Search
`
December 5, 2024

NYISO Energy Costs up in Q3 2024

The NYISO energy market performed competitively in the third quarter of 2024, with all-in prices ranging from $42/MWh in the North Zone to $72/MWh in New York City, a decline of 4 to 14% from the same period in 2023, according to the Market Monitoring Unit’s third-quarter State of the Market report.

Presenting to the NYISO Installed Capacity Working Group, Pallas LeeVanSchaick, vice president of MMU Potomac Economics, said that even though all-in prices were slightly down, energy costs generally were up by 4 to 26% in most areas, despite relatively flat natural gas prices compared to 2023. The MMU found that the driver was higher emissions costs: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative carbon prices rose by 78% between 2023 and 2024, adding $4 to $5/MWh to energy prices.

The exception to this was in the Long Island zone, which benefited from additional offshore wind and imports across the Cross Sound Cables.

A graph of all-in prices by region comparing Q3 of 2022-2024. There was a sharp decline in energy prices (light blue) caused by a decrease in natural gas prices. Overall prices are still much lower than they were two years ago. | NYISO

“There was an outage of one of the 354-kV circuits into Long Island which would tend to make prices higher,” said LeeVanSchaick. “But on the other hand, imports over the Cross Sound Cable increased a lot due to higher availability in 2024 … so you actually saw a drop in prices on Long Island despite a significant outage there.”

Capacity costs fell by 29 to 39%, depending on the zone, because of lower demand curve reference points, reduced locational capacity requirements and a lower peak load forecast.

“Congestion rose modestly from the previous year but remained low, marking the second-lowest level for a third quarter since 2014,” the report says.

MISO to Skip 2024 Queue Cycle While it Automates Study Process with Tech Startup

MISO has officially decided it will forgo acceptance of a 2024 queue cycle of projects while it works with Pearl Street to automate interconnection studies.

MISO announced during a Dec. 3 Interconnection Process Working Group teleconference that it will close its currently open queue application window sometime in the third quarter of 2025 to begin a freshly automated study process on submitted projects.

MISO’s Ryan Westphal said staff and Pittsburgh-based Pearl Street Technologies have worked diligently on standing up an automated study process, paying attention to how the program selects network upgrades and estimates upgrade costs.

“Determining the network upgrade is one of the most time consuming pieces of the queue. We’re trying to distill that down into something that’s workable, reasonable and fast,” he explained.

Westphal said MISO will introduce Pearl Street’s SUGAR (Suite of Unified Grid Analyses with Renewables) software to “finish off” studies beginning with the 2022 cycle of project entrants. He said MISO will not rebuild its study models using SUGAR for the 2022 cycle, leaving that to subsequent queue classes. Instead, Westphal said the software will help finalize network upgrades and associated cost estimates.

MISO plans to begin using the software in earnest and “start from scratch” on model-building, Westphal said, in the first quarter of 2025, when it kicks off studies on the 123 GW of submittals that entered under the 2023 cycle. He predicted a busy January for MISO.

“We do have a pretty robust I would say, first draft of what will work,” Westphal told stakeholders. “With everyone’s participation and help, we can make this even better than what we have today.”

The grid operator originally said it would postpone a possible 2024 cycle while it waits on FERC approval of an annual megawatt cap on its queue. (See 2023 Queue Cycle Delayed into 2025 as MISO Seeks Software Help on Studies.)

MISO filed Nov. 21 to implement a 50% peak demand cap on the project submittals it will accept into its interconnection queue annually (ER25-507). The RTO has said it needs the cap to limit project proposals year to year, making for more realistic study outcomes and potentially reducing network upgrade costs.

MISO also promises to debut a special brand of faster interconnection processing for projects needed for resource adequacy. (See MISO Outlines Plan on Fast-track Queue for Resource Adequacy.)

For the 2025 cycle, MISO will use SUGAR to conduct pre-queue, “quality assurance” technical checks of applicants to test whether projects are feasible, Westphal said.

“Right now, the technical work is done sort of manually, by an engineer,” he said, adding that SUGAR should allow for “near instantaneous” checks.

Westphal also said MISO likely could accommodate stakeholders’ requests to provide a primer on how files and supporting documents should be submitted under the new automated study process.

He said under SUGAR, MISO’s input files still would be available to interconnection customers so they’re able to conduct their own analyses and look for alternative mitigations to upgrades.

Westphal predicted the SUGAR software will be in use in MISO for years and evolve over time with improvements.

“We’re hopeful that it’s a long-term partnership on this tool,” he said.

Pearl Street has said it is “thrilled” to partner with MISO and explained that a pause while MISO incorporates the software is regrettable but necessary.

