The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission won’t wait for PJM stakeholders to develop rules to prevent fleet owners from receiving reactive power payments for retired generators.
FERC last week ordered PJM to revise its Tariff to address the issue within 30 days or show cause why it should not be required to do so (EL15-15).
A frustrated Vince Duane, PJM general counsel, told members Thursday that FERC’s action appeared to be prompted by the “fairly contentious” process that preceded the Markets and Reliability Committee’s approval last month of a problem statement to address the issue. “They’re not prepared to wait for this group to go through those issues,” he said.
The problem statement included language suggested by Public Service Enterprise Group, which complained that the original statement assumed that fleet owners are being overpaid if they failed to file revised cost schedules with FERC after plant retirements. PJM officials said they did not know how much ratepayers might be overpaying. (See PJM Members Seek Fix for Payments to Retired Plants.)
Duane said it was not certain whether PJM will file proposed Tariff revisions within 30 days or seek more time. But he added that the issue was “not going to be addressed through the stakeholder community — at least not exclusively.”
The commission said it was acting because PJM’s Tariff lacks explicit provisions to end reactive power payments for generators that are retired or sold.
FERC said it also had asked its Office of Enforcement “for further examination and inquiry as may be appropriate” for owners that may have received payments for retired units. Any refunds resulting from the order will be dated from when the Nov. 20 order is published in the Federal Register.
The commission cited a filing in which FirstEnergy “asserted that the commission and the PJM Tariff are silent about updates to reactive service revenue requirements when units are deactivated or transferred out of a fleet, but that ‘parties may agree among themselves regarding the allocation of revenues with respect to changes in ownership.’”
FERC also cited the Sept. 24 request of Sunbury Generation to terminate the reactive service tariff for its retired 436-MW coal-fired facility in Snyder County, Pa. FERC noted that Sunbury had closed the plant more than two months before its filing. PJM told the commission it was still paying for reactive power on the retired plants.
The commission Thursday approved Sunbury’s cancellation request and required it to refund any payments received for the period after the plant deactivation (ER14-2936).