 recommendations as well as fuel assurance, resource planning and availability issues. The group has completed two of the recommendations and another 17 are in progress.
“This effort is going to take a lot of work, and there’s a lot of debate. A lot of it has already begun with the task force,” Nickell said.
Southwestern Public Service’s Bill Grant asked that the group consider force majeure issues that arose during last February’s winter storm, when natural gas pipeline companies were unable to meet contractual terms and provide fuel to some gas plants. Nickell said the task force will address the issue when it next meets.
“We’re using the IRATF as that platform [between the electric and gas industries], as it touches both the regulatory committee and our membership,” Nickell said.
“I feel like we’re obligated to do it,” SPP CEO Barbara Sugg said. “If the IRATF is not the right group, we’ll take another tack. We can’t just wait for something to happen organically.”
The report also made 92 Tier 2 and 3 recommendations. Eight of those are complete and 13 are in progress.
Crisson Takes the Chair
The meeting marked the first for Crisson as SPC’s chair and the first for Oklahoma Gas and Electric’s Usha Turner and WAPA’s Sanders as committee members.
Board member Crisson took over the chairmanship role from Altenbaumer, who was quick to point out he left no open action items after his two years leading the committee.
“I just want to let you know I gave you a clean slate,” Altenbaumer said.
Daniel Brooks thinks the energy industry is going about resource adequacy the wrong way.
With hundreds of gigawatts of new renewable power, widespread electrification and an enormous buildout of transmission all expected in the next decade, “the question that gets asked often is how do we maintain the reliability and resiliency of the grid with such a massive transformation? And that is completely the wrong question,” said Brooks, vice president of integrated grid and energy systems at the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI).
“Resiliency is not a barrier to achieving decarbonization; it is a prerequisite,” Brooks said during a Thursday press call. “The question that we have to be asking is not how to maintain the existing reliability, but how do we actually increase the reliability and resiliency with that massive increase in the dependence on the grid” as electricity provides more of the nation’s energy.
Brooks was one of four EPRI executives speaking on the call, highlighting the work of the organization and the trends and priorities that will drive the U.S. energy transition in 2022 and beyond.
For example, expanding and upgrading the grid will also be essential for developing and optimizing other low- and no-carbon technologies, said EPRI CEO Arshad Mansoor. “We need to make sure that the resources we have … the hydro, the nuclear, not only remain in operation but we are operating them so we are getting more from them,” he said.
Held three days after the Rhodium Group made headlines with its announcement that U.S. carbon emissions were up 6.2% last year, the EPRI call was nonetheless upbeat and optimistic about the country’s ability to cut its greenhouse gas emissions 50% by 2030.
Mansoor said that ambitious target, set by President Joe Biden at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, was “a clear indication globally that our ambitions for a clean energy transition, our aspirations are becoming more tangible.”
“We’re seeing large industries that consume a lot of energy focusing on clean energy,” he said. “So now you’re bringing industry together with the electricity sector, just like they’re bringing the transportation sector [together] with the electricity sector, so collaboration and innovation become the theme of this transition.”
Thus, in the wake of recent extreme weather events and the resulting power outages in California and Texas, EPRI launched a new initiative on resource adequacy for a decarbonized future, enlisting a range of industry stakeholders, including NERC, to look at the metrics and methods used to assess risk.
“What’s clear is the way that we’ve actually conducted resource adequacy assessments in the past — with the changing resource mix and with the changing climate and extreme weather that we’re exposed to — those methods just may not expose the actual risks to the electricity grid going forward,” Brooks said.
The industry needs to rethink resource deployment, he said. “What are the right metrics? … How do we actually represent the performance of all of the different supply and demand resources under the context of that changing weather and climate? … How do you take that information, overlay that on to a particular utility grid and determine what the impacts are on the grid and then start to look at the investments that are needed to ensure that it is more resilient?”
Affordable, Equitable Transition
Along with grid resilience, Mansoor believes transportation electrification is going to be a key driver of the transition. It is, he said, “what will make this clean energy transition affordable and equitable.”
With U.S. automakers rolling out a range of electric vehicles, Mansoor sees EVs reaching price parity with gas-powered cars within the next three years. A family of four, spending a total of $4,500 per year on energy — including electricity, natural gas and gasoline — could save $1,000 a year by buying an EV, creating a major economic stimulus, he said.
The caveat is charging infrastructure, or the current lack of it, but Mansoor was again optimistic about state programs and the $7.5 billion for EV charging in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
At the same time, EPRI’s view of the energy transition encompasses nuclear, green hydrogen and the mitigation of coal and natural gas emissions, all technologies offering opportunities for the U.S. to innovate and compete in global markets. Neva Espinoza, vice president of energy supply and low-carbon resources, talked up a range of EPRI initiatives focused on accelerating the development and deployment of low-carbon technologies, including those that are not yet available. Just one example, the 2021 launch of EPRI and Georgia Power’s Ash Beneficial Use Center, which “allows for testing and validation of emerging policy or technologies that can help address residual coal products as we move forward,” Espinoza said.
The closing of coal plants has also led to a greater dependence on natural gas, Espinoza said. “We need to better understand methane, carbon, NOx emissions and other emissions profiles, how to characterize them, how to measure them and, of course, how to mitigate them,” she said.
Projects such as the New York Power Authority pilot on blending hydrogen with natural gas to generate power “will be critical as we think about integrating new low-carbon fuels into our energy system, understanding their operational profile, understanding overall air impacts, understanding overall safety impacts as we move forward to operationalize them and bring them into the energy system,” she said.
Multiple Paths to Decarbonization
Calling in from Abu Dhabi, Neil Wilmshurst, EPRI’s senior vice president for energy system resources, stressed the importance of looking beyond the energy transition in the U.S. and leveraging international collaboration as a “force multiplier.”
Tracking the energy transition in the Middle East is “a really, really educational thing,” Wilmshurst said. “You have tremendous solar installations. You’ve got countries entering into new-build nuclear issues. You’ve got people with oil-based economies thinking, ‘What does the future look like in 20, 30, 40 years?’”
