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July 7, 2024

Hawaii PUC Approves HECO Grid Resilience Plan

The Hawaii Public Utilities Commission on Feb. 1 approved Hawaiian Electric Co.’s five-year resilience plan to harden the grid against future natural disasters like the wildfires that ravaged the state last year, particularly the island of Maui. 

The PUC’s approval of the Climate Adaptation Transmission and Distribution Resilience Program will allow HECO to receive $95 million offered by the Biden administration in August for investments in resilience. HECO’s ratepayers will fund the remainder of the plan’s $190 million overall cost. In a press release, the utility said the federal funds should reduce the program’s cost for consumers by half, with an estimated impact on the monthly bills of residential customers using 500 kWh to be 17 cents on Oahu, 47 cents on Hawaii Island and 39 cents in Maui County. 

The first phase of the plan will involve replacing or strengthening more than 2,000 transmission poles on critical circuits, HECO said. Additional steps include: 

    • increased situational awareness and control through cameras, sensors and reclosers in areas with higher wildfire risk; 
    • removal of trees that are weak, dead, diseased or otherwise in danger of falling on power lines; 
    • strengthening circuits serving hospitals, defense facilities and other critical customers; 
    • undergrounding selected distribution circuits; and 
    • hardening existing control centers, moving the Maui control center to avoid flooding and building a backup control center on Oahu. 

HECO faced widespread criticism in the immediate aftermath of the fires, which killed 100 people on Maui in August and burned more than 3,000 acres, including the historic town of Lahaina. As of October, more than 35 lawsuits had been filed against the utility, including by Maui County, which accused HECO of failing to power down electric equipment amid fire danger warnings from the National Weather Service. (See Hawaiian Electric Faces Multiple Lawsuits over Wildfires.) 

The county also said the utility and its sister company, Maui Electric, failed to properly maintain and repair utility poles and to keep vegetation trimmed and away from power lines. 

Testifying before the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee in September, HECO CEO Shelee Kimura pushed back against the allegation that her company was responsible for the fires, noting that the lines in the area where the Lahaina fire began in the afternoon of Aug. 8 were not energized at the time. (See House E&C Members Grill HECO CEO About Maui Fires.)  

In later supplemental testimony, Kimura added that HECO had put its high-wind protocol in place Aug. 7, including a protocol to disable automatic reclosing on certain circuit breakers and reclosers to prevent lines that trip offline because of faults from re-energizing. She also acknowledged that HECO, “like most utilities,” did not have a pre-emptive public safety power shutoff program in place Aug. 8, but that it was working with stakeholders to design such a program. 

Last month HECO said it was continuing wildfire restoration efforts in West Maui, including by replacing destroyed transmission poles with more resilient steel infrastructure. While nearly all of the 12,000 customers in the area had restored power at the time, the utility warned that it will not have the ability to reroute power from other circuits until the work is completed later this year, meaning that outage restoration times may be longer than normal. 

Cupparo Replaces Certoma as SPP Board Chair

SPP’s Board of Directors has elected independent director John Cupparo to be its chair, the RTO said Feb. 6.

Cupparo, who will assume the role Feb. 7, will fill out the remainder of Susan Certoma’s term, which expires at year’s end. Certoma told stakeholders Feb. 6 she is stepping down as chair but will remain a board member.

Susan Certoma | © RTO Insider LLC

“It’s an honor and a privilege to have the opportunity to follow in the footsteps of the SPP board chairs that have come before me,” Cupparo said during a Feb. 6 board meeting, which featured several discussions on resource adequacy and the grid’s transformation.

“As we saw in the conversation today, SPP is faced with a series of opportunities and challenges,” he said. “I believe SPP is well positioned to capture those opportunities and to meet those challenges, given the strength of this board, [SPP CEO] Barbara [Sugg] and her team, [and] the members in the broader SPP community.”

Cupparo was elected to the board in 2022. He will continue to chair the Strategic Planning Committee and serve on the Interim Markets+ Independent Panel and the Finance and Human Resources committees. He previously was an officer with PacifiCorp, a senior executive at Berkshire Hathaway Energy leading a transmission investment program in the West and a board member for WECC.

Certoma opened the board’s quarterly meeting Feb. 6 by announcing she was giving up her position as board chair, a position she has held since 2023. She will continue to serve on SPP’s Finance and HR committees.

“At this time, there are other matters that require my attention,” Certoma said.

Sugg lamented that the meeting’s virtual format prevented a standing ovation for Certoma. Still, members were able to use the webinar application to send virtual hand claps to Certoma.

“I don’t think that the membership realizes the load of work that the chair takes on, and it is significant,” Sugg said. “Susan has been with me at every step of the way over the last year.”

The three-year board terms for both Certoma and Cupparo expire at the end of the year, along with that of Ben Trowbridge. All three have expressed a desire to remain on the board. The Corporate Governance Committee will consider their interest when it meets next week.

Liz Moore will remain as the board’s vice chair.

Mass. Gas Working Group Finalizes Recommendations to Legislature

The Massachusetts Gas System Enhancement Plan (GSEP) Working Group submitted its final report to the state Legislature at the end of January, providing a series of recommendations on aligning the state’s efforts to replace leak-prone pipes with its climate mandates. 

