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November 9, 2024

Ariz. Looks to Public Safety Power Shutoffs to Prevent Wildfires

Arizona Public Service is prepared to implement public safety power shutoffs for the first time this year, and another utility in the state is laying the groundwork to use the wildfire prevention technique. 

“It is a tool that we expect to use very, very seldomly, but one that we are prepared to use if conditions warrant,” said Scott Bordenkircher, APS forestry and fire mitigation director. 

Bordenkircher’s comments came during an Arizona Corporation Commission workshop April 23 on electric utilities’ summer preparedness.  

Salt River Project is also evaluating the possibility of a public safety power shutoff (PSPS) program. 

“We are in the development stages and looking at what that could look like for SRP,” Jace Kerby, director of transmission line design, construction and maintenance at SRP, said during the workshop. 

The utility has brought in a vendor to help model wildfire threat in SRP’s service territory — information that would be key in designing a PSPS program, Kerby said.  

Utilities in other Western states have used PSPS as a wildfire prevention technique. In California, there have been 72 preemptive shutoffs since 2018, according to a California Public Utilities Commission dashboard. 

Oregon’s first PSPS event was in 2020. (See High Fire Danger Prompts First Oregon PSPS Event.) 

Xcel Energy implemented the first PSPS in Colorado in April in response to a severe windstorm forecast. The shutoff affected an estimated 55,000 customers April 6-7. 

After the event, Gov. Jared Polis (D) criticized the utility for failing to minimize outages and effectively communicate with customers. The Colorado PUC has opened an investigation into Xcel’s use of PSPS and will explore potential regulation of prescribed outages. 

As the risk of wildfire increases nationwide, some predict that more states will be facing public safety power shutoffs. 

“Ultimately, it’s a national push. This will happen very likely with all utilities in the nation very soon,” Commissioner Nick Myers of the Arizona Corporation Commission said during a wildfire mitigation town hall meeting April 4.  

PSPS Design

Bordenkircher at APS said the utility has targeted 13 circuits in high fire-risk areas in Yavapai, Coconino and Gila counties for potential power shutoffs. 

He said shutoffs would occur during “really bad fire weather,” when high temperatures, low humidity and strong winds elevate the risk of wildfires igniting and spreading quickly. He estimated that a shutoff would last about 20 hours, from when winds pick up in the afternoon and evening until crews could get out the next morning to inspect power lines for damage. Customers would be alerted four days in advance of a potential shutoff. 

Kerby said SRP is exploring circuit segmentation to reduce the number of customers affected by an outage if the utility proceeds with PSPS. 

Utilities are taking other steps to reduce wildfire risk, with two goals: to prevent utility equipment from starting wildfires and to protect utility infrastructure from wildfires of any origin. 

Kerby at SRP said vegetation management “has got to be the biggest key component to helping drive down the risk when it comes to wildfire mitigation.” Utilities are clearing vegetation from rights-of-way, removing trees at risk of toppling onto lines and clearing space around power poles. 

Another strategy at SRP is replacement of wooden poles with steel in its transmission and distribution systems. Tucson Electric Power (TEP) also has a pole-replacement program. 

High-tech Approaches

Other wildfire mitigation efforts are more high-tech. 

SRP has installed 12 artificial intelligence smoke-detection cameras on its transmission system as part of a research project. The cameras learn the topography in a 10-mile radius and send an alert if smoke is spotted. A limitation is that transmitting the data requires cellular service, Kerby said. 

TEP is also testing a fire detection system in the Gila National Forest and in grassland areas around Fort Huachuca. 

APS is adding weather stations and cameras to its circuits to better monitor conditions.  

The utility is using covered conductors in high fire-risk locations and undergrounding lines “where it makes sense,” APS’ Bordenkircher said, noting the difficulty of digging through granite prevalent in parts of the state. 

Another upgrade in fire-prone areas is expulsion-limiting fuses, which contain sparks rather than letting them fall to the ground. APS is using the fuses, as is TEP.  

Kerby said SRP partners with APS on a “no reclosing program” for circuits in high fire-risk areas. If a fault occurs on one of those circuits during periods of high fire danger, it will remain out of service until it’s been inspected and found to be in good condition, he said. 

Ultimately, Kerby said, “It should be every utility’s end goal to not need a PSPS,” and measures including equipment replacement, system hardening and vegetation management will help make that possible. 

“[So] that ultimately our system is in a good enough shape and the environment around the system is in a good enough shape that it can withstand the environmental conditions that could come its way,” he said. 

Western Officials Get Rundown on ‘Irritating, Inefficient’ Market Seams

DENVER — Utility staff responsible for real-time operations will be equipped to manage the seams between two Western day-ahead markets, but the situation will be far from ideal, state energy officials from across the West heard April 24 at the joint spring conference of the Committee for Regional Electric Power Conference and Western Interconnection Regional Advisory Body (WIRAB).   

“I can say that I have a positive outlook that maybe you will be happy to hear: that system operators are going to make it work,” Kelsey Martinez, director of regional markets and transmission strategy at Public Service Company of New Mexico, told the officials during a panel discussion on the potential impact of seams between CAISO’s Extended Day-Ahead Market (EDAM) and SPP’s Markets+. 

“Even if we give them subpar designs regarding the seams, even if we give them amateur joint operating agreements [on] Day 1 with the seams, system operators will make it work. They will keep the lights on and there won’t be any large reliability event that we can point to and say that ‘Seams were the smoking gun on that,’” Martinez said on the panel, which was moderated by New Mexico Public Regulation Commissioner Gabriel Aguilera.  

“That’s the good news,” according to Martinez, who based her views on five years’ experience as a former system operator and three years managing real-time operations. “The bad news is that seams show up in all kinds of little irritating, inefficient ways in the control room.” 

Those irritants include: 

    • use of different sets of “situational awareness” tools and data sets among neighboring balancing authority areas (BAAs), making it difficult for operators to troubleshoot in real time; 
    • challenges for vendors in configuring those tools because they must translate different market rules among adjacent BAAs; and 
    • differing time frames among BAAs around when schedules are due and market operating runs take place and are published. 

Dividing the West into two day-ahead markets also would roll back some of the gains system operators have seen from improved visibility into neighboring areas provided by widespread participation in CAISO’s Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM), Martinez said. The WEIM now includes BAAs representing about 80% of the load in the Western Interconnection. 

“Now there’s going to be some visible information and then some invisible information, and that also includes communications,” she said. “So, we’re going to continue to get communications in real time from our market operator, but we may not be getting real-time communications from the other market operators that will affect our system.” 

Taken together, those issues add up to what Martinez called a “low-level reliability degradation.” 

“These aren’t things that are going to represent huge events on the system, but what they will do is just create economic inefficiencies that are hard to measure but are very prevalent, and could be improved with mature seams operations,” she said. 

Perpetuating Inefficiencies

“Having one seam between two markets is a lot better than having 32 seams and no transparent pricing [and] no hourly trading,” said Johannes Pfeifenberger, principal at The Brattle Group, referring to the current patchwork of BAAs that characterizes the Western grid. “But what you get with two markets is you [can] have intertie [trading] between the markets if that feature is enabled, at least; so there’s a lot of work that needs to be done.” 

Bilateral trading faces the highest number of “hurdles” under a scenario with multiple BAAs in a non-organized market, Pfeifenberger said, while bilateral trading between two organized markets becomes more efficient due to increased transparency and liquidity. 

He said market simulations have shown that an organized day-ahead market in the West would increase trading volumes by 20 to 30% (60 to 90 TWh) compared with the “bilateral” status quo. And while a scenario in which most Western entities participate in one market would bring the highest increase in trading, a two-market scenario still would provide a boost. 