“Any delay in the schedule is always unfortunate, but we see this as an investment to enable a truly transformative payoff: a fast, repeatable and transparent process that all interconnection stakeholders will ultimately benefit from. Let’s move some projects through the queue!” the company said in a statement in September.

FERC Upholds MISO Sloped Demand Curve, Lets Opt-out Provision Stand

FERC was not persuaded by environmental nonprofits, utilities or Mississippi regulators to order MISO to rework the sloped demand curve it’s been cleared to use in the spring capacity auction.  

The commission issued a Dec. 3 order, refusing all rehearing requests tied to the demand curve’s opt-out provision, elimination of a clearing price cap and the curvature itself (ER23-2977).  

Starting in 2025, LSEs that decide to opt out of the auction and sloped demand curve must obtain more capacity than strictly necessary to meet MISO’s one-day-in-10-years system reliability standard. The rule is a feature of the new curve and applies an “X% adder” — which changes yearly — beyond strictly necessary load obligations in an attempt to create congruence between LSEs that participate in the auction and are subject to the sloped demand curve and LSEs that opt out of the auction by assigning them similar reserve requirements. (See FERC Approves Sloped Demand Curve in MISO Capacity Market.)  

The Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council and the Sustainable FERC Project argued over the summer that it’s unfair for the RTO to require utilities that opt out to procure capacity beyond resource adequacy needs. (See Environmental Groups Seek Rehearing of MISO Sloped Demand Curve.)  

But FERC said it’s appropriate for MISO’s sloped demand curve plan to place a value on incremental capacity above a loss of load requirement. As such, the commission said LSEs that choose to opt out shouldn’t “be exempt from contributing to these incremental reliability benefits.”  

“LSEs that opt out of the auction are not also opting out of the overall resource adequacy construct, which, as MISO notes, is crafted as a ‘risk-sharing pool across all LSEs, regardless of the LSE’s choice of participation model,’” FERC decided.  

The commission pointed to a previous finding that “a downward-sloping demand curve provides a good indication of the incremental value of capacity at different capacity levels” and that “incremental capacity above the [reserve margin] is likely to provide additional reliability benefits.”  

FERC said MISO’s opt-out as its stands neither motivates LSEs to participate in MISO’s voluntary capacity auctions nor incentivizes bowing out.   

FERC disagreed with the nonprofits that MISO is obliged to offer a “truly compelling justification” before it forces LSEs to buy more capacity than necessary to meet its reliability targets. The commission also said it is not MISO’s concern if incremental capacity procured outside the auction is more expensive than incremental capacity procured within the auction — a theoretical argument of the nonprofits.  

“While public interest organizations would prefer an opt-out mechanism that considers parity of cost of incremental procurement rather than parity of quantity, we do not need to evaluate the relative reasonableness of such a mechanism, given that we continue to find MISO’s proposed design to be just and reasonable,” FERC explained.  

The commission also decided MISO remains free to terminate its current 1.75-times-the-cost-of-new-entry (CONE) annual price cap for local resource zones. Transmission-dependent utilities in the Midwest had argued that MISO should have preserved the annual cap to discourage excessive prices and protect consumers. 

FERC’s refusal leaves MISO using a setup where the total annual price for a local resource zone could reach as high as four times the CONE, depending on whether capacity shortages occur in all four seasons of the auction.  

FERC said the annual cap was necessary under the previous vertical demand curve because even an “extremely small,” 1-MW shortage could have prices shooting up to CONE in all four seasons. Conversely, FERC said the sloped curve should return more gradual increases in shortage pricing that are commensurate with the missing capacity quantities.  

FERC said it’s “extremely unlikely” MISO would experience shortages in all four seasons, and if it did occur, the four-times-CONE clearing prices would properly reflect “unprecedented and severe capacity shortages.” The commission also dismissed as speculative the utilities’ argument that price protections are needed because a sloped curve would introduce the potential for more erroneous market results.  

Finally, FERC rebuffed arguments from the Mississippi Public Service Commission that it shouldn’t have accepted the sloped curve because it supported MISO’s vertical demand curve in past dockets.  

FERC said it never foreclosed MISO’s ability to adopt a sloped curve just because it found a vertical curve reasonable at the time and it “expressly left open the possibility that MISO could adopt a different market design if it so desired.”  

FERC noted that in the past, it has found both sloped and vertical demand curves practical and said it did not “change course” from its precedent regarding a sloped versus vertical curve, as the Mississippi PSC suggested.  

“Rather, this was the first instance in which MISO proposed a shift to a sloped demand curve design,” FERC said.  