Intended to inform lawmakers as they attempt to craft an omnibus climate bill this spring, the recommendations also highlight key areas of contention between the gas utilities, climate advocates and state officials. (See Mass. Lawmakers Aiming for an Omnibus Climate Bill in 2024.)  

The working group consisted of representatives from a wide range of stakeholders, including state agencies (The Attorney General’s Office, Department of Environmental Protection, Department of Public Utilities and Department of Energy Resources), nonprofits (Conservation Law Foundation, HEET, Low-Income Energy Affordability Network, National Consumer Law Center and PowerOptions), and the state’s gas utilities (The Berkshire Gas Co., Eversource Energy, Liberty Utilities, National Grid and Unitil Corp). 

The existing GSEP program dates to a 2014 law directing utilities to replace or repair old gas pipes to reduce methane leaks, allowing the utilities to recover the costs on an accelerated timeframe. The program has faced criticism for encouraging investment in the gas system as the state simultaneously moves to phase out its reliance on gas. 

GSEP costs are expected to increase substantially in the coming years. An analysis by Dorie Seavey of Groundwork Data estimated capital expenditures from the program would cost ratepayers more than $34 billion between 2022 and 2039. The state Attorney General’s Office (AGO) estimated “if GSEP continues at its current pace, the total cost of this initiative will be approximately $40 billion over the next decade, an expense borne by ratepayers.” 

The working group was initiated by the state’s 2022 climate law and worked throughout the past year to produce a series of recommendations. 

Members of the working group voted on proposals to redefine the types of projects that are included and prioritized in the GSEP program, authorize the utilities to terminate gas service to existing customers within the scope of GSEP projects, and change the GSEP cost recovery timeline. 

Repair and Retirement

The majority of the working group, including the state agencies and advocacy groups, voted to add language shifting the program from a focus on pipe replacement toward the inclusion of pipe repair and retirement to help minimize costs and avoid stranded assets as the state moves away from gas. The gas utilities and the United Steelworkers Union (USW) opposed adding language promoting repair. 

Representatives for the state’s gas utilities argued that “it is more cost-effective and in the best interest of customers to replace pipe segments rather than undertaking extensive repairs that only serve to defer inevitable replacements.” The utilities voted in favor of adding language around pipe retirement.  

The working group also favored requiring the utilities to evaluate non-gas pipe alternatives (NPAs) prior to GSEP repairs or replacements. The AGO wrote that this would force the gas companies “to be proactive about the transition to renewable energy.” 

The gas utilities and USW opposed this requirement, arguing it undermines the purpose of the law. The gas utilities added they “do not believe it is practical or efficient to evaluate a NPA for all GSEP projects, and in fact, may result in delays to replacement of high-risk leak prone pipe, having a negative impact on safety.” 

Emissions Limits

The group also voted to add language to specify that GSEP projects must be consistent with the state’s decarbonization mandates, including the sector-based emissions sublimits. This proposal was supported by most stakeholders, with partial opposition coming from gas utilities. 

The utilities said the state should constrain the consideration of subsector emissions limits to the “Natural Gas Distribution and Service” sector, arguing that emissions limits that apply to natural gas consumption are beyond the scope of the GSEP program. 

Redefining the Obligation to Serve

Most of the stakeholders also voted to add language allowing gas utilities to “terminate natural gas service to a customer” to implement non-gas GSEP upgrades that would provide similar heating service to customers. This was supported by the state agencies and advocacy groups, with several of the nonprofits stressing the need to add language protecting low-income ratepayers. 

Redefining the obligation of local distribution companies to serve “can provide an opportunity for LDCs to identify opportunities for their participation in efforts to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions,” commented the Conservation Law Foundation. “This is a potentially vital tool in Massachusetts’ transition to a clean energy future and should be considered as a viable change sooner rather than later.” 

The gas utilities and USW opposed this proposal, arguing that changing the statutory obligation to serve existing gas customers is beyond the scope of the working group. 

Cost Recovery Timelines

A plurality of members also supported a proposal by the AGO to phase out accelerated cost recovery for gas infrastructure investments, backed by the advocacy groups.  

“GSEP is, at its core, a funding mechanism that allows utility companies to recover the costs of natural gas infrastructure replacement on an accelerated timeline,” the AGO wrote, adding that accelerated cost recovery encourages the “further institutionalization of natural gas infrastructure that should be largely phased out by 2050.” 

The utilities and USW opposed this proposal. The utilities argued that repealing the accelerated cost recovery is beyond the working group’s scope, adding that the proposal “is tantamount to the repeal of the GSEP statute.” 

The fate of the proposals now sits with the Legislature. The working group included two members of the Legislature, Sen. Mike Barrett (D) and Rep. Jeff Roy (D), co-chairs of the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy. Barrett typically voted in alignment with the advocacy groups and state agencies, while Roy abstained in the votes. 

DOE Opens 2nd Solicitation in Transmission Offtake Program

The U.S. Department of Energy opened the second solicitation in its program to prime the pump for new transmission needed to meet the Biden administration’s climate goals.