But based on evidence gleaned from Eastern RTOs, Pfeifenberger said, seams can “perpetuate” five types of inefficiencies. 

A key inefficiency is “largely ineffective” interregional transmission planning, and Pfeifenberger warned that coordinated planning in the West could decline under a two-market scenario compared with the status quo. 

“Once you have these markets, that planning between the markets is almost worse than what you have now because these markets are so focused on their region, more so than individual utilities can afford to do,” Pfeifenberger said. “The [West] has a better track record with regional planning than the East.” 

The other inefficiencies include: 

    • generator interconnection delays and cost uncertainty created by affected system impact studies;   
    • a reduced — or overlooked — value of resource adequacy at interties across seams due to restrictions on capacity imports and differences in RA accreditation across two markets; 
    • difficulties in managing loop flows through market-to-market coordinated flowgates; and 
    • inefficient trading across contract-path market seams. 

Pfeifenberger said the last problem must be addressed by “intertie optimization,” a mechanism that allows for trades across seams to respond to fast-changing real-time prices in adjacent markets. 

Fondest Dream

But seams between day-ahead markets will pose problems beyond those experienced at the boundaries dividing the full RTOs in the East, said Scott Miller, executive director of the Western Power Trading Forum (WPTF). 

Miller pointed to a recent study WPTF commissioned in partnership with the Portland, Ore.-based Public Generating Pool to examine the potential impacts on trading from a West divided between EDAM and Markets+. The study pointed to increased barriers to contracting across markets, inefficiencies related to greenhouse gas accounting and associated generation dispatch, and differences in market power mitigation approaches, among other issues. It also noted that, given the lack of BAA consolidation seen in RTOs, the two day-ahead markets still will contain “seams within seams.” (See Western Market Seams Issues to Differ from East, Study Finds.) 

“We found that, indeed, day-ahead markets are going to be different in many respects, and that the seams areas may present certain challenges that need to be addressed [in ways] that will be not informed by what the RTOs do,” Miller said. 

“And this is not to rain on the parade of day-ahead markets; this is definitely going to be an improvement on the status quo,” he said. “But recognize you are talking to somebody whose fondest dream — at least professionally —would be that there is a single market [with] security-constrained economic dispatch across the West. But we are where we are, and we do things incrementally.” 

Past and Future Seam?

Rachel Dibble, vice president of power bulk marketing at the Bonneville Power Administration, cautioned against conflating day-ahead seams issues with what would happen in an “eventual RTO.” BPA has been heavily involved in the design of Markets+ and its staff recently recommended the federal power agency select the SPP day-ahead market over CAISO’s EDAM, a move criticized by some proponents of a single Western market. (See BPA Staff Recommends Markets+ over EDAM.)  

“I just want to clarify that the seams that exist today between balancing authorities, transmission service providers and transmission operators — [they] will still exist in a day-ahead market,” Dibble said. “Now, there are efficiencies that Kelsey [Martinez] and Scott [Miller] both talked about, even with the day-ahead market that can improve things, but those things don’t go away with a day-ahead market.” 

Dibble said she would expect “experienced and responsible” market operators (that is, CAISO and SPP) to work together to “find the efficiencies to be able to allow power to flow across those boundaries in the most efficient way possible and bring participants into that discussion.” 

She added that BPA has “a lot of experience” working with CAISO on seams issues, considers the ISO a “valued business partner” and is a WEIM participant. 

Dibble noted that BPA negotiated a coordinated transmission agreement with CAISO when PacifiCorp joined the WEIM as the market’s first member in 2014, “long before” BPA joined. 

“And that was essentially a seams agreement that identified ways that we could operate efficiently and address that seam and going across,” Dibble said. “So, yes, I agree, it’s a big seam. It’s a seam that’s there today and may be there in the future as well.” 

“We can’t really tackle this until we know where the boundary is,” Miller said. “And so, when we get to that point, I think sometime this year, then we can engage meaningfully in what we can do to manage the seams that are unique to the day-ahead market.” 

Uncertainty is part of the landscape, according to panel moderator Aguilera. 

“Many of you in one way or another are thinking about this in your job, which is whether a utility should join a day-ahead market, and we’re hoping that this session will confuse you further,” Aguilera joked with his fellow commissioners. “We’re not hoping for that, but I believe that our panelists will give you more to think about.” 

PJM MRC Briefs: April 25, 2024

Stakeholders Defer Vote on Long-term Planning Proposal

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — The PJM Markets and Reliability Committee delayed voting on a proposal establishing a multiscenario long-term transmission planning process to allow stakeholders to first see what action FERC may take on regional planning. The motion to defer received 78% sector-weighted support. 

The proposal would create two reliability-focused scenarios identifying transmission violations eight and 15 years in advance; two policy scenarios looking at new generation development backed by state legislation eight to 15 years out; and an additional policy scenario including higher generation entry not backed by signed legislation. It also would expand PJM’s two-year planning cycle to three years to accommodate the increased number of scenarios. (See “Stakeholders Long-term Regional Transmission Planning Proposal,” PJM PC/TEAC Briefs: March 5, 2024.) 

FERC announced it intends to vote on an order related to cost allocation for regional transmission expansion during a May 13 special meeting. (See FERC Observers, Stakeholders Lay out What is at Stake with Tx Rule Looming.) 

Paul Sotkiewicz, president of E-cubed Policy Associates, said the proposal is deficient from both policy and process standpoints, arguing it would replace the ideal of having markets driving planning decisions with PJM picking “winners and losers.” By constructing the proposal through workshops, rather than committees, he said the stakeholder process was bypassed, preventing the language from being fully vetted by members. 

“There are some real deep concerns from a process standpoint and from a concept standpoint,” he said. 

Sotkiewicz introduced the motion to defer to a month after FERC is expected to issue the order on the basis that members should have time to understand how it may interact with PJM’s proposal. 

“This is a major change. You’ve got a FERC rulemaking sitting out there that’s going to come out in three weeks. There’s no reason to vote on this now,” he said. 

Gregory Poulos, executive director of the Consumer Advocates of the PJM States (CAPS), said advocates are frustrated that alternatives to the standard stakeholder process increasingly are being used to seek endorsement of changes with reduced stakeholder input. 

Denise Foster Cronin, of the East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC), said the proposal could lead to significant costs for market participants and should be implemented by revising the governing documents rather than by edits to Manual 14B and Manual 14F alone. 

PJM argued a delay was unnecessary as its proposal is in line with the notice of proposed rulemaking (NOPR) the commission issued in April 2022 (RM21-17). PJM’s Jason Connell clarified that expectation is entirely based on the NOPR, and RTO staff has not discussed the contents of the order with FERC. 

The RTO’s Michael Herman told the committee that if it endorsed the proposal without a deferral, a competitive window could be opened in 2025, whereas a delay could compromise its ability to implement the new process on its envisioned timeline. 

PJM CEO Manu Asthana admitted there could be unintended consequences, such as PJM projecting too much load growth and overbuilding transmission, but the reliability needs outweigh the risks. 

“There’s many risks, but not doing this is a bigger risk,” he said. 

Ryann Reagan, of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU), said the scenario-based planning paradigm is a major improvement that could relieve the interconnection backlog and contribute to proactive planning connect generation to the grid at the most cost-effective locations. 

PJM Re-evaluating CONE Inputs

Rising interest rates and construction costs have prompted PJM to initiate a re-evaluation of the inputs used to calculate the cost of new entry (CONE) for the reference resource in the quadrennial review. That parameter is a factor used to determine demand curve scaling. (See FERC Approves PJM Quadrennial Review.) 