Podesta: Economics of Clean Energy ‘Have Simply Taken Over’

WASHINGTON, D.C. — David Crane opened the Department of Energy’s Deploy 2024 conference with the facts and figures of the money he and other DOE officials have helped to distribute from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act over the past three years.

“We’ve committed over $95 billion in grants and loans, and with more [going out] each day,” Crane, DOE’s under secretary for infrastructure, told an audience of more than 1,800 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. “So, within the next few days and weeks, it will be over $100 billion and moving northwards.”

That money has gone to about 1,900 grant selectees and another 4,500 recipients of formula grants, Crane said. “And all that is tied with over $100 billion — well over $100 billion — committed from the private sector.”

Those public and private dollars have created irreversible momentum the U.S. clean energy transition, said White House Senior Advisor John Podesta, who closed the conference’s opening plenary with a call to action for the private sector facing the uncertainties of the incoming Trump administration.

Donald Trump and congressional Republicans have declared their intention to roll back the IRA and other clean energy initiatives. Chris Wright, a fracking CEO and Trump’s nominee for secretary of energy, is an unabashed advocate of fossil fuels.

But, Podesta countered, “the economics of the clean energy transition have simply taken over. New power generation is going to be clean. The desire to build our next generation nuclear is still there. The [data center] hyperscalers are still committed to powering the future with clean energy. The auto companies are still investing in electrification and hybridization.

“All those trends are not going to be reversed,” he said. “Are we facing some new headwinds? Absolutely. But will we revert back to the energy system of the 1950s? No way.”

Echoing Podesta, the buzz at the conference was upbeat. Crane noted that many of DOE’s funding opportunities have continued to draw more applicants than could be funded. The Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships Program was eight times oversubscribed, he said.

Crane also pitched to investors at the event that DOE-funded projects are well-vetted and derisked.

energy

David Crane, DOE under secretary for infrastructure | © RTO Insider LLC

“One of the most important things … the Department of Energy has done for the private sector is that we put immense effort into picking the best of the best in terms of projects,” he said. “Of course, any [investor] here is going to do their own due diligence, but I think it’s fair to say that if the Department of Energy has … provided a grant to a company, if we’ve provided a loan to a company, they’ve been subject to extensive due diligence, and we believe the technology that we’re financing can scale and the projects can be commercially viable.

“Treat us as like a Good Housekeeping seal of approval,” he said.

Podesta also argued that U.S. innovation in clean energy will continue to be critical to ensure the nation can compete in global markets.

“The prices of clean technologies will keep dropping, and the need to compete with the rest of the world, as they move full steam ahead on clean energy, is going to only increase and increase and increase,” he said. “Now it’s up to you, America’s clean energy entrepreneurs and clean energy companies, to lead that transition.

“We need you to keep innovating, showing the world that America leads with big ideas.” Podesta said. “We’re counting on you to carry this work forward, for the sake of your businesses, for the sake of the communities you’ve invested in, for the sake of the American people, of our economy, our security, our young people and our planet.

“Thank you for what you’re doing. Just keep doing it. Do it faster. Do more of it, and we’ll all be better off.”

New Jersey Plans for 2025 Community Solar Solicitation

New Jersey has launched a stakeholder input campaign for its community solar program as the state prepares to solicit interest for 250 MW of capacity in 2025 after two nearly fully subscribed allocations in the program’s first 12 months. 

The New Jersey Board of Public Utility (BPU) allocated 225 MW in the fully subscribed first allocation, which the agency launched in November 2023, and an additional 275 MW of capacity in the second allocation, which was launched in May 2024, agency officials said at a Dec. 3 public hearing. The BPU said it allocated all but 4.8 MW of the available capacity in the second solicitation. 

The BPU said it will collect written stakeholder comments until Dec. 16 and review whether the program needs to be adjusted before the opening of a new solicitation in coming months. 

Most of the dozen or so speakers at the hearing, many from the solar development community, commended the progress of the program, which is a key element in the state’s goal to reach 12.2 GW of solar energy by 2030 and 32 GW by 2050. 

Yet the most salient comments focused on the future, and how the state responds to the incoming Trump administration. The president-elect has expressed opposition to renewable energy and the subsidies for solar and other sectors in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

Lyle Rawlings, president of Mid-Atlantic Solar Energy Industries Association (MSEIA) and a solar developer, asked how the BPU would “account for potential changes” in the Investment Tax Credit, which at present can cover 30% of a solar project cost. 

Industry analysts have expressed fears that the new administration will seek to shrink or delete the ITC, citing the more than 50 votes taken by Republicans in the House of Representatives in the past to repeal parts of the IRA. (See Chesapeake Solar Industry Prepares for Trump 2.0 ‘Solarcoaster’.) Trump also has said he expects to implement a wide-ranging tariff program, including a 10% tariff on China, the source of much solar equipment. 