Initial proposals for the $1.2 billion to be offered in Round 2 of the Transmission Facilitation Program will be due March 11, DOE’s Grid Deployment Office said in its Feb. 6 announcement.

Authorized by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the program allows DOE to borrow up to $2.5 billion to assist in the construction of high-capacity transmission lines that otherwise would not be built or to increase the capacity of already planned lines.

On Oct. 30, DOE announced it would spend $1.3 billion to purchase up to 50% of the capacity on three projects totaling 3.5 GW: the 500-kV Cross-Tie Transmission Line (Nevada and Utah), the Southline Transmission Project (Arizona and New Mexico) and the Twin States Clean Energy Link (New Hampshire and Vermont). (See DOE to Sign up as Off-taker for 3 Transmission Projects.)

The program offers capacity contracts to late-stage projects to increase investors’ and potential customers’ confidence and reduce the risk of developers undersizing projects. DOE will seek to recover its costs by selling its capacity rights, allowing it to make offers to additional projects.

DOE’s National Transmission Needs Study, also released in October, estimated the U.S. must more than double its regional transmission and expand interregional capacity more than fivefold by 2035 to ensure reliability, resilience to extreme weather and access to renewables.

Responding to industry feedback, DOE broke its second solicitation into two parts, with an initial submission of a  “project paper and virtual presentation” to be followed by a detailed application and in-person interview.

DOE will hold a public webinar to provide additional information on the solicitation Feb. 21 at 3 p.m. ET.

Bill to Create Wash. Oil Market Oversight Agency Dies in Committee

OLYMPIA, Wash. — A Washington bill that would have created a new agency to monitor the state’s oil industry has died in committee.

Senate Bill 6052 was stopped in the state Senate’s Ways and Means Committee on Feb. 5 because of the costs stemming from the cybersecurity need to protect the data to be collected from oil companies, the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Joe Nguyen (D), told NetZero Insider. The bill will be revived in the legislature’s 2025 session, he said. (See Wash. Bill Seeks Increased Monitoring of Petroleum Sector.)

Washington’s Legislature is in the middle of a short 60-day session that will mainly tweak the 2023-2025 biennial budget adopted last year.

In a recent hearing on the bill, oil industry representatives voiced concerns about the cybersecurity of several dozen different types of information the proposed Division of Petroleum Market Oversight would collect and analyze to make sure the industry is not engaging in price gouging. The cybersecurity measures bumped up the initial costs of establishing the agency to $30 million, which is not available in the budget the Legislature is working on, Nguyen said.

But the money should be available in the 2025 session, which will deal with the main biennial budget, Nguyen said.

Creation of the agency has been a major plank in Gov. Jay Inslee’s push to fight climate change. Inslee and Democratic leaders are concerned the oil industry has been unjustifiably raising gas prices due to the cap-and-invest program the state launched last year.

“We knew a proposal like this would be a heavy lift for a short session, especially with the expense of setting up new state infrastructure for this,” Inslee spokesperson Mike Faulk said in an email. “Even as gas prices in Washington have dropped to almost their lowest in two years, consumers will continue experiencing dramatic price swings. … As we make the transition to clean fuels, transparency into oil pricing will only become more important for protecting consumers.”

“Until the close of this session, no proposal is truly dead,” said Jessica Spiegel, senior director for the Northwest region at the Western States Petroleum Association. “However, there are legitimate concerns about the structure, scope and costs of the new state agency SB 6052 would have created. Once we move beyond this issue, the focus can be on the important work of reforming Washington’s cap-and-trade program.”

The WSPA represents four of Washington’s five oil refineries.

Modeled after a new California office, the proposed agency would collect a massive amount of financial and industrial data from various branches of the oil industry in Washington, including five refineries and a complex supply chain.

The agency would have subpoena power and would confidentially refer suspected legal violations to the Washington Attorney General’s office. It also would report its observations and conclusions to the governor’s office, other state agencies and the Legislature.

Inslee called for the bill following the political and economic fallout from the state’s introduction of a cap-and-invest program that went into effect in January 2023. Critics have blamed the program for a gas price increase of 21 to 50 cents per gallon, depending on how calculations are done.

Inslee has pointed to the fact that the oil industry reported $200 billion profits in 2022, sparking suspicions that it is price gouging behind closed doors. Meanwhile, a public referendum is headed to the November ballot to repeal the cap-and-invest program against the wishes of the Democratic-controlled Washington Legislature.

Washington’s gas prices have been among the highest in the nation since last summer, including spending a week as the highest. However, citing AAA figures, Nguyen said Washington’s gas prices have been among the five highest in the nation since the 1970s for economic and geographic reasons.

President Biden’s LNG Pause Fuels Partisan Debate at House Hearing

Republicans teed off on President Biden’s pause on processing new applications for LNG exports at a congressional hearing Feb. 6. (See Report: Biden Admin to Evaluate LNG Terminals’ Impact on Climate.)

“In addition to undercutting our domestic energy industry, President Biden’s decision is a gift to Vladimir Putin,” said Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.), chair of the House Energy, Climate & Grid Security Subcommittee. “Global demand for natural gas is expected to increase 46% by 2050. And our European and Asian allies who want to do business with the United States will now look to Qatar, Russia and Iran to meet their growing energy needs.”