Wilmshurst also focused on nuclear issues. First on keeping the existing U.S. fleet in operation “as much as possible, as much as feasible.” And second, on developing smaller, modular or micro reactors, particularly to produce hydrogen. Pointing to the advanced nuclear demonstration projects being supported by the Department of Energy, he said, “We need to have reactors being built, [and] hopefully operational in the next seven to eight years.” (See Strong Bipartisan Support for Advanced Nuclear at Senate Hearing.)
But the energy transition in the U.S., while irreversible, still faces political obstacles, most prominently the stalled Build Back Better Act and the federal tax incentives it contains for diverse clean technologies.
Confronting the current political landscape, Espinoza said, EPRI tries “to look above and beyond what those potential implications can be and what is required for different technologies.”
EPRI’s research has looked at mapping out multiple pathways to decarbonization, based on different assumptions and sensitivities, she said. “There will be different mixtures of technology. We know reliability and resiliency will be critically important; we know energy efficiency will be critically important; we know the electric sector decarbonization will enable economy-wide decarbonization,” she said.
“So, the sensitivities and the political and policy decisions can tweak the overall pathway,” Espinoza said. “But still those resounding, underlying findings remain the same.”
The Northwest Power Pool began forming committees last week to nominate directors and shape program design for its resource adequacy effort designed to serve much of the Western Interconnection.
The new stakeholder committees will start to prepare the program’s governance for an initial nonbinding “beta test” of the Western Resource Adequacy Program (WRAP) starting next winter and should be in place before NWPP seeks FERC approval for binding phases of the program in late 2023, organizers said.
In standing up the WRAP, NWPP has determined that it must meet FERC requirements for the group’s governance and committee structures as well as for the program’s design, including the appointment of an independent board of directors to replace its existing board staffed by member representatives. (See RA Program will Require Restructuring of NWPP.)
“We see the need ahead of the nonbinding program [and] ahead of the FERC filing … of setting up committees,” Sarah Edmonds, director of transmission services at Portland General Electric, said Wednesday during an NWPP meeting. “We see the need to get those committees going ahead of official approval of the governance structure, [and] we expect … that what we’re doing will be very easily translatable into the future FERC jurisdictional governance program with little to no changes.”
The two new committees — the Program Review Committee and the Nominating Committee — will be composed of representatives from various sectors, including independent power producers, public interest organizations and advocates for retail customers.
The Program Review Committee “will be charged with receiving, considering and proposing design changes to the WRAP and will serve as the clearing house for most recommended design changes,” NWPP said in a statement.
The Nominating Committee will help establish an independent board by working with an executive search firm to identify candidates.
In Wednesday’s meeting, NWPP Director of Reliability Programs Rebecca Sexton-Kelly asked sector representatives if they wanted to organize among themselves or needed NWPP’s help finding committee members.
Spencer Gray, executive director of the Northwest & Intermountain Power Producers Coalition, volunteered NIPPC to lead committee selection on behalf of independent power producers and marketers.
Nicole Hughes, executive director of Renewable Northwest, offered to head the public interest sector’s selection process. And Josh Weber, an attorney representing the Alliance of Western Energy Consumers, said AWEC would lead industrial sector organizing.
NWPP is planning to help the retail advocacy sector and a sector representing certain types of load-serving entities to find potential committee members.
‘Unacceptable Loss of Load’
NWPP began examining the idea of a Western RA program in 2019, as shortfalls loomed because of the retirement of fossil fuel plants, especially coal-fired plants, and the spread of weather-dependent wind and solar resources.
“Soon, areas in the West may face a capacity deficit of thousands of megawatts,” NWPP CEO Frank Afranji said in an April 2020 meeting hosted by the Committee on Regional Electric Power Cooperation and the Western Interconnection Regional Advisory Body. “Deficits of that magnitude may result in both extraordinary price volatility and unacceptable loss of load.”
The WRAP is intended to increase visibility into existing RA conditions in the West, addressing concerns among industry stakeholders and state regulators that load-serving entities are unknowingly relying on the same capacity resources without realizing it, threatening system reliability during periods of scarcity.
The program is designed to provide participants a framework in which to access capacity resources when a participant is experiencing an extreme event.
In December, NWPP took its first steps in implementing WRAP by inviting participants to submit resource data for a nonbinding phase of the capacity market, which the organization says will serve as a “beta test” for a final program design. (See Implementation Underway for NWPP’s Western RA Market.)
NWPP noted that the move to implement the WRAP officially kicks off its working relationship with SPP, which has been retained to administer the program. (See SPP to Operate NWPP’s Resource Adequacy Program.)
Last week’s start to forming key committees was the next big step.
“The NWPP is looking forward to getting stakeholders engaged in governance and program design updates in this hands-on way,” COO Gregg Carrington said in a statement. “It’s an exciting evolution of the organization.”
Members Approve $1.04B 2021 ITP, Withhold $409M Project’s NTC
SPP stakeholders last week endorsed the grid operator’s latest transmission planning assessment, but not before withholding construction approval of a 345-kV, double-circuit project in West Texas.
The Markets and Operations Policy Committee on Jan. 10 agreed with a pair of working groups’ earlier recommendation to not issue notifications to construct (NTCs) to the 150-mile Crossroads-Phantom project.
The committee also withheld NTCs to a pair of transformer projects in New Mexico.
The 2021 Integrated Transmission Planning (ITP) report found the double-circuit project would provide twice the capacity of a single circuit, while “incrementally” increasing the engineering and construction (E&C) cost from $330.2 million to $409.9 million, a 23.9% increase. According to the 10-year assessment, the project would provide a low-resistance, parallel path for delivery of low-cost energy to Southwestern Public Service’s SPS South load pocket.
The 2021 ITP portfolio includes 28 projects costing more than $1 billion. | SPP
“For an additional cost increase, you’re getting two times the capacity and reserving some future options a little more effectively,” said ITC Holdings’ Alan Myers, chair of the Transmission Working Group (TWG).