“The tariffs and changes to the ITC could be making things much more expensive for community solar,” Rawlings said. “And if this application window incorporates a new incentive rate that does not take that into account, then a whole year-plus of development is going to be severely handicapped by that.” 

Uncharted Territory

Fred DeSanti, executive director of the New Jersey Solar Energy Coalition, urged the BPU to prepare for sector changes. “We’re in kind of uncharted territory with federal policy,” he said. “The need to remain flexible during this period, I think, is very important because we don’t know what’s coming.” 

Sawyer Morgan, a research scientist at the BPU’s Division of Clean Energy, said the BPU is not aware of any changes in the ITC and would appreciate input from the solar sector on how to address the issue. 

“At this point, we can’t account for what we do not know,” he said. “In the event that there are changes to the ITC, I would anticipate that the board would take these into account in any future evaluations. We would certainly consider any incentives to be responsive to changes in the general marketplace, and would take that into account for future registrations.” 

In response to another question about a cut in the ITC, Sawyer said “any future changes made to the ITC will be taken into account for incentives made available to future rounds of applications.” 

Pent-up Demand

Community solar projects target users who either cannot or do not want to have solar on their roofs but seek to support a clean energy initiative. To make the projects work, the developer must sign up subscribers, who commit to using the clean energy and in turn receive a credit on their utility bill, reducing the electricity cost by a set percentage. 

New Jersey had 4.98 GW of installed solar capacity in October, including 109 community solar installations that total 166,632 kW, or about 4% of the state’s installed capacity, according to BPU figures. The state has an additional 364 projects, or 522,291 kW of capacity, in the pipeline. 

The state enacted its first community solar pilot program in 2019 and its second in 2021. The first program, which attracted 252 applicants, approved 45 projects totaling 75 MW. The second pilot, which attracted 412 applications, awarded 105 projects totaling 165 MW.  

The BPU enacted a permanent program in August 2023, creating a program for community solar projects smaller than 5 MW developed on rooftops, carports, canopies over impervious surfaces, contaminated sites, landfills or bodies of water. Projects in the program are eligible for an incentive of $90/MWh (See NJ Opens Community Solar and Nuclear Support Programs.) 

Charles Coggeshall, mid-Atlantic regional director for the Coalition for Community Solar Access (CCSA), said the program is “doing well.” He attributed it in part to the “pent-up demand that was building up over several years as we were awaiting the final rules, and then ultimately, the program opening.” 

The fact that the first two solicitations under the permanent program were so well subscribed is “indicative of that pent-up demand and the kind of energy and interest by the market,” he said. 

“We believe that the pent-up demand, and sort of lowest-hanging fruit, has been kind of tapped in large part,” Coggeshall said, adding that he expects sites from now on to be “more challenging” and interconnection costs to rise as “the grid becomes kind of more constrained with regards to available places to interconnect.” 

The next few months, and “potential impacts on tax incentives and tariffs,” would indicate a preference for not rocking the boat by changing incentive levels, he said. 

Attracting Subscribers

Rawlings, of MSEIA, urged the BPU to do more to increase the percentage of low- to moderate-income (LMI) subscribers to community solar projects beyond the 51% requirement that is the current rule, and to have an “aspirational goal” of 100%. He said they could include in the ranking of applications to the program the percentage of LMI subscribers they expect to sign up and the discount the subscribers would receive. 

“We believe this will drive developers to find ways to serve more LMI customers,” he said. 

Other developers said the expected introduction in January of a consolidated billing system for new and existing projects will make it easier to attract subscribers. Since the program began, subscribers have received two bills: their regular bill plus a separate bill for their community solar subscription. (See Billing Key to NJ Community Solar Growth.) 

Supporters of a consolidated bill say it would be simpler for subscribers to understand, and its clarity would encourage potential subscribers to get involved. 

DeSanti called the introduction of consolidated billing “absolutely essential to making this program work well and to drive some cost out.” 

Texas PUC’s Glotfelty to Resign from Commission

Jimmy Glotfelty said Dec. 4 he will resign from the Texas Public Utility Commission at year’s end, leaving the regulator two short of a full complement. 

In a letter to Gov. Greg Abbott, Glotfelty offered his resignation, effective Dec. 31, saying it has been “an honor and privilege to serve the people of Texas” as a commissioner. Also leaving at the same time will be Lori Cobos, who announced her resignation in November. (See Texas PUC’s Cobos to Leave Commission.) 