Duncan said committee leaders had invited a speaker from the Department of Energy, but nobody from the administration came. Undersecretary of Energy David Turk is scheduled to testify on the subject at a Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee hearing Feb. 8.

The pause comes after the industry already has built enough capacity to export 14 billion cubic feet per day, with enough under construction to double that capacity, said Subcommittee Ranking Member Diana DeGette (D-Colo.). Additional projects with full approvals from FERC and DOE, but yet to start construction, would triple that capacity, DeGette said.

None of those facilities under development will be affected by the pause in reviews, she added. The last time the review process for new export facilities was updated was 2018, when export capacity was just one-third of today’s level.

“The fact that our nation’s production has ramped up so quickly must be considered, especially since the U.S. currently has enough approved capacity to fulfill the world’s energy needs in the short and medium terms,” DeGette said. “Continuously increasing LNG exports, without updating guidelines to account for new information, is a fundamentally unserious proposal.”

EQT calls itself the largest producer of natural gas in the country, with its drilling focused around the Marcellus and Utica shales in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. EQT CEO Toby Rice blasted the decision to pause approvals for new export facilities.

“The Biden administration’s decision was pure politics,” Rice said. “The moratorium was made under the guise of updated research and a claim that we needed updated studies on the environmental and economic impact of U.S. LNG. But we all know what it really is, and that’s an election-year stall designed to garner votes.”

Europe has had to rely on importing LNG from the U.S. since its countries were cut off from Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, said Brigham McCown, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. Last month, spot prices there averaged $9.56/MMBtu (million British thermal units), while Henry Hub gas was at just $2.26/MMBtu this week, McCown said.

“Europe should not be allowed to recede into the background,” McCown said. “Energy security highlights the need for a comprehensive approach and a stable policy environment coupled with innovation, technology and international cooperation. Our allies would like to be able to have energy security as well.”

Gillian Giannetti is a former high school teacher along the part of Louisiana’s coast called “cancer alley” because of the concentration of industrial facilities and their pollution’s impact on locals. Now senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Sustainable FERC Project, Giannetti said she’s witnessed the effects on her former students, who had high rates of asthma and other respiratory conditions.

The pause impacts only LNG facilities being built to serve countries that do not have a free-trade agreement with the U.S., she noted. DOE must find that a facility shipping gas to non-free trade countries is in the “public interest” to approve it, and so far, it has yet to deny an application for any facility, Giannetti said.

“Put simply, DOE’s tools for assessing whether future gas exports are consistent with the public interest are both obsolete and inapplicable,” she added. “First, DOE has never published guidelines for evaluating the public interest for LNG exports. Never.”

The closest it came was a 1984 effort that sought to come up with rules for LNG imports, which do not work well for licensing export facilities four decades later, Giannetti said. DOE did do some studies on the economic impact of LNG exports in 2018, but they need to be updated too, she added.

The Industrial Energy Consumers of America (IECA) was not invited to testify, but it released comments saying LNG exports affect domestic prices, especially when storage is low. That coincides with demand peaks, which the IECA claims contributed to $84 billion and $53 billion in higher natural gas and electricity prices in 2022 compared to a year earlier.

“Accelerating volumes of LNG exports do have increasing impacts to reliability and prices of natural gas and electricity that are accentuated when inventories are low and during peak winter and summer demand,” said IECA President Paul Cicio. “The relationship is fundamental to the law of supply and demand. Low inventories result in high prices and high inventories result in low prices.”

New Jersey Senators Back Grid Connection Fee Revision

New Jersey’s Senate Environment and Energy Committee endorsed a sweeping revision of how clean energy connections to the grid are funded and advanced legislation that would give tax credits to help install electric vehicle charging stations and retrofit warehouses for rooftop solar projects. 

The five-member committee on Feb. 5 unanimously supported S209, which would make warehouse retrofit projects eligible for corporate business tax credits of the lesser of $250,000 or half the cost of the project for buildings of at least 100,000 square feet. The bill sets a cumulative total of $25 million awarded in credits under the bill. 

The panel voted 4-1 in favor of a second bill, S210, that would provide a tax credit of the lesser of half the cost or $1,000 to pay for an EV charger at a taxpayer’s business, trade or occupation, or at a location where it could be used by tenants or guests of a multifamily or mixed-use property. 

The bill also would offer a tax credit for the purchase of a commercial zero emission vehicle that would equal half the additional cost of buying a clean energy vehicle rather than one powered by fossil fuel. The bill would allow for a tax credit of up to $25,000 for a vehicle weighing less than 14,000 pounds, $50,000 for a vehicle weighing between 14,000 and 26,500 pounds, and $100,000 for a vehicle weighing more than 26,500 pounds. 

Preparing the Grid

Other bills met more resistance in the committee, which handles much of the state’s clean energy legislation. 

The Democrat-controlled committee voted 3-2 along party lines for a bill, S212, that would revise the regulations that set interconnection standards for Class 1 renewable energy sources, crafting them in line with standards written by the Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC). 