The project is meant to address one of two targeted areas in the 2021 ITP where SPP found voltage-stability issues because of isolated load and above-average load projections, both related to oil and gas exploration: the Permian Basin in West Texas and eastern New Mexico, and the Bakken Formation oil fields in North Dakota.
However, load-projection errors, related to how load was allocated to individual substations, were discovered late in the process. Myers said the error was found in the 2022 ITP models, too late for staff to do a full impact analysis.
“So there was no time for staff to do like a full redo, if you will, of the analysis,” he said. “It was disproportionately, I believe, impactful to the loads down on that southern portion of the system.”
Myers said the TWG and Economic Studies Working Group spent a total of 7.5 hours in December discussing the NTCs for Crossroads-Phantom and the New Mexico transformers. Both groups endorsed the ITP in January but recommended the NTCs not be issued.
Staff, on the other hand, said they believe the Crossroads project is the best overall solution for the region. They requested the project still be considered for an NTC with conditions.
MOPC tabled and then un-tabled the proposal before finally approving the 2021 ITP by a vote of 56-5, with four abstentions. It recommended further evaluation of the Crossroads-Phantom project and that it be brought back to the committee during its July meeting.
The ITP portfolio includes 28 new projects and 380 miles of new 345-kV lines at an E&C cost of $1.04 billion. Staff said the projects would solve 185 system needs with a 5.3 to 5.7 benefit-to-cost ratio.
The committee also approved staff’s recommendation to re-baseline the delayed 2022 ITP by performing a reliability-only assessment, resuming full studies with the 2023 and 2024 ITPs.
SPP says its proposal to rebaseline the 2022 ITP will enable 2023 ITP work to begin early. | SPP
MOPC directed staff to work with the ESWG and TWG to review the tariff and scope documents to find further improvements to ensure timely completion of current and future ITP assessments. Staff are currently working on three ITPs, for 2021, 2022 and 2023. The 2022 plan is already behind schedule because of 2021 ITP constraints, and 2023 is at risk because of the previous two assessments’ delays.
SPP engineer Nick Parker said a task force that developed recommendations to improve the planning process “did a good job getting us close” and that staff were only a few months off, despite remote work during the COVID-19 pandemic and their other transmission-related requirements. (See SPP Strategic Planning Committee Briefs.)
“Certain stuff hit us all at once,” Parker said, adding that SPP has since added manpower to help manage the workload.
Casey Cathey, SPP’s system planning director, reminded members that ITP studies are on 27-month cycles so that a full assessment can be brought to MOPC every October.
“We did so in 2019 and 2020. The process is not broken,” Cathey said. “It’s really a 30-month process because of the contingencies that happen. Things happen. COVID happened, and that pushed things to where they’re at. Worst-case scenario, we do nothing and we have a 30-month process squeezed into a 27-month process, and you end up skipping an ITP once every four calendar years.”
MOPC also endorsed the 2021 ITP assessment report as having met the tariff’s requirement to complete the planning process.
Storage Accepted as Transmission
Stakeholders moved to accept storage resources as transmission assets in endorsing a recommendation (RR476) from the Electric Storage Resource Steering Committee (ESRSC).
The measure adds another acronym to SPP’s lexicon by defining the assets as “storage as transmission-only assets” (SATOAs). It requires SATOAs to register as market storage resources in the Integrated Marketplace to account for their injections and withdrawals. They will not be dispatched in the market and are only to receive charges and credits for the energy and over-collected losses; revenue or losses from the injections and withdrawals will be added back to the SATOA’s annual transmission revenue requirement.
EDP Renewables’ David Mindham said that while RR476 installs guardrails that prevent the assets from having an “overly burdensome” effect on the market, it “missed an opportunity.”
“By automatically assigning [SATOAs] to transmission owners, the developers could have provided a lot of experience in bringing these assets online,” Mindham said. “They could have provided this as a service and a competitive process probably more cheaply, especially for the limited uses that they’re intended for.”
He asked whether local issues outside the transmission-planning process would prevent the storage assets from coming online through the process.
“I don’t think that this process would prevent it from being put together,” SPP’s Joshua Pilgrim said. “The general consensus, since the device is only meant to run for post-contingency situations, is that their impact on local dispatch profiles would be minimal. They’re not designed to be run all the time. Most of the time, they’re waiting.”
MOPC Chair Denise Buffington, who also chaired the ESRSC, said storage devices’ multiple uses will demand a future conversation between staff and stakeholders.
“We need to get a baseline understanding out there for what the asset can do,” she said. “Once we get that baseline, we can start building on it. Part of the problem with some of the discussions we’ve had about the model is where do you start? Then, it starts to get circular.”
MOPC passed the measure by a 53-3 margin, with 10 abstentions. The Regional State Committee will have to weigh in on RR476’s rate sections.
The committee also endorsed an ESRSC policy paper that sets the methodology for accrediting hybrid generating facilities that qualify as capacity, SPP’s first such policy. The paper proposes that hybrid components (primarily wind, solar and storage) be studied and allocated separately, with four-, six- and eight-hour duration products. The proposal will consider a facility’s investment tax credit and its ability to charge from the grid, beginning with the 2023 summer season.
SPP defines a hybrid facility as two or more resources behind the same interconnection point, where at least one of the resources is not classified as storage.
Golden Spread Electric Cooperative’s Natasha Henderson, chair of the Supply Adequacy Working Group, said there are currently no hybrid facilities on the system, but they are expected to become more prevalent over the next five years. Given their multiple configuration possibilities, she said, the SAWG worked to ensure the facilities are not over or under accredited.
The stakeholder group will now work on criteria and develop tariff language. “That’s when we will debate the issue,” Henderson said.
“The policy’s basically been debated already,” American Electric Power’s Jim Jacoby said. “If people go out and make business decisions based on [the paper] and then you change the rules on them, they’re not going to be happy.”
Still, members approved the policy paper 49-7, with five abstentions.