Asked to elaborate on his decision, Glotfelty told RTO Insider, “Just time to go build some infrastructure and nuclear plants in Texas. You cannot do that inside the government.” 

Glotfelty chaired Texas’ Advanced Nuclear Reactor Working Group, which wrapped up more than a year’s worth of work in November with a 78-page report meant to ensure Texas is “the energy capital of the world.” 

“We hope this is a springboard to greater, bigger, better things in the nuclear space in Texas, and this is just the beginning,” he said as he rolled out the report during the Texas Nuclear Summit. (See Texas Now Wants to be No. 1 in Nuclear Power.) 

In his letter, Glotfelty said he was “especially grateful” to lead the nuclear working group and implied that’s where his future will take him. 

“We now have a lot of work to do [to] implement its recommendations, and I remain committed to continuing the effort to support the leadership on this issue,” he wrote. 

Glotfelty told Abbott he was “proud of the work we have accomplished to address the challenges that face the Texas electric system.” He listed efforts to strengthen the ERCOT system after the disastrous 2021 winter storm, expanding the transmission system, developing an aggregated distributed energy resource pilot program, and improving the grid’s reliability.  

With the departures of Glotfelty and Cobos, the PUC will begin the new year with only three commissioners, two short of a full slate. 

Abbott appointed Glotfelty to the PUC in 2021. His term expired in September, but he has continued to serve at the governor’s pleasure.  

Glotfelty brought a long career in the energy industry to the PUC, including leadership roles with Calpine, ICF Consulting and Quanta Services. He was a founder and executive vice president at transmission developer Clean Line Energy and founded and led the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Electricity. Glotfelty served as policy adviser and legislative directors for several political figures, including DOE Secretary Spencer Abraham, Texas Gov. George W. Bush and U.S. Rep. Sam Johnson (R). 

Industry Seeks Flexibility on New Supply Chain Reliability Standards

Electric industry participants asked FERC for flexibility in setting the new supply chain risk management (SCRM) standards the commission suggested in a notice of proposed rulemaking issued in September (RM24-4).  

Edison Electric Institute, Electric Power Supply Association and the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association filed joint comments Dec. 2 saying they support efforts to improve supply chain risk management practices but have qualms with FERC’s specific proposals. 

“As FERC states in this NOPR, while the global supply chain introduces risk to the security and reliability of the BPS by creating potential attack surfaces for threat actors to exploit, it also provides the opportunity for significant customer benefits such as low cost, product variety and rapid innovation,” the joint trade groups said. 

As the technology to operate the grid evolves, grid owners and operators will continue to be responsible for security, but that responsibility is shared by suppliers, vendors and manufacturers. Revisions to mandatory standards need to strike the proper balance between the responsibilities of industry and suppliers, the trade groups said. 

FERC’s proposed rule would require responsible entities to evaluate equipment and vendors to better identify supply chain risks, requiring NERC to establish a maximum time frame between when an entity performs its initial risk assessment during the procurement process and when it installs the equipment. Responsible entities would have to take steps to validate supplier claims around any risks. (See FERC Proposes Further Cybersecurity Measures.) 

The trade groups said they don’t support the commission’s recommendation that entities should reevaluate the risks of installing any piece of equipment that has sat in storage for a long time.  But they did agree with a proposal to perform periodic reassessments of vendors that consider the criticality of a service or product and changed circumstances, such as a merger or a security event associated with a supplier. 

Forcing such reassessments could prove difficult contractually with overseas suppliers, who might not be required to go through reviews, the groups said. 

While FERC stopped short of requiring responsible entities to guarantee the accuracy of information they get from vendors, the trade groups oppose overarching requirements for vendors to supply supporting evidence or independent certifications. 

“Mandatory Reliability Standards should use a risk-based approach that allows entities to determine when and what validation is required for vendor-provided supply chain risk management information based on entity-defined criteria,” the groups wrote. “This approach allows entities to focus on products and services that represent the greatest risk to reliability while minimizing the increased workload associated with validating vendor responses.” 

The trade associations asked FERC to support a risk-based approach to developing future supply chain standards, which, given the growing number of suppliers, will require scalable mechanisms to identify and address risks. 

‘Continuous Monitoring’

Amazon Web Services (AWS) also weighed in on the NOPR, urging FERC to use a risk-based approach on any requirement to restudy equipment in storage before it gets installed. AWS advised against a blanket requirement for reassessment, saying it should only be triggered by events such as a change in supplier ownership, geopolitical events or new security exploits. 

Rigid time frames could lead industry participants to miss important risks that arise right after a reassessment, while adding costs with no major benefits, AWS said. 