The changes would include the introduction of fixed, one-time “grid modernization fees” to be paid by the project owner to defray the cost of connecting to the grid, “including, but not limited to, costs related to administrative tasks, studies, infrastructure upgrades and grid upgrades carried out by the electric utility.” The fees would be based on the number of kilowatts of energy to be produced by the project, with a limit of $50 per kilowatt for projects less than or equal to 10 kilowatts. 

Connection costs not covered by the developer fees would be recovered by the utility from the ratepayers. 

Sen. Bob Smith (D), the committee chairman and a bill co-sponsor, said the legislation is aimed at strengthening the state’s ailing grid, which is considered inadequate to handle a surge of new clean energy projects. 

“We have a grid that is the equivalent of toothpicks and chewing gum,” Smith said, adding there are lengthy delays before a project can get connected, during which the project often “dies as a result.”  

Lyle Rawlings, president of the Mid-Atlantic Solar & Storage Industries Association, said the urgency of the initiative can be seen in his agency’s estimate that on a clear day, solar projects provide 35% of the state’s load between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. The state has reached an “inflection point,” and the improvements funded by the bill are essential, he said. 

“We’re almost in a crisis where the grid is shutting down to new solar,” he said. 

But Brian O. Lipman, director of the New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel, in a Feb. 1 letter to the committee, urged senators to hold the bill because it would create “avoidable and expensive electric system upgrades that will be foisted onto captive ratepayers.” 

Lipman said the current “beneficiary pays principle” means that developers and the utilities make “efficient siting decisions” because projects for which the connection costs are too high won’t go ahead. “The risk is better handled by the interconnection customer than captive end-use customers,” he said. 

Subsidizing Storage

Lipman also opposed S225, which would create an incentive program to support new energy storage systems. New Jersey, like other states, sees an extensive storage capacity as key to creating a renewable energy system that is reliable. But the state has little storage capacity. It failed to reach a legislative goal of installing 600 MW of storage by 2021 and now aims to install 2 GW of storage by 2030. (See New Jersey Offers Plan to Boost Lagging Storage Capacity.) 

S225, which the committee approved in a 3-2 vote, would require the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJ BPU) to develop a pilot — and later permanent — program that would award up-front incentives paid in dollars per kilowatt-hour based on the installed capacity of the storage system. The incentive would cover up to 40% of the project cost. 

The program would pay a “performance incentive to compensate the owner of a customer-sited energy storage system or front-of-the-meter energy storage system” for the cost of providing “capacity, demand response, load shifting, generation shifting, locational value and voltage support,” according to the bill. It says the cost of the incentives would be “apportioned” to ratepayers. 

Lipman, in a Feb. 1 letter to the committee, expressed concern the bill would “impose significant costs on New Jersey’s electric ratepayers, while impairing the state’s ability to leverage other sources of funding for energy storage.” He estimated the incentives would cost the state’s societal benefits charge program $60 million. 

But Evan Vaughan, executive director of the Mid-Atlantic Renewable Energy Coalition, said he believed it would “help the market take off in the state.” 

“We have numerous front-of-the-meter storage companies in our membership that are eager to develop projects in New Jersey,” he said. “But they need this legislation in order to make those projects pencil.” 

Discussion Dispute

Two bills discussed by the committee in order to solicit input, but not voted on, drew vigorous opposition from the business community, while drawing support from environmental groups. 

SCR11 would amend the state constitution to prohibit the construction or reconstruction of any new power station that would burn coal, natural gas, oil or petroleum. If approved by the legislature, the proposed prohibition would need voter support in a ballot initiative to be enacted. 

Smith, the bill sponsor, said about 35% of the state’s electricity is generated by nuclear plants and 7% comes from solar projects. The remaining 55% comes from carbon-emitting plants, mostly natural gas. 

Michael Egenton, executive vice president at the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, said changing the constitution over the issue is excessive, and added that prohibiting the plants would stifle the state’s ability to grow and keep businesses. 

“We have to make sure that we have reliable, affordable, sustainable energy — and I’m talking about energy all across the board,” he said. 

Tina Weishaus, co-chair of the DivestNJ Coalition, and a member of Empower New Jersey, which opposes fossil fuel projects, said that given the health damage to nearby communities, operating such plants is “morally wrong.” 

“We cannot live in a world that continues to burn fossil fuels, and create greenhouse gases and toxic pollutants, that are killing us,” she said.    

Business groups also opposed S198, which would prohibit the state pension funds and annuity funds from investing in the “200 largest publicly traded fossil fuel companies,” and require the funds divest from any such companies in the existing portfolio. 

The divestment should be done “in accordance with sound investment criteria and consistent with their fiduciary obligations,” the bill states. It also gives the director of the State Division of Investment the power to reinvest in fossil fuel companies and funds or continue investing in them if “within a reasonable period of time” the value of the state retirement funds drops to 99.5% or lower of the “hypothetical value had no divestment occurred.” 

Smith rejected the suggestion that the state’s divestment would be of no consequence to big fossil fuel companies that do “trillions of dollars of business.” He said they do listen to “governments and institutions in society that stand up and say, ‘You’re going in the wrong direction.’” 