The new analysis will be for the values used in the quadrennial review accepted by FERC on Feb. 14, 2023, effective for the 2026/27 Base Residual Auction (BRA) scheduled to be run in December 2024. The Brattle Group has been hired as an independent consultant for the review; the firm also was brought in for the initial quadrennial review. 

PJM’s Pat Bruno said initial analysis of the change suggests updated figures could lead net CONE to increase between $50 and $100/MW-day. He said the review will be limited to the inputs used to calculate the reference resource CONE and will not affect other values produced by the quadrennial review. 

Several stakeholders questioned why the energy and ancillary service (EAS) offset is not also being reconsidered given the potential for forward energy prices to change significantly between the quadrennial review’s completion and the BRA. Two significant changes made in the most recent quadrennial review were shifting the reference resource from a combustion turbine to a combined-cycle generator and using a forward EAS offset, which uses forward energy forecasts to estimate revenues a market seller will receive outside the capacity market. 

Stakeholders also suggested that developing a trigger for PJM to review quadrennial review figures or periodic reviews could increase transparency. 

Additional Guidance on Co-located Load

PJM has revised its guidance for generators with co-located load clarifying how it conducts grid impact studies, the difference between co-located load configurations where the load is connected to the PJM grid or only the generator, and the circumstances under which generators with a capacity obligation can serve non-network load. 

The guidance initially was posted in March and presented to the Market Implementation Committee on April 3. PJM updated the language with feedback received from stakeholders and reposted the document April 17. (See “PJM Provides Guidance on Co-located Load Configurations,” PJM MIC Briefs: April 3, 2024.) 

PJM’s Tim Horger presented the revised guidance, saying the RTO’s preference is that co-located load be interconnected with PJM, which provides firm service and subjects consumers to all service charges. However, the guidance acknowledges that jurisdictional constraints prevent it from requiring that configuration. 

The alternative configuration is for the co-located load to be behind the generator’s meter and not directly connected to the PJM grid, thereby not receiving firm service and allowing it to avoid service charges. The generator’s capacity interconnection rights (CIRs) would be reduced by the amount of non-network load being served. 

If the generator trips offline or otherwise cannot serve non-network load, the configuration must prevent the load from being able to draw from the PJM grid instead. A portion of the generator’s committed capacity can serve non-network load; however, it must be approved to go on forced outage by PJM, which could expose the unit to capacity performance penalties if it is dispatched by PJM and does not switch its output to the grid. 

The revised guidance clarifies how backup generators submit forced outage requests and adds that energy-only resources always will be approved for an outage to serve non-network load but still must request an outage to provide visibility to operators. 

The co-located load is required to reduce its consumption to zero before the generator can coordinate with PJM to switch from the primary resource to the backup generator. 

Adrien Ford, Constellation Energy’s director of wholesale market development, said the requirement that load power down before being served by the backup generator ignores technologies for which the load could remain online while the power source is switched over without risking the load inadvertently drawing off the PJM grid, such as battery storage. 

Under both configurations, PJM requires a network impact study be completed before co-located load comes online so PJM can analyze any potential reliability issues that arise, such as a need for more reactive power capability. If grid upgrades are required, the costs would be assigned to the generator. 

“We need to know about these configurations. If there’s co-located load coming onto the system, we need to know it’s out there, so it needs to go through the proper interconnection system,” Horger said. 

Connell said it typically takes fewer than nine months to complete network impact studies on co-located load requests, depending on the configuration, with simpler arrangements often being completed much quicker. 

Horger said PJM plans to draft manual revisions addressing co-located load over the next sixth months with the aim of arriving at governing document revisions. As the amount of co-located load has increased, he said it started to affect PJM planning and operations, necessitating clear rules. 

Stakeholders voted on rule change packages for co-located load in October 2023, but none received adequate support. One of the core sticking points between the proposals was whether capacity resources should be permitted to retain their CIRs while serving non-network co-located load if that load could be quickly curtailed to allow the generator to meet its capacity obligation. 

Quick Fix for Dual-fuel Classification Endorsed

Stakeholders endorsed a quick-fix proposal from Calpine Energy to adjust the qualifications for a generator to offer capacity as a dual-fuel resource to include gas units that can operate on an alternate fuel after starting on gas. 

Calpine’s David “Scarp” Scarpignato said the change would be implemented in the 2026/27 BRA due to how far into pre-auction activities the 2025/26 BRA is. The quick-fix process allows a proposal to be voted on concurrently with an issue charge and problem statement. (See “Calpine Proposes Changes to Dual Fuel Classification,” PJM MRC/MC Briefs: March 20, 2024.) 

Scarp said many combustion turbines and combined-cycle units capable of operating on an alternate fuel still consume gas to start, but the amount is so miniscule they could start multiple times on residual fuel in the pipeline even if supply was so compromised that they couldn’t use gas as their primary fuel. 

Erik Heinle, Vistra director of PJM market policy, said the change addresses an oversight in the governing document language establishing dual-fuel classification, leading to no dual-fuel combined-cycle generators being offered for the 2025/26 auction.  

Stakeholders Endorse Additional ELCC Data Posting

The committee endorsed a PJM proposal adding a paragraph to Manual 33, which pertains to administrative services, allowing PJM to post aggregated forced outage data broken down by effective load carrying capability (ELCC) class.  

PJM’s Pat Bruno said manual language requires that any aggregated data must include four or more generation owners to be posted, which could prevent PJM from publishing outage data for ELCC classes in some hours. The revisions would allow PJM to post data for those hours while excising data for ELCC classes for hours in which the four-generation owner threshold was not met. 

Heinle said the data could help market sellers better understand their ELCC accreditation and performance as PJM shifts to using marginal ELCC to determine the amount of capacity they can offer into the market. 

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring said posting aggregated data would be a major departure from PJM’s practice of posting such data only after major events, such as storms resulting in high outage rates. He said the difference in forced outage rates could allow identification of which resource went online and the revealing of market-sensitive data. 

Changes to Capacity Assignments for Large Load Additions Contemplated

PJM’s Pete Langbein presented a first read of a proposal revising how capacity obligations are assigned for serving large load additions (LLAs) — forecast load interconnection requests not captured in PJM’s economic forecasting. (See “Stakeholders Endorse Proposal on Large Load Capacity Obligations,” PJM MIC Briefs: April 3, 2024.) 

The Tariff and Reliability Assurance Agreement (RAA) revisions would rework how PJM calculates capacity obligation assignments to exclude LLAs included in Table B-9 of the load forecast from base zonal scaling factors and add those LLAs back when determining the obligation peak load input. 

Bowring argued that PJM’s processes for reviewing LLA submissions and assigning capacity need a deeper look as they can result in consumers buying excess capacity if forecast load does not manifest in the expected delivery year. 

Michael Cocco, of Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, agreed with Bowring but said LLAs receive some high-level review by the Load Analysis Subcommittee and PJM staff, which ultimately accept or reject the LLAs. 

PJM’s Andrew Gledhill said the RTO has rejected LLA submissions and would retain the power to review and ultimately determine whether they are incorporated into the load forecast and translated into capacity obligations. 

Alex Stern, Exelon director of RTO relations and strategy, said the proposal aims to ensure capacity assignments accurately reflect the load that’s expected to materialize in a region. 

“This seems to be an enhancement to the load forecasting process and that’s a primary goal and objective of what we do here, which is making sure we’re investing in what we need to invest in, but also making sure that costs on the transmission and generation side are properly allocated to all customers,” he said. 