“Continuous monitoring of assets in production is a more effective approach to supply chain risk management by increasing visibility into potential risks and the ability to respond to emerging risks,” AWS said. “NERC should credit programs that include continuous monitoring to complement periodic full reassessments.” 

AWS urged FERC to accept the use of third-party certifications and technology solutions to help responsible entities stay on top of supply chain risk management. 

“Use of third-party certifications should be explicitly supported as a valuable aspect of risk assessment because such use leverages high-quality risk analyses and security practice verification provided by disinterested third parties,” the company added. 

‘Aggressive Approach’

The ISO/RTO Council said it supports robust supply chain risk management practices and argued that any directives to NERC should recognize that responsible entities are best suited to determine how and when to evaluate risks. 

“Neither NERC nor a NERC standards drafting team will fully understand or appreciate each individual responsible entity’s unique supply chain risks,” the IRC said. “Although NERC can develop a requirement that responsible entities identify risks and specify the timing requirements for equipment and vendor evaluations, each individual responsible entity is in a better position to understand the risks related to its unique supply chain.” 

IRC also urged FERC to tread lightly on requiring confirmation of vendor’s claims about supply chain risks because that is difficult and potentially cost-prohibitive. Any rules should give responsible entities flexibility to pick a validation process — such as a direct or third-party audit, it said. 

“This flexibility will assist compliance in the short-term,” IRC said. “Any commission directive to NERC should also encourage and drive further consideration of a longer-term evolution that would take validation responsibilities off of each responsible entity and allow for the development of third-party verification and other means to more efficiently undertake this important validation task.” 

While many in the industry argued for flexibility, the Secure the Grid Coalition, which calls itself “an ad hoc group of policy, energy and national security experts,” argued the NOPR is a small step and said FERC should do more to secure the industry’s supply chain risk management (SCRM). 

“The continued reliance on generic improvements to SCRM standards without targeted action against known risks from Chinese-manufactured transformers and other critical grid equipment leave significant vulnerabilities unaddressed,” the conservative group told FERC. “To ensure the reliability and safety of the U.S. electric grid, FERC must take a more comprehensive and aggressive approach.” 

Utilities should be incentivized to buy American products, something FERC can encourage with an aggressive messaging campaign that it is no longer satisfied with the “status quo of its entities purchasing vital assets — particularly transformers and other critical grid equipment — from hostile nations,” the coalition said. 

NY Contracts for $4.7B of Wind, Solar Projects

New York state has executed contracts for proposed onshore wind and solar projects totaling 2,341 MW of capacity at an expected cost of over $4.7 billion.

The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) reported the contracts Dec. 3, a little over a year after it launched the state’s 2023 Renewable Energy Standard solicitation.

The 23 contracts are intended to get New York closer to its decarbonization goals and are expected to generate about 5 million MWh of electricity per year. The nominal weighted average strike price of the projects over their lifetime is $94.73/MWh, which would average about 70 cents on the average customer’s monthly utility bill.

All the projects are in upstate New York, and all but one is far removed from the New York City area, where the need for clean energy is greatest. Thanks to upstate nuclear and hydropower generation, a high percentage of northern New York’s electricity already is emissions free. The densely populated downstate area still relies heavily on fossil-fired generation.

Eliminating transmission bottlenecks to move the clean power north to south is another priority for the state.

NYSERDA President Doreen Harris said in a news release: “Today we celebrate 23 more projects that will deliver clean, sustainable energy to our state’s electric grid. New York continues to provide a reliable market for renewable energy projects, and by facilitating responsible development of these projects, we are protecting our natural resources and creating healthier communities.”

The word “celebrate” is appropriate, given events of the past 13 months.

Developers holding New York Tier 1 renewable energy certificate (REC) contracts sought inflation adjustments after the contracts became financially untenable. The state rejected the request in October 2023, prompting a mass cancellation of contracts and evisceration of the state’s renewable energy portfolio.

The 2023 Tier 1 solicitation, launched Nov. 30, 2023, was one of the state’s efforts to recover.

Importantly, the 23 contracts awarded in this solicitation are going to later-stage projects, which should limit the delay and cancellation risks that face early-stage projects. NYSERDA said several of the contracted projects already have started construction, and all are expected to be operational by 2028.

This will help the state get closer to its statutory 2030 target of 70% renewables; earlier this year, officials acknowledged they are likely to miss that goal, perhaps by a wide margin.

The upfront investment to build these 23 projects, expected to surpass $4.7 billion, will be borne by the private sector. The REC money does not start flowing to the developers until the projects are fully permitted and fully operational.