Order 2222 Compliance Filing Endorsed
MOPC endorsed a revision request (RR468) that approves a compliance filing for FERC Order 2222 as SPP prepares to allow distributed energy resource aggregators to participate in its markets.
Members approved the measure by a 58-3 margin, with five abstentions, with some noting that did not mean they approved of FERC’s order itself.
“Our vote to approve is understanding that this is a compliance filing in response to a FERC order and not … endorsing the FERC order itself,” Oklahoma Gas & Electric’s Usha Turner said.
DeWayne Todd, with the Advanced Energy Management Alliance, said his organization remained concerned about the compliance proposal because “it does not really address some of the requirements of 2222 relative to reducing barriers [to DER participation].” He cited imposed telemetry requirements for every aggregation’s size, restrictions to single nodes and a registration process “that doesn’t provide a lot of value” because it’s duplicative to subsequent steps in the registration and participation process.
The compliance filing allows a DER aggregator to register its aggregation as a valid resource type if it meets technical and operational requirements, with the aggregator subject to the same service provision rules as other resources within that type. Aggregations must be at least 100 kW and can include a single DER. The aggregations must include real-time telemetry and settlement quality metering.
In what may be a nod to further pushback at FERC, SPP plans to keep alive the task force responsible for RR468’s tariff modifications until it receives the commission’s response. Assuming approval, staff plan to implement the tariff changes in early 2024.
The compliance filing was originally due last July, but FERC, noting the absence of opposing intervenors, granted SPP an extension until April 28 this year (RM18-9). (See FERC OKs Delay on Order 2222 Compliance.)
The committee also easily approved RR480, which gives the industry expert panel evaluating responses to SPP’s competitive transmission process the option to use incentive points in scoring the proposals. Members raised concerns that the expert panel could select a project other than the highest-scoring proposal, but they still gave the measure 93% approval.
JTIQ, Tx Value Staff Reports
David Kelley, SPP’s director of seams and tariff services, said the RTO’s collaborative work with MISO addressing their overflowing interconnection queues has identified a project portfolio that can relieve constraints on either side of the seam. Thirty-three of those constraints are in MISO’s footprint, and the other 17 are in SPP’s.
The grid operators began their joint targeted interconnection queue (JTIQ) study in September 2020, hoping to find interregional transmission projects to alleviate queues filled with renewable resource requests.
“The key theme was the development of generation along our seams and the difficulties many generation developers have found in accomplishing that,” Kelley said. “We happen to be very blessed in our part of the country with low-cost renewable generation; … the transmission system is at capacity along the seam.”
Kelley said the “optimized” portfolio has a preliminary combined load-adjusted-production-cost (APC)-to-cost ratio of 0.45. A report is being drafted for stakeholder review by the end of the month. The RTOs will schedule meetings with stakeholders to review the full results before seeking board approval for the plan.
A cost-allocation methodology is under development, Kelley said, and will reflect input from load-serving entities and generation developers. “We should reasonably assign those costs to those who will benefit,” he said.
Cathey told MOPC that an update to 2016’s value of transmission analysis determined that the $3.35 billion of installed transmission from 2015 to 2019 resulted in $27.2 billion in net present value of quantified benefits over 40 years and a 5.24 benefit-to-cost ratio.
The earlier study, dubbed by the Brattle Group as a “path-breaking effort,” found a net present value of $16.6 billion in benefits from projects installed from 2012 to 2014, a benefit-to-cost ratio of 3.5. (See SPP Begins Promotional Campaign to Tout Transmission Value.)
“I think that’s pretty reasonable if you think about what’s gone on in the last five years, especially with all the wind [resources] in our region,” Cathey said.
The new study simulated 57 days of production, compared to 38 in the earlier study, and captured benefits from line rebuilds and transformer additions in addition to the new infrastructure. Operations and engineering staff, “squeezing” in the analysis along with their other work, evaluated APC savings, reliability and resource adequacy benefits, increased wheeling revenues, reduced on-peak losses, and optimal wind generation development.
Cathey said the report is 95% complete. Staff will share the study and findings with other stakeholder groups before seeking endorsement from the Strategic Planning Committee in April. The report will then be shared with a wider audience.
Engineering Humor
A comedy routine (Or was it a comedy of errors?) broke out during MOPC’s final four-hour segment. Cathey, an engineer by trade, took advantage of a momentary pause before one of his presentations to try out his standup chops.
“Two investors were talking and one asked the other, ‘What do you think about this solar craze?’” Cathey said. “The other said, ‘Well, it’s not going to happen overnight.’”
Greeted by silence, he moved on. Cathey’s listeners, punch-drunk after hours of virtual conversation, didn’t.
“You just can’t hear all the laughter,” Lincoln Electric System’s Dennis Florom said in the virtual meeting app’s chat function.
Others chimed in with their own versions of “dad jokes.” Energy consultant Simon Mahan tweeted to SPP to “please let Casey know Energy Twitter loves him.”
MOPC’s New Faces
MOPC welcomed several new members, including two representing SPP’s newest members: Ray Bergmeier, with Sunflower Electric Cooperative’s competitive Konza Transmission, and Matt McCoy, with Southern Star Central Gas Pipeline. The pipeline company joined the RTO late last year as its 107th member. (See Southern Star Gas Pipeline Joins SPP.)
The committee’s other new members stepped in for their companies’ previous representatives. They are Western Area Power Administration’s Steve Sanders for Lloyd Linke; AEP-Southwestern Transmission Co.’s Brian Johnson for Chad Heitmeyer; Exelon’s Jason Barker for Chris Lyons; Walmart’s Jim Staggs for Holly Rachel Smith; Northeast Texas Electric Cooperative’s Ron Ray for Rick Tyler; and Mor-Gran-Sou Electric Cooperative’s Trisha Samuelson for Robert Kelly.
$73M Tab for 161-kV Rebuild
Members unanimously approved the consent agenda, which included the Project Cost Working Group’s recommendation to re-baseline the 31-mile, 161-kV Neosho-Riverton rebuild project’s costs from $48.3 million to $73.1 million. The line is historically SPP’s highest congested path, but rising steel costs and delivery issues threaten its in-service date of October 2023.