But Ray Cantor, a lobbyist for the New Jersey Business and Industry Association, said pension fund managers have a fiduciary responsibility to make decisions that generate as high a return as possible. The state should “not be looking to use our pension funds as a lever to enact public policy,” he said. 

Scot Mackey, a lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute, said the industry is trying to address climate change. Penalizing investment in the industry would penalize the investments “that they’re making in the future, as they try to change and they try to grow into what the future is going to look like,” he said. 

PJM Stakeholders Open Poll on Proposal to Align Electric and Gas Markets

PJM’s Electric Gas Coordination Senior Task Force has opened a poll on a proposal aimed at aligning components of the RTO’s energy market with gas pipeline operations. 

The joint package sponsored by PJM, Dominion Energy and Gabel Associates would add intraday real-time commitment runs to the day-ahead market ahead of the three gas nomination cycle deadlines and notify gas-fired generators that they are being committed with adequate time for them to nominate for fuel in the subsequent cycle. In turn, generators would be asked to notify PJM if they have procured fuel or expect to do so in time to be scheduled. 

Speaking during a Jan. 30 task force meeting, PJM’s Brian Fitzpatrick said the proposal is focused on improving situational awareness over the status of gas generators and reducing the need for operators to check in with the approximately 300 such resources during emergency conditions. 

“Really it’s about reducing the unknowns and identifying where there are risks,” he said. 

Having multiple commitment periods throughout the day corresponding to the gas nomination cycles would give PJM insights into when resources are likely to be available, such as whether they have obtained fuel for evening peaks. 

Voting on the proposal will be open for around two weeks, and results are expected to be discussed at the task force’s Feb. 29 meeting. This is the second poll the task force has held, following a round in which six packages failed to receive majority support in October. 

The highest vote-getter was a joint proposal sponsored by PJM and Dominion, which would have required gas generators to confirm to PJM that they had procured adequate fuel to meet their day-ahead commitment. It would have also required that resources that had not procured fuel during a PJM cold weather alert verify gas availability with pipeline operators twice a day and reflect any shortages as a forced outage. 

Michael Borgatti, Gabel senior vice president of RTO services and regulatory affairs, said he’s hopeful that the joint proposal can be a compromise between all those previously brought to the task force. 

The revised package now under consideration states that generators should confirm the availability of their fuel supply and reflect that in their parameters, but Fitzpatrick said it would not carry any enforcement or penalties. 

Brock Ondayko, director of RTO operations for AEP Energy, said that even without any specified penalties at PJM, generators that report incorrect information — such as stating that a unit has purchased fuel and then experiencing an interruption in supply — could run into compliance issues with FERC. 

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring said the fuel reporting component is vague and would be ineffective at providing true situational awareness without stronger requirements. In particular, he said allowing generators to state that they expect to have fuel available would add too much ambiguity to the process. 

“It is creating false confidence, so I really don’t see the point of this,” he said. “In my view this is potentially worse than not having it. … The straightforward approach is to have a mandatory requirement to report whether a unit has procured gas. Combining the voluntary reporting in the proposal with reporting about what generators expect makes that part meaningless or worse than meaningless. A rule based on a generator’s expectation is an unenforceable rule.” 

Vistra Director of PJM Market Policy Erik Heinle said the deadlines for reporting information to the RTO could distort the gas market if a large number of generators are trying to get contracts in place at the same time. 

Bowring also said that the proposal would be a significant change to PJM’s day-ahead markets that has not included a careful review of how the interaction with markets would work and the likely consequences. 

“Issues including whether the commitment process prior to the day-ahead market would use the same software and have the same objective function have not been addressed. Issues about how market payments and uplift payments would be defined and the treatment of commitments prior to the day-ahead market that carry forward into the next day have not been carefully thought through. The Market Monitor supports increased situational awareness and supports inclusion of offer parameters that are consistent with pipeline rules, but this proposal is being rushed to a vote before important questions have been asked, let alone answered,” Bowring said. 

Ohio, Pa. Officials Examine PJM Reliability in Joint Session

Ohio and Pennsylvania lawmakers met in Columbus for a hearing on the future reliability of the PJM grid, quizzing RTO and industry insiders on the role states can have in maintaining resource adequacy.

Much of the Feb. 1 discussion centered around the concerns PJM expounded on a year ago in its so-called “4R’s” report (“Resource Retirements, Replacements & Risks”), which laid out a scenario in which a significant number of thermal generators deactivate and take their capacity offline faster than renewables can replace it. (See “PJM White Paper Expounds Reliability Concerns,” PJM Board Initiates Fast-track Process to Address Reliability.)

PJM Senior Vice President of Governmental and Member Services Asim Haque — a former chair of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio — said the RTO has made strides in improving generator performance since December 2022’s Winter Storm Elliott, when 46,124 MW were unable to perform. He pointed to a 16,119-MW peak forced outage rate during the winter storm of mid-January.

Two proposals PJM filed with FERC last year following the Critical Issue Fast Path (CIFP) process aim to further incentivize capacity resources to take the steps necessary to perform during extreme weather and to rework components of the Reliability Pricing Model (RPM) to send the market signals the RTO sees as necessary to address the longer-term resource adequacy concerns at the heart of the 4R’s report. One of those filings (ER24-99) was approved by the commission last week, while an order on the other (ER24-98) is expected Feb. 6. (See related story, FERC Approves 1st PJM Proposal out of CIFP.)