The contracts announced Dec. 3 are for the following projects and developers:

    • Dog Corners, Cordelio Power, Cayuga County.
    • Scipio Solar, Cordelio Power, Cayuga County.
    • ELP Granby Solar II, VC Renewables, Oswego County.
    • Garnet Energy Center, NextEra Energy Resources, Cayuga County.
    • Trelina Solar Energy Center, NextEra Energy Resources, Seneca County.
    • Cider Solar Farm, Hecate Energy and Greenbacker Renewable Energy Co., Genesee County.
    • Highview Solar, Cordelio Power, Wyoming County.
    • Heritage Wind, Apex Clean Energy, Orleans County.
    • Excelsior Energy Center, NextEra Energy Resources, Genesee County.
    • Little Pond Solar, Greenbacker Renewable Energy Co., Orange County.
    • Tayandenega Solar, Greenbacker Renewable Energy Co., Montgomery County.
    • Rock District Solar, Greenbacker Renewable Energy Co., Schoharie County.
    • Grassy Knoll Solar, Cordelio Power, Herkimer County.
    • Flat Hill Solar, Cordelio Power, Herkimer County.
    • Watkins Road Solar, Cordelio Power, Herkimer County.
    • Hills Solar, Cordelio Power, Herkimer County.
    • Flat Stone Solar, Cordelio Power, Oneida County.
    • Brookside Solar, AES, Franklin County.
    • Baron Winds II, RWE, Steuben County.
    • Canisteo Wind Energy Center, Invenergy, Steuben County.
    • Valley Solar, Cordelio Power, Tioga County.
    • Alle-Catt Wind, Invenergy, Allegany and Cattaraugus counties, Wyoming County.
    • Bear Ridge Solar, Cypress Creek Renewables, Niagara County.

SPP Stakeholders Endorse Need Dates for Delayed Transmission Projects

SPP stakeholders have endorsed a pair of winter-weather staging dates for transmission projects after two months of discussions and negotiations that delayed their approval by the Board of Directors. 

The Markets and Operations Policy Committee on Dec. 2 voted to endorse the need dates for a pair of projects from the 2024 Integrated Transmission Planning assessment, sending the issue onto the board and its Members Committee for final consideration during their Dec. 9 conference call. 

The board delayed a decision on the projects’ need dates — the earliest that staff identify that a project is needed — during its October meeting over a lack of consensus. (See SPP Board Approves $7.65B ITP, Delays Contentious Issue.) 

SPP staff met three times over eight days in November with the Transmission and Economic Studies working groups to iron out their differences over the staging issue. They held separate discussions on two winter storm-based models, reviewed staging data on the Year 2 Winter Storm Elliott model and agreed on an incremental staging concept to prevent Elliott-level load shed. 

Sunny Raheem, SPP’s director of system planning, said staff’s focus was ensuring stakeholders could review the two models and provide additional education on the staging approach used to determine the projects’ need dates and in-service dates. 

“There was a lot of involvement from the stakeholder groups and being able to make sure those meetings were progressing forward and accurately within the board’s direction,” he said. 

The discussions resulted in MOPC’s endorsement of a December 2028 date for the 345-kV Tobias-Elm Creek transmission line on the western side of SPP’s footprint, an 85-mile segment valued at $887.46 million. It cleared the two-thirds approval threshold with 71%. 

The TWG and ESWG recommended a 2028 need date for the 154-mile, $484.09 million 345-kV Buffalo Gap-Delaware project from Kansas into Southwest Missouri, but Evergy was able to amend the motion to move the need date to December 2025. MOPC eventually approved a motion that included the 2025 need date as resolving the remaining Elliott target area’s reliability needs, consistent with SPP staff’s incremental staging approach. It passed with 75% approval. 

The first project is expected to increase transfer capability from SPP North to SPP South and decrease the chances for load shed. The second brings a new extra-high-voltage source into Missouri to support system voltage and transfers from SPP. 

Evergy’s Mo Awad pressed for the earlier 2025 need date, saying a related 345-kV project with a 2025 need date would not resolve low-voltage issues experienced during Elliott. He said the 2025 date is consistent with staff’s “shorter lead time” approach referenced in an ITP staging process information paper. 

SPP defines projects needed within three years to be “short-term reliability projects.” SPP must explain the reliability issues and post them for a 30-day comment period before the board’s determination. Incumbent transmission owners hold the right of first refusal. 

Rebuild projects in a ROFR state and needed after three years are open to competitive bids under FERC Order 1000. 

“I don’t see any of these projects being in service before the winter of 2028. That’s just the reality of building big transmission projects,” Kansas Power Pool’s Larry Holloway said. “It appears to me that this is just an argument to avoid the competitive process.” 