The agenda’s approval also resulted in MOPC’s endorsement of the Transmission Owner Selection Process (TOSP) Task Force’s suggestion to sunset next January. The TOSPTF has been evaluating improvements to SPP’s competitive transmission process, several of which were among the eight revision requests on the consent agenda:
RR450: provides guidance for using operating guides in the planning horizon.
RR469: corrects the Integrated Marketplace protocols’ settlements language defining the variables RtDesiredEn5minQty and RtOrigLmp5minPrc to clarify that the real-time desired energy five-minute quantity (RtDesiredEn5minQty) uses the dispatchable LMP and the real-time original locational five-minute price (RtOrigLmp5minPrc) uses the LMP.
RR470: corrects settlements language in the Marketplace protocols by removing an erroneous “minus” in section 4.5.9.35 (Real-Time Ramp Capability Non-Performance Amount) and correcting the variables in section 4.5.12 (Revenue Neutrality Uplift Distribution Amount).
RR471: automatically suspends the TOSP if a re-evaluation is approved equal to the days the re-evaluation requires.
RR472: requires that the TOSP’s industry expert panel Direction to Respondents document be created and published during a request for proposals response window.
RR473: cleans up the TOSP’s governing documents to more accurately capture their intent and execution.
RR478: adds flexibility to the resource planning process by allowing alternative methods outside of software, as required by the ITP manual.
RR479: clarifies staff’s steps when reviewing submitted detailed project proposal and determining if they qualify for incentive points under SPP’s competitive transmission process.
Just hours after taking office on Saturday, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) signed an executive order aimed at taking the state out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, the 10-state cap-and-trade compact whose members have seen their carbon emissions decline by 50% since the program began in 2009.
The executive order sets up an expedited, 30-day process under which the departments of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and Natural Resources (DNR) will reanalyze the costs and benefits of RGGI and draft a proposed emergency regulation for the State Air Pollution Control Board to repeal its 2019 rules allowing the state to join the initiative.
Youngkin also ordered the departments to notify RGGI of the state’s intent to withdraw and “take all necessary steps so that any proposed regulation to the State Air Pollution Control Board can be immediately presented for consideration for approval for public comment.”
The order tacitly acknowledges what critics have argued since Youngkin first vowed to take Virginia out of the initiative during a speech in December: The governor does not have the authority to unilaterally order a withdrawal. (See Youngkin Vows to Pull Va. from RGGI.) He will have to work through a regulatory process that has some significant roadblocks built into it.
For example, Youngkin has based his argument against RGGI primarily on its cost to the state’s utilities and their customers. As part of its participation in RGGI, the Air Board has set a cap on carbon emissions in the state, which declines each year through 2030, and utilities must buy carbon allowances to cover emissions above the cap.
As noted in the executive order, Dominion Energy has estimated that it will have to pay $1 billion to $1.2 billion on allowances in the next four years, which has already raised residential rates $2.39/month. The utility had applied to the State Corporation Commission for an even higher add-on — $4.37/month beginning in September — to recover its costs for RGGI, but it pulled the application after Youngkin’s speech.
But how costs and benefits are calculated is sure to be a flashpoint for former EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler and Michael Rolband, Youngkin’s picks to head the DNR and DEQ, respectively.
To date, Virginia has earned $227.6 million in proceeds from the auction of carbon allowances, as recorded on the RGGI website. That money is split between the state’s community flood preparedness program (45%) and energy efficiency measures for low-income households (50%). The remaining 5% covers administrative expenses.
In December, former Gov. Ralph Northam (D) announced that RGGI funds would provide $24.5 million to 22 local government organizations for flood preparedness projects. Another $15.2 million is filling a gap in state programs for weatherizing low-income housing, and $5.9 million is being used to preserve or build hundreds of affordable housing units, according to the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development.
“Were Virginia to withdraw, we would lose hundreds of millions to help working-class families cut their electric bills,” said Harry Godfrey, executive director of Advanced Energy Economy Virginia.
Health benefits related to emission reductions produced by RGGI are also likely to be raised by environmental advocates. A 2020 study from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health found that, in addition to carbon emissions, the initiative is cutting particulate matter, which is decreasing childhood asthma and premature birth rates. The study estimated the benefits at $191 million to $350 million across the RGGI states.
A Packed Board
Implementation of the executive order will also depend on leadership at the DNR and DEQ, which could be yet another hurdle.
Wheeler, who led EPA during the Trump administration, will first have to clear confirmation hearings in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly. Republicans now hold the House of Delegates, but Democrats have a slim majority in the Senate. (See Youngkin Taps Trump’s Former EPA Chief to Head Virginia DNR.) Similarly, because the Air Board is part of the DEQ, the less controversial Rolband might also face questions about RGGI at his confirmation hearings.
But the board itself could be the biggest obstacle to Youngkin’s effort to withdraw Virginia from RGGI, regardless of how fast he pushes for an emergency rollback. The original vote on the RGGI regulations was 5-2, and the seven-member board is now packed with Northam appointees. The new governor’s first opportunity to change the board’s composition will come in June, when Vice Chair Kajal B. Kapur’s and Gail Moore’s terms end. Youngkin might have to wait until 2024 to get a clear majority on the board.
Further, the DEQ successfully defended RGGI from a legal challenge from the Virginia Manufacturers Association. As reported in the Virginia Mercury, the Richmond Circuit Court in July rejected the association’s argument that RGGI is an illegal carbon tax on utility customers.
Virginia Democrats quickly voiced opposition to withdrawal. A statement on the state party’s Twitter feed declared that “Glenn Youngkin is already failing Virginia on climate change. His short-sighted decision to remove Virginia from the RGGI is purely partisan and it makes clear that he has no clear plan to combat climate change or invest in a clean energy future in Virginia.”
Nate Benforado, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center, called the executive order “a dead end.”
“For a new governor who has pledged to help Virginia communities struggling with climate change, this is a shocking and troubling first action out of step with what Virginia communities need,” Benforado said in an email statement.