While PJM is adjusting its markets to address the possible imbalance between retirements and new entries, Haque said the majority of the anticipated deactivations through 2030 are because of state and federal policies.

“Part of the reason we’ve been doing this sort of road tour is this concept of avoiding policies that push resources off of the grid until a replacement quantity has been added to the grid. So this is something that we’ve been trying to tout and explain to policymakers across the footprint,” he said, adding that the other side of the coin is finding ways of working with states to speed development of new generation.

ReliabilityFirst President Tim Gallagher said its latest reliability study identified policy decisions as a top risk to the grid for the first time and urged legislators to ensure that changes are designed to leave time for analysis to understand potential ramifications.

“Right now it looks to me like the effort to remove conventional resources from the grid is outpacing our ability to keep up with it. … None of the problems associated with transitioning to a greener grid are unsolvable or insurmountable; they just take time, and they take money. So I think the single biggest thing you can do as policymakers is ask the right questions,” Gallagher said.

Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Chair Jenifer French said PJM’s focus should be on maintaining reliability and a diverse portfolio of generation types to avoid overdependence.

“We must refocus PJM’s capacity market on its basic purpose — resource adequacy and reliability — rather than the promotion of state or federal policy initiatives that undermine that purpose,” she said.

NERC President James Robb said the 1-in-10 reliability target long used in the electric industry is on its way to becoming antiquated as growing electrification decreases consumers’ tolerance for grid outages that may disrupt home heating or electric vehicle charging. As those changes in consumer demand drive load growth not seen in decades, Robb said new risk vectors demand the attention of grid operators and regulators.

The inverter-based resources substituting for coal, gas and nuclear generators raise questions about their ability to provide essential reliability services, such as frequency control, Robb continued. Significant load growth is also occurring rapidly and in regions that have historically had flat load profiles, both because of electrification and energy-intensive industries like data centers. Threats from bad actors also are manifesting, with hackers targeting utilities in ransomware attacks and extremist groups damaging physical infrastructure.

One of the largest obstacles to addressing those risks is constructing new transmission and gas pipelines, Robb said. He noted that the only major interstate power line built in the past 20 years, the 500-kV SunZia line between Arizona and New Mexico, took 17 years to get final construction permits.

“That’s completely out of whack with the pace of change that we’re dealing with. … It’s due to issues such as cost allocation; it’s due to issues such as siting; and it’s due to a range of policy issues that are making it very, very hard to legitimize projects to attract investment,” he said.

Ohio state Sen. Kent Smith (D) said PJM is sounding the alarm on resource adequacy and reliability, but he noted that in its December 2023 Long-term Reliability Assessment, NERC rated the RTO as being at normal risk.

Robb said the level of risk it has seen across the U.S. has been steadily growing to now include elevated concerns with PJM’s neighboring balancing authorities, raising the possibility that those regions will lean on the RTO during emergencies. He added that the 4R’s report looked at a longer horizon than NERC’s annual analysis and predicted that the risks it presented will manifest in assessments released over the next few years.

Pennsylvania state Sen. Gene Yaw (R), chair of the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee, asked what obstacles there are to new resources coming online to meet the growing imbalance between supply and demand.

“PJM has had to get its house in order to ensure that our markets appropriately reflect what we are seeing in this energy transition and incent reliability,” Haque said. “So we’ve done capacity market reform; there’s one more filing that’s outstanding, and it relates to market power mitigation, and in our opinion, the market is being over-mitigated right now.” He added that additional changes are being made to the reserve and regulation markets.

Speaking on the hearing’s second panel of the day, Glen Thomas, president of GT Power Group, said there are also numerous market structures at PJM that are discouraging investment in the RTO’s capacity market. He pointed to FERC’s 2021 approval of a tightened minimum offer price (MOPR) that allowed resources receiving state subsidies to avoid being mitigated to their cost-based offers, a stringent market seller offer cap (MSOC) and Capacity Performance (CP) penalties exceeding $1 billion following Winter Storm Elliott. (See 3rd Circuit Rejects Challenges to PJM MOPR, Affirms Authority over FERC Deadlocks.)

Thomas said comments submitted by the Pennsylvania and Ohio utility commissions were instrumental in supporting the CIFP proposal the commission approved in January and encouraged the states to remain engaged at the federal level, both with FERC and on EPA rule proposals.

Ohio Manufacturers’ Rebuttal

The Ohio Manufacturers’ Association (OMA) questioned PJM’s message that long-term reliability is at risk in a Jan. 31 briefing, raising commissioned analysis of the 4R’s report that suggested that the RTO had not adequately accounted for shifting market signals if resource deactivations accelerate and intermittents fail to keep up.

Go Sustainable Energy CEO John Seryak, who drafted OMA’s rebuttal to PJM’s study, said in such a scenario the capacity market would automatically produce market signals that would incentivize developers to speed up or make investments that allow existing resources to comply with the environmental regulations the RTO predicts may cause their deactivation.