Other MRC Business

Stakeholders endorsed with 67% sector-weighted support a set of revisions to PJM’s governing documents drafted through the Governing Document Enhancement and Clarification Subcommittee (GDECS), with the most notable being lowercasing the term “end-use customer” in the language detailing load management participation in the capacity market. Bowring and some stakeholders argued the change could significantly alter which entities can participate in demand response and said the change should have been made through the stakeholder process. (See “Governing Documents Revisions Endorsed Through GDECS Process,” PJM MRC/MC Briefs: March 20, 2024.) 

The committee endorsed by acclamation governing document and manual revisions adding definitions of three synchronous condenser parameters — condense startup costs, condense-to-generate costs and condense energy use. PJM’s David Hauske said the parameters are in use and the new language codifies ongoing practice. (See “Other Committee Business,” PJM MRC/MC Briefs: March 20, 2024.)

PJM reviewed revisions to Manual 3, which details transmission operations, and Manual 36, pertaining to system restoration, following the documents’ periodic review. Both proposals are slated to be voted on by the MRC at its May 22 meeting. 

The changes to Manual 3 would include a requirement that transmission owners notify the Operating Committee prior to implementing dynamic line ratings (DLRs) and rules for rescheduling canceled transmission outage tickets. 

Manual 36 revisions update the list of TOs within PJM and the list of TO deadlines for submitting annual restoration plan reviews. 

NY Reaches Deals for 2.4 GW of Onshore Renewables

New York state has reached tentative contracts with developers proposing 24 land-based renewable energy projects totaling nearly 2.4 GW of capacity. 

The announcement April 29 is the result of the rush solicitation issued in late 2023, as 81 onshore projects with a total 7.5-GW capacity were in the process of cancelling renewable energy certificate contracts that were no longer economically viable. 

The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority expects to negotiate and finalize the tentative new contracts over the next few months. NYSERDA won’t release details on the projects or their costs until final contracts are awarded. 

The state’s vaunted renewable energy development pipeline imploded in late 2023 and early 2024. Dozens of projects contracted years earlier had not begun construction when inflation and interest rates skyrocketed.  

En masse, developers in June 2023 said they could not proceed to construction under terms negotiated and asked for more money. (See OSW Developers Seeking More Money from New York.) 

The state Public Service Commission rejected their petitions in October, saying that renegotiating deals would undercut the competitive process by which they were selected. (See NY Rejects Inflation Adjustment for Renewable Projects.) 

Along with the 7.5 GW of land-based contracts that were canceled, developers bailed out on 4.2 GW of offshore wind projects. 

It was a serious blow to New York’s hopes of reaching the first of its climate protection milestones: 70% renewable energy flowing through the grid by 2030. 

NYSERDA undertook immediate damage control efforts, including onshore and offshore solicitations carried out far more quickly than past procurements.  

The resulting tentative contracts fell far short of the cancellations, however: 1.73 GW of offshore wind was announced Feb. 29, and the 2.4 GW of onshore wind and solar was announced April 29. That’s 4.1 GW of tentative contracts to replace 11.7 GW of finalized contracts. 

And the equation is worse than even that sounds: NYSERDA on April 19 announced tentative offshore wind contracts totaling 4 GW could not be finalized because the specified turbines would not be available. (See NY Offshore Wind Plans Implode Again.) 

Contract cancellations do not equate to project cancellations, however. NYSERDA expects many of the developers will attempt to proceed to construction eventually. But the reset inevitably will mean longer time frames and higher price tags in a state where energy development is already slow and expensive. 

One positive detail: The two provisional offshore wind projects chosen in February are mature plans that previously held contracts and are approaching construction-ready status. 

NYSERDA said all the tentative onshore contracts announced April 29 also are for mature, late-stage projects, and said some of them were among the mass cancellations of late 2023.  

That was a requirement to submit bids in the latest onshore solicitation: Projects had to have achieved late-stage interconnection and permitting milestones. 

The trade organization representing the developers that canceled the contracts, the Alliance for Clean Energy New York, welcomed the latest news. It said via email:  

“Any day a renewable energy project makes progress is a good day, and we thank NYSERDA for announcing these 24 provisional contract awards from the recent competitive solicitation. Since the projects provisionally awarded today are further along than previous competitive solicitations, it is exciting to know they could be on the grid serving New Yorkers as soon as 2025.” 

Also on April 29, NYSERDA issued a request for information that will help it shape its eighth large-scale onshore renewable solicitation, which it expects to kick off as soon as late May and which could yield provisional contract awards as soon as October. 

However, NYSERDA is looking at pushing the timetable back a few months to better mesh with the NYISO Class Year 2023 Study. This could give potential bidders a better understanding of their expected upgrade costs prior to submitting a bid proposal. 

Responses to NYSERDA’s request for information are due by May 13. 

NYSERDA on April 23 issued a request for information to help shape its next offshore wind solicitation, planned to be issued in the summer of 2024. Responses are due by May 21. (See IPF24: New York Starts Another OSW Rebound.) 

IPF24: Moving Offshore Wind Beyond Contract Cancellations

NEW ORLEANS — Five Northeast states have seen contracts for offshore wind projects totaling more than 12 GW canceled in the past year. 

Getting them back on track to construction and avoiding future derailments for other projects is a central concern for the advocates and officials working to expand offshore wind in the United States. 

An International Partnering Forum panel discussion April 25 looked at lessons learned and ways to move forward. There is much to learn from and much to move forward from: The Northeast scratch sheet reads like a who’s who in the offshore wind industry. 

In the past year, the contracts for SouthCoast and Commonwealth in Massachusetts, Park City in Connecticut and Skipjack in Maryland were canceled because of rising construction costs, as were Empire 1 and 2, Sunrise and Beacon in New York; Ocean Wind 1 and 2 in New Jersey were canceled due to construction costs and nonavailability of installation vessels; and provisional contracts for Attentive 1, Community 1 and Excelsior were canceled in New York after development of the 18-MW turbine specified in those contracts was halted. 

Empire 1 and Sunrise already have tentative replacement contracts with New York, and bids have been resubmitted for some of the others.  

But the wholesale reset of the pipeline in Northeast states inevitably will raise costs and extend timelines. 

“You can’t look at everything that has happened over the last year and say, ‘No, we should just keep doing everything exactly the way we have been doing it,’” said Abby Watson, president of The Groundwire Group. “We clearly have designed a system that was not sufficient to meet some of the potential shifts in the market and macroeconomic environment that could come along, and so we need to find more resilient strategies for building this out because these are really long timeline projects … we’re going to have other shocks and disruptions to the system.” 

Fred Zalcman, director of the New York Offshore Wind Alliance, said policymakers need to be flexible. 

“Let’s remind ourselves that what we’re trying to achieve here is nothing short of standing up a new U.S.-based heavy industry,” he said. “It’s not just the steel in the water, but it encompasses localizing our manufacturing, standing up a new workforce, Jones Act-compliant vessels, community benefits. Those are all very laudable public policy goals, and I don’t mean to question them, but it also comes with some risks and some cost.” 

Zalcman said he already is seeing that flexibility in the actions of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, which is seeking stakeholder input through a request for information (RFI) as it prepares the state’s fifth offshore wind solicitation and concurrent requests for supply chain development proposals. 

NYSERDA Director of Offshore Wind Greg Lampman described the situation as a clean slate. 

“We are now … working to not continue to engage and negotiate and revise but really just to start fresh, build a new solicitation gathered by input from the RFI and push forward to continue to develop the industry.” 

Power Advisory President John Dalton said his firm is working with Massachusetts and Rhode Island on their latest offshore wind solicitations. 

He said the contracts in Massachusetts involve electric distribution companies as counterparties, so they have a more commercial focus than the holistic contracts NYSERDA pursues. 

Dalton said the interest rate considerations outlined in New York’s RFI are intriguing. 