Meanwhile, a tweet from the Richmond chapter of the Neoliberal Project noted that Del. James Morefield (R) recently introduced a bill (HB 5) that would cut the RGGI allocation for community flood preparedness from 45% to 40% and redirect that 5% to a flood relief fund that would compensate private property owners for flood damage.
LANSING, Mich. — Michigan would have at least 2 million electric vehicles and get 50% of its electricity from renewable energy by 2030 — while ending coal use by 2035 — under a draft climate proposal sent to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) Friday.
The Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy’s (EGLE) proposed Healthy Climate Plan, a roadmap for reaching carbon neutral status by 2050 required by a 2020 executive order by Whitmer, will be open to public comment through Feb. 13.
“Michigan communities and families are taking hit after hit from power outages, extreme heat events, flooding and sewer backups caused by intense rains,” the report said. “Our farmers are struggling to adjust and survive as temporary thaws result in frozen fruit blossoms thinking spring has come early, drenching storms inundate fields one day and then disappear into extended periods with no rain at all, and new insects migrate from warmer climates each year threatening our gardens, forests and crops. Disease-carrying ticks — in places we have never seen them and in previously unimaginable numbers for our state — add hassles and health risks to the outdoor [adventures] so many of us cherish.”
Input
In a letter accompanying the proposal, EGLE Director Liesl Eichler Clark said the plan was “first and foremost a Michigan plan.”
“We heard from environmental justice, public transit, and local food advocates; an array of business executives and labor leaders; academic experts and local government officials; and concerned residents of all political persuasions and walks of life,” she said.
The Council on Climate Solutions — 14 residents and representatives from the Departments of Agriculture and Rural Development, Labor and Economic Opportunity, Natural Resources, Transportation, Health and Human Services, Treasury and the Public Service Commission — provided detailed recommendations, along with the Climate Justice Brain Trust and others.
Clark, who chaired the climate council, called the proposal comprehensive, impactful and considerate of how residents’ pocketbooks will be affected.
But in reviewing the draft — which winnowed down dozens of proposals made by the council’s workgroups on issues like transportation, buildings, agriculture and equity — some council members urged the state to take bolder action.
“Can we make this more aspirational?” Jonathan Overpeck of the University of Michigan, one of the more outspoken council members, said at a meeting Tuesday. Proposals such as permitting coal use until 2035 allow “people to say we’re just kicking it down the road,” he said.
The council will review comments on the draft Feb. 22 before issuing the final proposal to Whitmer by March 14.
The draft plan’s main goal is to cut carbon emissions by 28% by 2025 and 52% by 2030 before reaching carbon neutrality by 2050.
Benchmarks
To reach that goal, the plan calls for a 50% renewable energy standard by 2030 and 100% renewable energy in state buildings by 2025, with a 40% reduction in their energy intensity by 2040. Although coal once generated most of Michigan’s electricity, the report noted, only one coal-fired power plant will operate beyond 2028, according to utility retirement schedules.
Michigan’s electric utilities have pledged to cut their carbon emissions by between 80 and 100% by 2050. | Michigan Public Service Commission
The plan also calls for putting solar generation facilities on state-owned land and for the state to help local governments in developing “best practices” for their own solar projects.
To meet the transportation goals, the proposal calls for establishing low-carbon fuel standards and incentives for EV purchasers. It also recommends the state move to more fuel-efficient vehicles and EVs — the Michigan State Police recently tested an electric Ford Mustang as a potential pursuit vehicle — along with aiding local governments and school districts toward climate friendly fleets.
The plan also calls for the state to electrify public transit and boost access to it. The Detroit area has struggled for decades to develop a public transit system that serves both the city and suburbs, and expanding public transit, especially in Metro Detroit, has long been a goal of environmentalists.
To address building emissions, the proposal recommends investing in the Michigan Saves Green Bank, a nonprofit bank set up to help finance home and commercial energy efficient projects.
The proposal says the state, which last updated its building code in 2015, should adopt the 2021 International Energy Conservation Code. It also calls for annual waste-reduction goals of 2% for electricity and 1% for natural gas.
However, the proposal does not call for an end to natural gas use, as some members of the council and environmentalists speaking at public comment sessions through 2021 had called for.
To ensure equity and justice, the plan says 40% of state funding for climate-related initiatives should benefit economically disadvantaged communities, echoing President Joe Biden’s “Justice40” initiative. The state proposal also calls for adjusting job training programs to assist students getting jobs in clean energy.
Economic Impact
The plan portrays its recommendations as essential to both continuing the state’s leadership in automobile production and attracting new businesses, citing research that lists clean energy and sustainability among the top factors in corporate location decisions. It noted Site Selection magazine’s 2021 Sustainability Rankings listed the state at No. 3 for sustainable development, with Grand Rapids and Lansing ranked the U.S.’s No. 2 and No. 6 metros.
The plan also said the changes will ensure that the state — “with the highest concentration of engineers in the nation and a skilled trades workforce ranked in the top ten” — remains a leader in auto production as GM, Ford and Chrysler transition from internal combustion engines to EVs.
Actions Across State Government
The report noted involvement in the climate council of numerous departments in addition to EGLE. “In order to meet the moment, every department must be a climate department,” it said.
EGLE has developed a the “Next Cycle Michigan” initiative to increase the state’s recycled materials supply chain. The Treasury Department has launched the Energy Transition Impact Project to help communities and workers affected by coal plant closures. The Department of Natural Resources is seeking strategies for responding to climate-based threats to natural resources. The Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity expanded job training and workforce development programs to include clean energy and mobility opportunities. The Department of Transportation developed Mobility 2045 to prepare transportation systems for climate challenges and new technologies.
Overall, council members were supportive of the EGLE proposal, but some wanted to see the state act more aggressively and take a leadership position among the states. Phil Roos, CEO of consulting firm Great Lakes GrowthWorks, said Tuesday it was clear the proposal was “really striving for leadership.” But he said the state could adopt greater specificity and earlier deadlines.