OMA President Ryan Augsburger argued that PJM is overstating reliability risks in a manner that will lead to higher rates for consumers and said repeat tinkering with the capacity market design has led to delays in running Base Residual Auctions, depriving investors of market signals and confidence in the markets.

“While Ohio manufacturers agree that future shortfall risks should be taken seriously, we believe that PJM’s ‘Resource Retirements, Replacement & Risks,’ or 4R’s report, overstates this situation and only caters to the desires of its utility company members to justify expensive new investments that they will pass on to ratepayers, thus exposing manufacturers and others customers to significant new costs,” Augsburger said.

Brad Belden, president of Belden Brick and chair of the OMA Energy Commission, said PJM needs to balance reliability with customer affordability to avoid onerous electric rates that discourage economic growth.

“The OMA-commissioned review of the grid operator, PJM, raises a lot of questions that remain unanswered by PJM,” Belden said. “Their own report showed that new gas and renewable power, along with much of our existing generation, could meet the meets through 2030, even with any plant retirements, but PJM is seeking changes to its markets that could be costly. With plenty of natural gas and renewable energy waiting in line to provide power, we’re not sure why PJM is making costly changes.”

Ohio Consumers’ Counsel Maureen Willis said her office protested the CIFP filings, arguing that they should not be made prior to the next capacity auction and that further understanding is needed to understand the costs they could pose for ratepayers.

“There’s this push by PJM and others to scare lawmakers and other regulatory authorities into acting immediately without actually considering the consequences of their actions or without knowing the costs to consumers,” she said.

Long-duration Storage Key to Calif. Energy Goals, Report Says

Long-duration energy storage (LDES) will play an essential role in cost-effectively decarbonizing California’s electricity grid, according to a report released by the state’s Energy Commission (CEC) Jan. 29.  

The study, prepared by researchers from Energy+Environmental Economics (E3), Form Energy and University of California, San Diego, explores how LDES can help California meet goals set out in Senate Bill 100, the 2018 law requiring the state to serve all retail electricity load with emissions-free power by 2045.  

Relying on modeling of the CAISO grid, it represents the most in-depth analysis to date of the crucial role the technology will play in California’s transition to renewable energy. 

The report also examines LDES’s ability to reduce air pollution in the Los Angeles Basin, as well as its role in supporting resilience in microgrids.  

Main Findings

The study found that California has made significant progress in its energy transition, with prior studies showing the electric sector could reach 80% or greater decarbonization with existing technologies. But achieving decarbonization and reliability won’t be cheap without innovations in LDES, which could be a viable replacement for the natural gas-fired power plants that are traditionally relied upon for dispatchable capacity to balance renewables and meet grid reliability standards.  

Under a business-as-usual SB 100 scenario, which allows for retainment of all existing gas resources, the study found that deploying 5 GW of LDES could cost-effectively bring CO2 emissions down to 12 million metric tons by 2045. LDES is far more cost-effective with up to 37 GW deployed by 2045 under a zero-emissions scenario that covers in-state emissions and electricity imports.  

Simulations across 35 historic weather years in the Los Angeles Basin case study showed that LDES enables retirement of gas plants in the CAISO system while maintaining reliable grid operation. By 2045, 21 GW of LDES could substitute for all of California’s existing gas plant capacity. Without LDES, the study found that the cost of using other resources to avoid reliance on gas plants increases by up to 87%.  

“Portfolios that retire in-state gas by using LDES were found to achieve cost parity, and in some cases cost savings, relative to those that retain existing in-state gas,” the study found.  

While researchers highlighted that further analysis is needed to evaluate the environmental justice benefits of retiring gas-fueled generation more quickly, they demonstrated that LDES will likely play an important role in cost-effectively maintaining local capacity requirements while reducing the need to rely on emitting resources in disadvantaged communities.  

“In Form’s study of the Los Angeles Basin as an example area, 2 GW of LDES and 1.3 GW of 4-hour lithium-ion storage is found to be the least-cost substitute for gas power plants located in disadvantaged communities, lowering system costs by 3%,” Form Energy said in a brief about the report. “This is the first time that the benefits of LDES to local reliability and environmental justice have been studied in the state, creating a model for how other local reliability areas can be studied in the future.” 

Support for Microgrids

In a case study of microgrids at the University of California, San Diego, the team also found that LDES can support high-reliability microgrids by pairing with other distributed energy resources to deliver 48-hour resilience capability, also known as “islanding,” and protecting against outages.  

However, LDES-supported microgrids may not be cost-effective. The study found that the customer value of lost load needed to justify its use ranged between $5-18 kWh for small campus buildings. Some larger buildings, though, demonstrated a negative value of lost load, showing that some microgrids improve reliability while reducing costs.  

Goals

In addition to demonstrating the distinct value LDES will bring to California’s energy transition, the study highlighted the need for modeling tools and approaches that can continue to accurately capture the value of LDES in future portfolio planning. It also emphasized the importance of optimizing resource needs with hourly time resolution across a full year and in varying weather scenarios.  

“By using these methodologies, grid planners can proactively identify resources that electric markets may not yet be fully valuing,” Form’s brief said. “From there, policy initiatives can be designed to ensure these resources are able to rapidly proliferate and deliver savings to the electric grid.”