“Hats off to NYSERDA. The RFI that came out on Tuesday has an interesting formula, which I think really moves the industry forward in terms of one possibility how to better reflect interest rates and the impact on contract pricing,” he said. 

Watson raised a larger consideration about renegotiating failed contracts: “Something that we need to be really mindful of in this environment is that there are risks here regarding public perception of offshore wind,” she said. 

Traditionally there have been three public selling points for offshore wind, Watson explained: A significantly higher capacity factor to offset its slightly higher levelized cost of electricity; hedging against future increases in the cost of renewables by locking in huge blocks of capacity with a single contract; and development of supply chain, with its economic benefits.  

The second and third points have been undercut by the contract cancellations and rebidding, she said. Supply chain confidence is particularly important, she added, because of the long time frames involved. A manufacturer cannot commit to retooling for a project that may change. 

“Developers are hugely incentivized to take big risks and big gambles in securing these procurement awards because that’s the way that our process tends to be — expect the developer to take on a lot of that risk and they’re competing on the lowest price with a very limited amount of information about their lease areas,” Watson said. 

“We have to find a way to do this better if we want to attract those domestic manufacturing jobs and the supply chain piece,” she added, “also making good on our commitments to the people who have gone through workforce programs expecting to have jobs on a certain timeline that now we’re looking at pushing those timelines out.” 

Lampman called that a chicken-and-egg problem: Manufacturers want market certainty before setting up factories to build offshore wind components, and offshore wind developers won’t give it to them until it is too late to add new production capacity for a given project. 

Dalton said a helpful change would be a steadier cadence in development — a sense that there will be regular, manageable procurement, rather than states trying to lock down the supply chain for themselves with ever-larger procurement goals. 

Watson flagged another issue: Financing is expensive and the interest costs for a new offshore wind farm trickle down to electric ratepayers. 

“I think it’s worth noting that if you can get close to 6% on a Treasury bond right now, to be putting your capital at risk on something as long term and challenging as an offshore wind project, it is a fundamental challenge that the industry is facing,” she said. 

Lampman said projects bids often are viewed as too high for ratepayers to afford or too low for developers to follow through on. The middle ground is missing in the conversation, he said. 

“People sometimes cringe when I say this: We want everybody to make money — just not too much money,” Lampman said. “We continually say we’re trying to build an industry that’s going to be sustainable in the long term and keep persevering.” 

Zalcman said the industry and those surrounding it could do a better job communicating the value of offshore wind, explaining why costs are high and explaining the requirements placed on developers — whether it’s sailing ships more slowly to avoid killing whales or expending money and effort for community benefit. 

“We really don’t expect of other energy resources what we’re expecting of onshore wind,” he said. “We’re not asking coal plants to do workforce development or invest in ports and harbors, drive the trucks slower. We are encumbering the offshore wind industry with a lot of expectation. And again, I’m not challenging that, I just think as an industry, we probably need to do a little bit better messaging about the value proposition of onshore wind.” 

Additional IPF24 Coverage  

Read NetZero Insider’s full coverage of the 2024 International Partnering Forum here:  

Central Atlantic Region Prepares for OSW Development 

How Best to Address OSW’s Effects on Fisheries 

Interior Announces Updated OSW Regs, Auction Schedule at IPF24 

Louisiana Manufacturers Expand into Offshore Wind 

New York Starts Another OSW Rebound 

Offshore Wind Sector Leaders Emphasize Tailwinds 

Voices of the OSW Supply Chain, as Heard at Trade Show 

PJM Monitor and Consumers Protest Indian River Compensation Settlement

The Maryland Office of Peoples Counsel and the Independent Market Monitor for PJM are urging FERC to reject a settlement to compensate NRG for keeping a portion of its Indian River coal-fired generator online under a reliability-must-run (RMR) contract (ER22-1539). 

The agreement would pay NRG $263 million to continue operating the 410-MW Indian River Unit 4 between June 2022, the generator’s initial deactivation date, and the end of the RMR term on Dec. 31, 2026. The payment is split between $35 million for project investment costs and a $228 million “black box” sum, which combined amount to a $164 million cut to the $357 million NRG had requested for RMR service in its initial filing April 1, 2022. 

In addition to decreasing the RMR compensation, the settlement would reduce the notice PJM must provide NRG to terminate the contract early, include the Monitor in reviewing new project investments and create a requirement that updates be provided at least three quarters before transmission upgrades are completed to resolve the reliability violations created by Indian River’s retirement. The terms were signed onto by NRG, the Delaware Public Service Commission, Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, Delaware Municipal Electric Corp., the Delaware city of Dover and PJM. The settlement also states that it was not opposed by the Delaware Energy Users Group, Delaware Division of the Public Advocate, Maryland Public Service Commission and Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative. 

The Maryland OPC and Monitor both argued the black box nature of the settlement figure prevents the commission from evaluating the merits of the compensation and that about half of the payment would be for sunk costs that NRG already had written off as impaired investments in 2013 and 2017. 

The Monitor argued that PJM’s tariff has two pathways for recovering costs incurred to provide RMR service, neither of which allow for sunk costs from prior to the start of the RMR period. In an affidavit, Monitor Joseph Bowring argued the proposed compensation would include $115,862,358 in sunk costs. 

“The goal of the tariff language is to ensure that a generation owner who operates a unit past its intended retirement date for reliability reasons is compensated for all the costs that it incurs in order to provide that service. Part V service has the limited purpose of allowing PJM time to complete transmission upgrades needed to ensure the reliable operation of the system after a unit deactivates,” the Monitor wrote, citing PJM’s tariff. 

Based on figures included in NRG’s initial RMR filing, the OPC stated that about 43% of the compensation would be for investments made prior to the start of the RMR period. It argued that would put consumers in the position of being asked to pay for losses Indian River experienced during its time as a merchant generator or face increased reliability risk if the resource retired prematurely. 

“NRG’s proposition to the commission embedded in the proposed settlement, to the affected states, and to affected electric consumers — boiled down to its essence — is that absent securing the windfall of recovery of a substantial and disproportionate quantum of its already-written-off investment, it will retire the plant, thereby putting at risk operation of the electric grid. The commission cannot and should not endorse this. The plant can be fully compensated for those ongoing operating costs incurred so the plant remains in service during the RMR period without providing it a windfall for sunk investments that it had no investment-backed expectation to recoup years following their write-off,” the OPC wrote. 

If sunk costs were allowed to be included in RMR compensation, the OPC argued an incentive would be established for aging generators with poor capacity factors to deactivate early to pursue compensation far higher than what they could receive in PJM’s markets. It estimated the Indian River RMR would come out to about four times higher than recent Base Residual Auction (BRA) clearing prices for the DPL South zone. 

“The distorted incentives resulting from possible recognition of an inflated rate base due to sunk, fully loss impaired, investment, for RMR service units will only accelerate this process. The recent filings by Talen Energy … seeking RMR service for the Brandon Shores and Wagner power plants in the constrained (Baltimore Gas and Electric Locational Deliverability Area) is an exponential exacerbation of this problem,” the OPC wrote (ER24-1787, ER24-1790). 

In initial comments on the settlement, FERC trial staff stated the settlement is “fair, reasonable and in the public interest” and recommended Settlement Judge Stephanie Nagel certify the agreement. 

“The settlement reflects reasoned negotiations undertaken by all participants in good faith and resolves all issues in this proceeding. The settlement provides lower rates through a reduction in the monthly fixed cost charge and elimination of carrying charges in the project investment tracker,” trail staff wrote. 

PJM stakeholders are considering two proposals to rework rules around generation retirement requests through the Deactivation Enhancements Senior Task Force. A PJM package would increase the amount of time generation owners must provide of their intent to shutter a resource ahead, while the Monitor introduced a proposal to establish a formula for calculating RMR compensation based on going-forward costs. (See PJM Stakeholders Considering Changes to Generation Deactivation Compensation and Timelines.) 