Clark called the plan a “living document,” acknowledging that the state will have to make course corrections on the way to 2050. “Some of the solutions to get to a 100% decarbonized economy that deliver good jobs and justice for Michiganders are still very much on the drawing board. But much of the path to carbon neutrality is already well known to us,” she said. “While there are complexities in every aspect of this plan, most can be overcome if we simply commit to getting the job done and equitably sharing the burdens and benefits.”
Massachusetts legislators are considering a bill that would remove the current price cap requirement for new offshore wind project bids.
“The price cap gets in the way of our competitiveness and discourages some developers from offering more creative, diverse and comprehensive proposals,” Gov. Charlie Baker said Tuesday. “Removing it would give bidders the flexibility to offer important added benefits to Massachusetts residents, including economic investment, job creation and reliability solutions, such as transmission and energy storage.”
While the price cap was important to the state’s early OSW procurement process, removing it responds to “signals” in the market, Baker said in hearing testimony before the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy.
But moving forward without the cap could risk driving up the comparatively low bids that Massachusetts received in its first three procurement rounds, Sen. Mike Barrett, co-chair of the committee, said during the hearing.
The costs for Sunrise Wind and Empire Wind in New York are 43% higher than Mayflower Wind’s winning $58/MWh bid in 2019 in Massachusetts, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. Revolution Wind’s bid in Connecticut is 68% higher than Mayflower’s bid, while Ocean Wind’s bid in New Jersey is twice that of Mayflower.
Under the current Massachusetts procurement process, regulators cannot approve a contract with a per-megawatt-hour bid, plus associated transmission costs, that exceeds the winning bid price from the previous procurement round.
Barrett urged Baker to consider alternatives to removing the cap, including removing the current requirement that project-related transmission costs be included in the bid price. The number of OSW developers, Barrett said, is too small right now to create market competitiveness. Only four developers have submitted their projects for Massachusetts’ three OSW procurements.
A provision in the procurement process protects the state from high bids by allowing utilities the right to reject a bid they do not like, according to Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Kathleen Theoharides.
In such a small market, Barrett said, Massachusetts does not have the luxury of rejecting bids. “It’s basically an oligopoly,” he said.
Lifting the cap may lead to somewhat higher per-megawatt-hour prices, Theoharides said in her testimony, but a price increase would come with more benefits that have been missing from previous bids.
“Getting additional benefits through a more flexible contract … that includes storage … hydrogen … and better interconnections means that ratepayers will save money not just from the one offshore wind contract but across the system with the additional benefits more creative contracts can provide,” she said.
Additional Changes
The bill (H.4204), which Baker filed in October, would transfer the authority for selecting winning bids from Massachusetts’ utilities to the Department of Energy Resources (DOER) to help speed up the contract negotiation process.
“Speed is important in future solicitations and especially important as we pursue somewhere on the order of 15 to 20 GW of offshore wind over the next 30 years,” Theoharides said.
While parties to the contract negotiations for Massachusetts projects “strive for consensus,” she said, disagreements still occur and have stalled the process in the past. If there’s no clear path to a consensus in future negotiations, DOER would be able to consult with an independent evaluator and make a final decision on the procurement.
“This ensures we can press forward swiftly and not allow an overly long process or disagreements to hinder our climate goals,” Theoharides said.
The bill also would codify new provisions to advance diversity and equity that were in the state’s most recent OSW request for proposals.
Bidders had to demonstrate how their projects would ensure the development of a diverse, equitable and inclusive workforce, as well as provide economic benefits for ratepayers, foster economic development and protect environmental justice communities.
“This legislation now captures these changes to the procurement criteria,” Theoharides said.
New Funding
Baker is seeking what he said would be a “game-changing investment” to advance clean energy innovation in the state.
The bill would authorize a $750 million transfer from the state’s COVID-19 response fund to the Clean Energy Investment Fund.
The fund, Baker said, would support emerging clean energy innovators, institutions and businesses; provide funding to colleges, universities and vocational technical institutions; and assist regional employment boards.
The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce last week put the Tennessee Valley Authority on notice that it’s concerned about the federal utility’s rates and clean energy goals.
The committee on Thursday sent TVA a letter posing 16 questions on electricity affordability and renewable energy investment. Representatives said they were troubled that TVA wasn’t making enough progress on emissions reduction and that its prices are no longer affordable.
“Specifically, we are concerned that Tennessee Valley residents pay too much for electricity, which particularly impacts low-income households in Tennessee,” the committee wrote. “The committee is also concerned that TVA is interfering with the adoption of renewable energy by its commercial and residential customers and, while it is making progress on decarbonization, it must do more this decade.”
TVA ratepayers’ bills exceed the national average, the committee said. It pointed out that Memphis’ low-income residents have among the highest energy burdens in the country while TVA has scaled back its energy efficiency programs in recent years.
The committee said its questioning serves to “understand the extent to which the disparity between TVA’s low rates and its high customer bills is driven by the organization’s decision to deprioritize energy efficiency and impose fixed fees that keep rates low but cost ratepayers money.”
The committee asked whether TVA would commit to more energy-efficiency measures and requested information on the utility’s current and future energy-efficiency savings and on its local power companies’ energy efficiency programs. It also asked TVA to explain its “underinvestment in solar and wind resources” and detail its wholesale contracts with qualifying facilities under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act.
TVA must also furnish information on its rate changes over the last five years and its reasoning behind its 2018 decision to introduce fixed charges to its local power companies.
The committee also said it wants to know “whether TVA plans to update its decarbonization goals and next integrated resource plan (IRP) to comply with President Biden’s executive order and to reflect TVA’s statutory role as a national leader in technology and environmental stewardship.”
It asked what TVA is doing to reduce its natural gas reliance and whether the utility would retire its entire coal fleet earlier than its stated goal of 2035. The committee requested the status of the environmental impact statements for the planned retirements of TVA’s Cumberland and Kingston coal plants.