Awad responded during an extended back-and-forth between the two with several examples of 345-kV projects that Evergy has been able to complete on time and on budget.  

“Those are concrete examples that we complete 345-kV projects by the in-service data as accepted by SPP on the [notification to construct],” Awad said. “I would offer that if those projects go competitive, they’re not going to expedite the projects. They’re going to slow them down. If they’re not competitive, they’re going to go to the [designated transmission owner], and they’re going to start engineering and right-of-way acquisition immediately. If those projects go to the competitive process … it will take a year at least to award the project to an individual. That’s a year that could be used for engineering and right-of-way acquisition.” 

Power Market Costs Behind Rate Increases, PGE Says

Portland General Electric’s rate hikes largely stem from increased wholesale power market costs, the utility wrote after Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) voiced concern that customers are struggling to pay their electricity bills. 

PGE CEO Maria Pope responded to Wyden’s questions concerning increased electricity costs in Oregon in a Nov. 27 letter that described the immense growth the utility has seen in tech sector loads but stopped short of tying that development to the price pressures faced by residential ratepayers. 

The Oregon Public Utility Commission (OPUC) approved 40% in price increases for PGE customers from 2020 to 2024, an annual average increase of 8%, according to Pope. 

“These customer price changes over the last five years have primarily been driven by the rising costs to purchase necessary power from the open energy market to serve customers,” Pope wrote. “Power costs, which PGE has limited options to control and are necessary to maintain reliable service to customers, have nearly tripled in the past five years.” 

Pope’s response follows Wyden’s contention in a separate letter that PGE customers’ electricity bills have gone up by at least 40% since 2021, while nonpayment shutoffs have increased.  

“For folks that are walking an economic tightrope, balancing food and medicine bills with electricity prices, the rising prices are unsustainable,” Wyden wrote. 

The lawmaker acknowledged that efforts to modernize the power grid have partly contributed to the price changes but added that “it is concerning to see the cost of electricity rise at this rate in such a short time frame.” 

Wyden sent a list of seven questions to Pope’s office, requesting a response within 30 days. 

Pope got back to the lawmaker two days later, highlighting various factors that have contributed to the price increases over the past four years. The CEO pointed to recent investments in energy facilities and infrastructure, wildfires, heat waves and inflation, among other things. 

Energy deliveries in 2023 were 9.2% higher on a weather-adjusted basis than in 2019. In the 10 years prior, the utility saw growth of 2.8%. Industrial energy deliveries increased by 34.3% in the past five years, mainly driven by semiconductor manufacturing and data center segments, according to the letter. Over the same period, residential load grew by 5.2%, while commercial deliveries declined by 2.7%.  

Wyden asked if PGE has taken steps to limit the cost increases to those sectors that have driven the most growth in the past five years and to explain whether and why residential customers could be bearing the costs for that growth. 

Pope responded that rates for all customer classes are determined through OPUC’s public rate review process based on the utility’s cost of service to each class.   

“Existing regulatory frameworks will need to evolve to appropriately reflect how investments serve different customers and how costs are allocated given the changes in the new large load demands,” she wrote. “Collaboration with regulators, policymakers and stakeholders is essential to help address these new realities and to keep the price of electricity as low as possible for residential and other business customers.” 

‘Keep Pressing the Case’

Wyden also asked about costs not covered under the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. The act aimed to cover 30% of the cost of new clean energy installations, the lawmaker’s letter stated. 

Pope responded that clean energy resources are not the main culprit behind rate increases, saying that “[t]he cost of power purchased on the market and through the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) to serve customer demand, address capacity constraints or … fuel thermal plants tripled between 2019 and 2024.” 

“These costs are beyond the utility’s ability to control,” Pope added. “Over that same time, PGE’s own operating expenses underran the rate of inflation by 7%.” 

Doug Johnson, a spokesperson for BPA, told RTO Insider the agency “makes transactions at prevailing market prices and competes in the wholesale market as both a buyer and seller of energy and capacity.” 

“BPA, similar to PGE, has witnessed the value of these energy and capacity products fluctuate with a propensity to rise over the last few years as the demand for clean and reliable power and dispatchable resources has increased,” Johnson said.

“BPA was somewhat surprised to learn it had been singled out in the response letter,” he added.

Meanwhile, Wyden’s staff has contacted the OPUC to ask what else can be done to combat the increases, which exceed national averages, according to Hank Stern, a spokesperson for Wyden. 

“[Wyden] appreciates PGE’s responsiveness to his letter and in addition to the fresh discussions with the PUC about available options, will follow up with PGE to keep pressing the case for fair rates that Oregon consumers can afford,” Stern told RTO Insider.