IPF24: Central Atlantic Region Prepares for OSW Development

A two-turbine pilot project so far has been the only U.S. offshore wind installation south of New England. 

While pioneering projects in the Northeast have been first out of the gate and first to the finish line, the nation’s largest offshore wind farm to date — Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind — is set to start construction imminently in the Central Atlantic region. 

Several other wind energy lease areas have been designated and leased in the Central Atlantic, and federal regulators plan another auction this year. 

At the International Partnering Forum on April 25, representatives of four states shared their thoughts on how best to advance this new energy and economic sector. 

The Central Atlantic region already has had one casualty amid the financial and supply chain constraints that came to fore in the past two years: Skipjack Wind canceled its offtake contract with Maryland, though the project itself remains in development. (See Ørsted Cancels Skipjack Wind Agreement with Maryland.) 

“The theme to walk away with is collaboration and the need for collaboration,” Eric Coffman of the Maryland Energy Administration said as an introduction to the discussion. And that was a theme: Central Atlantic states advancing their own interests by collaborating to help grow a new industry that sprawls beyond any one state’s borders. 

But as with other discussions at IPF24, the growing pains of the U.S. offshore wind industry also were evident in the remarks. 

“One of the biggest challenges we’ve experienced talking with our stakeholders and our Tier 2 and Tier 3 suppliers is that there’s a lack of understanding of what industry needs,” said Emma Stoney, wind and water energy program manager at the Maryland Energy Administration. “Maybe not transparency, just a lack of understanding [of] what the industry needs, when it’s needed, and how the state can be that facilitator and help companies actually get into the industry.” 

Stoney tallied the offshore wind aspirations of Maryland and its neighbors: “We have over a 20-GW goal for the Central Atlantic, and that is extremely vague and it’s going to provide a lot of economic development opportunities, but to engage our businesses in it, it requires collaboration.” 

John Hardin, executive director of the North Carolina Department of Commerce’s Board of Science, Technology and Innovation, said offshore wind is an unknown for many businesses in his state. 

“One thing that we have learned is that the general level of awareness in the industry about offshore wind opportunity is very limited,” he said. “There’s just not much awareness now. So, one thing we’ve been doing is doing a lot of webinars and in-person presentations across the state. We have done several dozen in the last couple of years.” 

Alone among its neighbors, Delaware has no formal offshore wind goals. It is by far the smallest state in the region, unlikely on its own to develop economies of scale that could support the offshore wind sector, so it might find interstate collaboration particularly helpful. 

Tom Noyes, principal planner for energy policy at the Delaware Division of Climate Coastal and Energy, reported some recent news: Legislation has been introduced that would authorize procurement of 800 to 1,200 MW of offshore wind capacity in his state. 

“We understand that a gigawatt is sort of the sweet spot for a project, and at the same time, we’re interested in opportunities to partner with neighboring states if such an opportunity were to arise,” Noyes said. “We’re sort of bringing up the rear, we have learned a lot from working with, learning from our neighboring states.” 

Maryland and New Jersey have offshore wind goals of 8.5 GW and 11 GW, respectively, so Delaware’s proximity positions it to support both and benefit economically, he said. 

Stone said a study is looking regionally at ways to use each state’s strengths to overcome each state’s challenges, but also for ways to avoid a boom-and-bust cycle. 

That’s a good thing, Noyes said. “We can’t be all things to all the districts, and economic benefits don’t stop at the boundaries.” 

Jo-Elsa Jordan, business manager at the Virginia Economic Development Partnership, said her state has extensive maritime and industrial assets. Companies looking to enter the offshore wind space should explain their needs and ask for help — there are multiple agencies working to help them succeed. 

“Be clear,” Jordan said. “What do you need? What do you like? What are your challenges, what suppliers are contingent on others? Let us know. We can’t write a blank check because we’re stewards of taxpayer dollars. But what we can do is be creative and bring solutions to the table.” 

Hardin said there is not universal support for offshore wind in state government, and he advised businesses that want to benefit from the industry to tell their legislators. Businesses telling lawmakers about jobs and economic benefits for their constituents are more persuasive than bureaucrats, he said. 

“That’s an important message, and you can help cut through some of the misinformation as well.” 

Pulling back to the larger picture, Jordan said local and state entities need to be less parochial if they want to reap benefits. 

“From an economic development standpoint, if I’m being really candid — we don’t collaborate, we compete. We want the capital investment; we want the jobs. We want that, and that’s traditional economic development. But offshore wind is a different animal.” 

Stoney and Noyes called on the offshore wind industry itself to step up. 

“There is a point where a supply chain needs to be able to keep up with the innovation,” Stoney said. “It is a challenge to continually have new turbine sizes coming out every single year, knowing that we need to build Tier 2 and 3 and 4 suppliers who can help support those turbine components. And that makes it really challenging to build a domestic supply chain.” 

Noyes added: “We are counting on the industry working its way down, we call it, the learning rate. We’re counting on this industry becoming more efficient over time. We’ve been told to expect that … more important than any particular piece of the supply chain, we need — we all need — a supply chain that’s working and getting more efficient. Because that’s how the industry grows.”

Additional IPF24 Coverage  

Read NetZero Insider’s full coverage of the 2024 International Partnering Forum here:  

How Best to Address OSW’s Effects on Fisheries 

Interior Announces Updated OSW Regs, Auction Schedule at IPF24 

Louisiana Manufacturers Expand into Offshore Wind 

Moving Offshore Wind Beyond Contract Cancellations 

New York Starts Another OSW Rebound 

Offshore Wind Sector Leaders Emphasize Tailwinds 

Voices of the OSW Supply Chain, as Heard at Trade Show 

SPP, Members Close in on Fuel Policy, Base PRM

SPP and its stakeholders appear to be nearing consensus on two key parts of their resource adequacy work: establishing separate planning reserve margins (PRM) for the summer and winter seasons and setting up a fuel assurance mechanism. 

The Supply Adequacy Working Group on April 22 overwhelmingly approved two revision requests and a so-called transition motion, all related to resource adequacy (RA). The first (RR621) would install a fuel assurance mechanism and the second (RR622) would set winter and summer PRMs of 33% and 16%, respectively. 

Given SAWG’s approval of the two reserve margins, members also endorsed a transition motion that, should the PRM be increased, bases the deficiency payment on the sufficiency valuation curve for up to two years from the effective season. The Cost Adequacy Working Group (CAWG) also recommended consideration of a longer sufficiency valuation curve method if a higher PRM is approved. 

“This, to me, looks like a win across the board. It’s not just a win for fuel assurance, it’s a win for the planning margin and a win for the transition [motion],” American Electric Power’s Richard Ross said during an April 26 education session held by the Resource and Energy Adequacy Leadership (REAL) Team. 

“A lot of staff hours and stakeholder hours … went into [the PRM policy], a lot of discussion. And it took a lot of work to get to where we were,” said SPP’s Chris Haley, who is responsible for developing and managing RA policy items in the RTO’s footprint. 

CAWG also took several straw polls — as did the REAL Team in its previous meeting — gauging members’ comfort with the winter PRM. They split, 9-9, on whether staff’s 36% and 16% PRMs are appropriate when determining seasonal balance of risk. Seven members voted to impose those PRMs and keep the sufficiency valuation curve in place for three years; seven others favored a 33%/16% base PRM for 2026 that transitions to 38%/17% in 2028 or 2029.  

Casey Cathey, senior director of asset utilization, while pleased with the work so far, focused on approvals yet to come. 