The Biden administration has a goal of zero emissions in the electricity sector by 2035. TVA has a target to lower its carbon emissions 80% from 2005 levels by 2035; it plans to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. Clean-energy proponents have criticized TVA’s goals as sluggish. (See Green Groups Pressure TVA on Open Meetings, Decarbonization.)
Finally, the committee asked the utility to explain its participation in the defunct Utility Air Regulatory Group, a lobbying organization that opposed environmental standards. (See TVA Sued Over Contributions to Trade Groups.) The Center for Biological Diversity sued the TVA for passing on membership dues to ratepayers, leading to a FERC notice of inquiry over the appropriateness of recovering trade association dues in utility rates. (See FERC Questions Ratepayer Funding of Trade Association Dues.)
Reacting to the letter, TVA pointed that it has already reduced emissions 63% from 2005 levels and currently supplies almost 60% of its power from carbon-free resources.
TVA spokesperson Ashton Davies said the utility is “actively pursuing emerging technologies, from carbon capture to advanced nuclear, while supporting national clean energy initiatives, such as a robust electric vehicle charging infrastructure.”
Davies also said TVA’s rates are lower than 80% of the nation’s largest utilities.
“Even with TVA’s low energy costs, we recognize the challenge of high-energy burden in our region. TVA is in partnership with 153 local power companies and other organizations to help address the root-causes of this issue, including the need to weatherize and implement energy efficiency measures in buildings and housing,” Davies said in a statement to RTO Insider.
TVA has until Feb. 2 to respond in writing to the committee’s inquiry.
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy Executive Director Stephen A. Smith lauded the committee’s action. In a statement, he welcomed the “renewed Congressional oversight of this unregulated federal monopoly catering to the elite at the expense of the masses.”
“TVA has lost its way in serving the salt of the Earth people of the Tennessee Valley,” Smith said. “With a board of directors that condones the tasteless acts of cutting efficiency programs to help people lower their bills and blocking customer-owned clean energy, while simultaneously awarding excessive salaries and a jet-setting lifestyle to their executives, TVA has lost touch with its core service mission.”
Smith added that the “privileged rubberstamp of the TVA board structure is failing our people.”
Consolidated Edison (NYSE:ED) on Thursday reported its demand response programs increased only slightly in megawatt value last year but dramatically in enrollment, which climbed by approximately 250% compared to that of 2020 (Case No. 14-E-0423).
The company and five other investor-owned utilities in New York filed individual dynamic load management (DLM) performance reports for the state’s Public Service Commission to consider at a hearing Thursday.
Con Ed’s DR programs include its commercial system relief program (CSRP); distribution load relief program (DLRP); auto DLM; term DLM; and the residential Bring Your Own Thermostat (BYOT) program.
Under the DLRP, customers receive notification two hours before a DR event, which is called to address an isolated need. In contrast, the utility’s customers receive notification at least 21 hours before a CSRP event, which is called in response to systemwide peak demand.
Con Ed reported a slight decrease in enrollment in the CSRP and DLRP during 2021, which was the first year of the term and auto DLM programs. The term program is a day-ahead peak-shaving program that incentivizes customers to provide load relief with 21 hours of notice or more, while auto program participants agree to provide load relief on not less than 10 minutes advance notice.
The term and auto DLM programs offer fixed pricing for contract lengths of three to five years and longer-term price certainty compared to tariff-based programs, which can change pricing annually.
The PSC in September 2020 modified DLM implementation plans for the six utilities, all related to storage, saying the initial plans “resulted in a bias towards short-term, low-capital-investment solutions” because of their yearly performance structure (18-E-0130). (See “DLM Incentives Extension,” NYPSC Accepts CLCPA Environmental Review.)
Hearing facilitator Robert Cully, utility engineering specialist at the New York Department of State, asked whether the increase in term and auto DLM enrollments was related to the decrease in CSRP and DLRP enrollments, and whether there was a downward trend in overall enrollments.
A shift in program participation has definitely driven some of the decreases, said Marlon Argueta, energy efficiency program manager at Con Ed, “but when you look at the overall number of available megawatts for DR, it has definitely increased as a whole, and we expect to see that continue over the next few years.”
Aggregators drove the growth in participation by leveraging widespread deployment of advanced metering infrastructure to enroll residential and small business customers in their programs, which make up the majority of new customer enrollments, but each contributes much smaller megawatt reductions.
Shifting Load
David Ahrens, managing director at Energy Spectrum, asked why peaks were different within the four different call windows that Con Ed has in its CSRP program than in previous years.
In general the peaks are shifting more toward the day than the night, Argueta said.
“We are seeing a large movement in terms of how these call windows are aligned … and we have a sense that this is all being driven by some of the things that are happening right now in in the service territory, so COVID-19 brings a lot of folks into working from home and has driven a lot of the load towards residential areas,” Argueta said.
This shift is happening across the system, and of the more than 80 networks in the Con Ed system, the company’s analysis this year determined that 33 had shifted their peaks, meaning they changed call windows repeatedly, he said.
Summary of CSRP reservation payment option enrolled and achieved impact in 2021 | Con Edison
“This is not arbitrary; really the purpose of this program is to reduce network peaks, and we try to closely align those four hours the best we can to maximize the benefits that these programs bring to our system, and it seems that only one network now is peaking from 7 to 11 p.m., so that’s a significant change,” Argueta said.
Peter Dotson-Westphalen from CPower, an energy management company that manages some DLM programs for Con Ed and National Grid, asked for clarification on whether events called that may extend past midnight are still considered to be mandatory.
Under tariff revisions pending before FERC, participation will be mandatory before midnight, just as currently anything beyond midnight will only receive performance payments, Argueta said.
Ultimately, the DR programs are about allowing Con Ed to defer the need to build infrastructure, knowing that it has these resources to rely on, said Griffin Reilly, the company’s section manager of targeted demand management.
“We have some of these networks peaking for longer than eight hours in the day, and to really be able to defer infrastructure builds, we’re going to need resources that can respond for that long,” Reilly said. “How we do that is going to be a big part of the discussions we have this coming summer leading into potential changes that we’ll make for the program next year.”