“I think the real straw poll we will seek is official approval by the REAL coming in this May time frame,” he said. “It really comes down to the overall seasonal balance of risk and making sure that we’re covering what real-world scenarios were already seen in the winter time frame and where the risk is shifting.” 

The REAL Team next meets May 24 and again in June. It intends to bring both PRM options to the Board of Directors and Regional State Committee in August. 

“We’re just trying to bring you some of our major policies and to educate everybody and try to bring everybody up to speed,” said the REAL Team’s chair, South Dakota Public Service Commissioner Kristie Fiegen. “Some of it’s really detailed, but I kind of feel like sometimes it needs to be detailed for us to understand it.” 

The team met April 18-19 in Denver for what Fiegen called a “family conversation.” It was a candid discussion, after which REAL took straw polls on some of the issues discussed. 

REAL Team members agreed a fuel assurance policy is needed and supported SAWG’s direction. They selected, in a 9-4 vote, a 36%/16% base PRM and favored developing a voluntary load-shedding provision as an option for making deficiency payments. Finally, the team supported a 50% incremental cold-weather outage. 

Cathey said if a 33%/16% or 33%/18% base PRM ends up being a “palpable option” to stay within a 0.1 day/year loss-of-load metric, SPP needs to avoid “setting an anchor” for the 2026/27 time frame that would place the grid operator behind the curve in two or three years.  

“The recommendation would be to spend the time to make sure that we’re all appreciative of what risk we’re actually taking on at both the 33%/16% or the 36%/16% positioning for seasonal balance of risk,” he said, “and trying to cover where the risk of the region is starting to shift.” 

PJM Board Asks Members to Consider Endorsing RTO Filing Rights over Planning

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — The Markets and Reliability Committee discussed a request from the PJM Board of Managers that stakeholders consider endorsing revising the RTO’s governing documents to transfer filing rights for regional transmission planning from the membership to the board. (See “TOs Considering Handing PJM Transmission Planning Filing Rights,” PJM MRC/MC Briefs: Feb. 22, 2024.) 

The proposal comes as members of the Transmission Owners Agreement-Administrative Committee (TOA-AC) discuss similar revisions to the Consolidated Transmission Owners Agreement (CTOA) — moving filing rights over planning matters from the Operating Agreement (OA) to the Tariff. 

Any changes to the CTOA would require the approval of the TOA-AC and the Board of Managers, which requested the Members Committee vote on the changes in an April 17 letter to the Organization of PJM States Inc. (OPSI). That vote is slated for the MC’s May 6 meeting. 

PJM Director of Stakeholder Affairs Dave Anders said the board’s determination that members should weigh in on the change came after stakeholders voiced concern about how a significant change to the balance of authority between the RTO and its members is being considered, including through letters sent to the PJM board by OPSI and the Consumer Advocates of the PJM States (CAPS). 

Jessica Lynch, PJM associate general counsel, said the changes would delete Schedule 6, which details the Regional Transmission Expansion Plan (RTEP) protocol, from the OA and add largely matching language to a new Schedule 19 in the Tariff. 

General Counsel Chris O’Hara said if the MC endorsed the revisions and the Board of Managers opted to pursue them, the TOA-AC still would need to agree to corresponding changes to the CTOA. He said the PJM board has not ruled out making a Federal Powers Act (FPA) Section 206 filing asking FERC to grant the RTO filing rights if the MC voted against endorsing the proposed language. 

Asked where PJM staff stands on the proposal, Vice President of Planning Paul McGlynn said expanding the RTO’s filing rights could allow it to make necessary planning decisions as the grid faces new realities. 

“The system is changing dynamically right now. We’re seeing load growth like we have not seen in years, new generation retiring, new generation interconnecting … I do think it’s appropriate and I’m supportive of moving the protocol into the tariff,” he said. 

CAPS Executive Director Gregory Poulos said advocates remain frustrated by the pacing of the changes and the lack of information about their potential impact on transmission costs, one of the largest portions of consumers’ electric bills, he said. 

“I think there’s a significant amount of frustration that this is being pushed or rushed upon them,” Poulos said of consumer advocates. 

Anders said the Board of Managers has asked that members vote on the changes in May to inform its thinking as the TOA-AC aims to conduct its own vote on the CTOA changes, also in May. Poulos questioned why the timeline the TOA-AC has set for itself appears to be defining the time the board and membership have to deliberate. 

Adrien Ford, Constellation Energy’s director of wholesale market development, said it’s important PJM members be provided an opportunity to convey their perspectives to the Board of Managers through an endorsement vote. 

Paul Sotkiewicz, president of E-cubed Policy Associates, questioned what members would have to gain by giving up filing rights and said the main difference in having the filing rights in the Tariff over the OA would be granting PJM the ability to override stakeholders with an FPA Section 205 filing. 

McGlynn responded that PJM still would intend to go through the full stakeholder process to vet proposals, but that it would more appropriately complement PJM’s role as an independent planner to have filing authority.  

Asim Haque, PJM senior vice president of governmental and member services, said last year’s critical issue fast path (CIFP) process focused on resource adequacy underlines how holding filing rights can allow PJM to conduct a stakeholder process to solicit proposals from membership to inform its thinking, but still have the authority to bring a filing to FERC if consensus cannot be found. That power could address goals pursued through the stakeholder process, including bringing renewable generation onto the grid, limiting the number of costly reliability-must-run contracts and reducing the backlog of resources in the interconnection queue. 

Sotkiewicz argued the CIFP process is a cautionary tale for stakeholders, as the filings PJM ultimately brought to the commission varied significantly from the options the Members Committee most supported. 

“To me you’re making an argument to keep everything in the OA,” he said. 

IPF24: Louisiana Manufacturers Expand into Offshore Wind

MORGAN CITY, La. — With decades of experience servicing offshore oil and gas rigs, Louisiana manufacturers are finding offshore wind a natural expansion for their businesses. 

Louisiana companies making the jump hosted visitors from the 2024 International Partnering Forum for a review of their work to date and a preview of their plans to come April 22. 

Each has a different niche they hope to seize, but there was a common message in their presentations: We’ve got this. 

Oil and gas are the polar opposite of wind power in more than one sense, but there is some commonality in both industries’ skills and tools. 

A fine example is the first U.S. offshore wind farm, Block Island Wind — which Louisiana oil workers helped build. 

That synergy is what marine fabricators in Louisiana and elsewhere on the Gulf Coast are looking to exploit. 

The hard assets are in place; waterfront land is cheap and plentiful; the all-important human infrastructure and institutional knowledge already exist. 

However, offshore wind is less an energy transition than an energy addition in their eyes. They expect oil and gas to thrive for a long time to come, regardless of how many state and national proclamations set net-zero or emissions-free targets for one year or another. 

On April 25, the closing day of IPF24, a report suggesting ways for Louisiana to parlay its offshore expertise into wind power was released by the Southeastern Wind Coalition, GNO Inc., Center for Planning Excellence and The Pew Charitable Trusts. 

“Louisiana Offshore Wind Supply Chain” quantifies the state’s strengths and the potential it holds for the growing industry. 

Port Hopes to Grow

Cindy Cutrera, economic development manager for the Port of Morgan City, said the facility is a crossroads for all forms of transportation, with a small airport; direct rail access and future interstate access to the rest of the nation; and water access to much of the nation and world via the Atchafalaya and Gulf Intracoastal waterways. 

“We are at the focal point of waterborne transportation in four directions,” she said. 

Raymond “Mac” Wade, Port of Morgan City | © RTO Insider LLC

An assortment of marine industrial activity already is in place along those waterways, Cutrera said, and expansion is planned. 

“It’s expected to be completed by the summer of 2026 and that’s going to increase our dock space [with] about 900 feet for waterfront access,” she said, “and the laydown area is going to increase from about 200,000 square feet to about 500,000.” 

Offshore wind has little presence so far at the port — Oceaneering International and InterMoor are the extent of it — but there is room to grow. 

“For the Port of Morgan City or South Louisiana right now, we see the fabrication side — you’re in the hub of fabrication here,” port Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade said.  

“Louisiana is still trying to figure it out. I think we might be a little behind, but we are trying to push to get wind energy off the Louisiana coast,” he said. “But if nothing else, a lot of fabrication can be done here. I don’t care where it’s shipped, I just want it done using our waterways.” 

Wade noted InterMoor recently shipped an order of suction piles from its Morgan City shop to Guyana. 

Expansion Strategies

However eager Gulf Coast manufacturers and officials are to supply the offshore wind industry, the region has been slow to embrace it for electricity. 

Last year’s federal auction of wind energy lease areas in the Gulf drew minimal interest, although Louisiana itself secured agreements for two wind farms in state waters in late 2023, shortly before then-Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) left office. 

Wayne St. Pierre, InterMoor’s facility manager at Port Fourchon, noted the port is going to be the site of Louisiana’s first commercial-scale onshore wind turbine, and is ramping up to dredging to a 50-foot depth, which would allow the largest offshore wind installation vessels to dock.  

Here again, wind energy joins fossil fuel rather than replacing it: The port also is the proposed location for a new LNG export terminal. 

“Those vessels that do install windmills are really large. They need a place like this, and we are very close to the Gulf of Mexico. That puts us in a strategic spot to develop this facility,” St. Pierre said. 

“It’s going to be wind-driven, obviously, but there’s also going to be a need for topside repair, stuff like that,” he added. 

He noted there is not an immediate need: The large wind turbine installation vessels requiring a deepwater berth are foreign-flagged and cannot dock to pick up equipment, thanks to a 104-year-old protectionist law known as the Jones Act.  

Instead, a workaround is used — load the equipment onto a barge and take the barge out to the installation vessels. But fans of the Jones Act and opponents of offshore wind are trying to stamp out such subterfuge, St. Pierre said. 

“They’re already concentrating on that,” added Carrie Adams, InterMoor’s U.S. general manager. “They’re attempting to make that change to say if you take something off that barge and you put it on that vessel and you move that vessel at all to do an installation, you have violated the Jones Act. 

“It is difficult for all of us, not just what the renewables industry looks like, it’s also the oil and gas industry,” she said. “It is becoming more and more of a hindrance to all of us.” 

Tom Fulton, Acteon | © RTO Insider LLC

Tom Fulton, head of renewables and mooring development for Acteon, InterMoor’s parent company, said the company built its offshore expertise in oil and gas and moved to offshore wind. 

Floating wind is the latest focus for Fulton and Acteon, which is using InterMoor’s experience with moorings as an entry point. It does not have any “steel in the water” for the new floating wind sector but it is close, he said. 

Floating wind is more expensive and complicated than the fixed-base wind turbines being installed off the Northeast U.S., and there are few floating wind farms worldwide.  

Fulton also pointed out there is no supply chain to produce certain floating wind components at scale. Yet. 

“A lot of challenges, but it’s all doable with time, money and innovation,” he said. 

Undersea Opportunity

Oceaneering International gave a look at its Morgan City facility, where it maintains some of its remotely operated vehicles and trains their operators. 

Oceaneering designs its own hardware and software in an iterative process driven by employee and customer input, senior manager David Macnamara said. 

While the machines are not terribly difficult to operate — “Even Dave Mac can fly them,” he said — they are quite expensive, and they are working on critical underwater infrastructure. So, there is little margin for error. 

Oceaneering International senior manager David MacNamara shows IPF24 visitors the company’s Isurus remotely operated vehicle at its Morgan City, La., facility on April 22. | Oceaneering International

The company invests four weeks of training in new employees and gives them advanced training as they gain experience and demonstrate competency. 

Two flight simulators fill a large portion of a classroom. 

“You don’t need a degree to come in here to do this,” Macnamara said. “We’ve had little kids come in on tour and just blow us away with the simulators. There’s a job for you in 10 years. 

“We get a lot of young people out of the military,” he added. “The Navy has fantastic A schools and C schools for electronics.” 

Instructor Andrew “Putt” Bernard, a retired high school teacher who started a second career at Oceaneering two years ago, uses two once-identical cameras as teaching tools. One is normal, the other was crushed like an empty beer can when the ROV it was mounted upon was taken too deep. 

The Isurus ROV is rated for 3,000 meters. “You can always fly lower — once,” Macnamara said. 

Oceaneering International trainer Arthur “Putt” Bernard displays two formerly identical cameras on April 22, at the company’s Morgan City, La., facility. The one on the right was crushed by heavy deep-sea pressure when a remotely operated vehicle took it too deep. | © RTO Insider LLC

Oceaneering has not worked on the earliest U.S. offshore wind projects, Macnamara said, but the emerging industry is a natural progression for the company. 

“The tools are a very good common fit,” he said. 

Oceaneering sees expanding into offshore wind as a growth strategy on top of oil and gas as well as a defensive strategy in case the offshore oil and gas sector does shrink, Macnamara said. 

“I don’t think we as a company think we’re going to be ending fossil fuels anytime soon,” he added. “We want to be a player in those [offshore wind] markets as those markets develop.” 

Building More Boats

Metal Shark Boats has been building a wide array of work, emergency and military vessels on the Gulf Coast for 36 years. Crew transfer vessels for offshore wind facilities are now taking shape in the company’s Franklin, La., boatyard. 

Vice President of Commercial Sales Carl Wegener apologized in advance to the Europeans in the contingent from IPF24, then debunked some skepticism about U.S. shipbuilding capabilities. 

“When I hear the Europeans say, oh there’s not enough shipyards in the United States to build all the CTVs we need, bull! I could have four more of these going here right now,” he said, pointing to a gleaming catamaran towering in one of the work bays. 

Wegener cited the fleet of 32 ferries plying the East River in New York City. The offshore CTVs that Metal Shark is building are of a similar design but with heavier plating to withstand the controlled collisions they will make with monopile towers. 

“We built 22 of the 32 right here in 38 months,” he said. 

Wegener said his company cannot supply CTVs for some projects because of states’ efforts to steer work to local companies. He does not think those policies can continue — it would be impossible to build and staff an industrial boatyard in every state that wants one. 

A welder works at Metal Shark Boats’ Franklin, La., boatyard. | Metal Shark Boats

Metal Shark has not built the offshore service vessels that are the workhorse of the Gulf oil and gas industry, but it has benefited nonetheless from that sector’s heavy presence. 

“We’re really lucky that the [offshore oil and gas industry] started here,” Wegener said. “We’ve got tons of tradespeople, training programs, all the companies, the pipefitting, everything that supports oil and gas, there’s a lot of it in this area. It’s just a culture of workforce and that’s really the advantage the Gulf Coast is going to have over the Northeast.” 

He added: “Is it hard for us to find labor? Yeah, but not nearly as hard as for my friends up in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and other areas.” 

Additional IPF24 Coverage  

Read NetZero Insider’s full coverage of the 2024 International Partnering Forum here:  

Central Atlantic Region Prepares for OSW Development 

How Best to Address OSW’s Effects on Fisheries 

Interior Announces Updated OSW Regs, Auction Schedule at IPF24 

Moving Offshore Wind Beyond Contract Cancellations 

New York Starts Another OSW Rebound 

Offshore Wind Sector Leaders Emphasize Tailwinds 

Voices of the OSW Supply Chain, as Heard at Trade Show