SPP’s Markets and Operations Policy Committee will begin 2019 with new faces in all its leadership positions following the Board of Directors’ approval of NextEra Energy Resources’ Holly Carias as chair and Evergy’s Denise Buffington as vice chair.
SPP Vice President of Engineering Lanny Nickell, who will become the committee’s staff secretary, made the announcement late Friday in an email to stakeholders.
“I’m confident they will do a fabulous job leading the group,” said Nickell, who is replacing SPP COO Carl Monroe on the committee. Monroe served as secretary for 18 years.
Carias, a senior director in regulatory affairs for NextEra who became heavily involved with the MOPC during 2018, has been a vocal proponent for renewable resources.
Buffington, director of federal regulatory affairs for Evergy companies Kansas City Power & Light and Westar, has focused on SPP’s budget and transmission zonal placement issues. The board and MOPC in 2017 both rejected her attempts to address cost shifts caused by the RTO’s zonal placement decisions. (See SPP Board Rejects Changes to Tx Zonal-Placement Rules.)
Carias and Buffington replace Nebraska Public Power District’s Paul Malone and independent consultant Jason Atwood. Malone cycled off the committee in December, while Atwood left the Northeast Texas Electric Cooperative in November to start his own business.
FERC last week approved SPP’s plan to streamline the process by which it designates frequently constrained areas (FCAs), effective Dec. 22 (ER19-166).
The commission had directed SPP to seek approval of any new, removed or modified FCAs when the RTO submitted Tariff revisions in 2012 to implement its Integrated Marketplace. SPP and its Market Monitoring Unit worked with stakeholders to develop the designation process for areas with high levels of congestion and a dominant or pivotal supplier.
The commission agreed with SPP’s argument that the designation process may result in a significant lag between the MMU’s annual evaluation of FCAs and when they are updated in the Tariff. It said SPP’s proposal allows the RTO and MMU to address market power concerns in a timely fashion.
“We find that this delay could result in the inappropriate application of mitigation measures during the lag period or, conversely, the lack of application of mitigation measures when appropriate, potentially allowing market participants to exercise market power,” FERC said.
SPP’s Tariff requires the MMU to re-evaluate FCAs at least annually.
The MMU said it strongly supported SPP’s proposed revisions, noting that under the previous process, it could take up to six months to update the FCA list following its report. With the change, the Monitor’s updates and associated analysis will be publicly available at least 14 days before any updates take effect. Affected market participants can raise any concerns with the MMU.
SPP stakeholders approved the Tariff revision during July’s Board of Directors and Markets and Operations Policy Committee meetings.
The commission denied Nebraska Public Power District’s complaint against fellow SPP member Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association that certain costs in the latter’s annual transmission revenue requirement (ATRR) and its failure to credit certain revenues are unjust and unreasonable (EL18-194).
NPPD alleged that Tri-State unfairly included in its ATRR the costs of two grandfathered agreements (GFAs) and its facilities not physically connected to SPP’s system. It also said Tri-State excluded point-to-point revenue from the credits applicable to revenue requirements for network service. The utility asked the commission to remove all costs related to the two GFAs and the facilities from Tri-State’s ATRR and SPP’s rates for NPPD’s transmission zone, and to include point-to-point revenue as a credit to the cooperative’s revenue requirement.
The complaint stems from Tri-State’s placement in NPPD’s transmission zone when the cooperative wholesale power supplier joined SPP in 2015 as part of the Integrated System. NPPD protested at the time but reached a settlement with Tri-State and SPP in 2017.
FERC ruled the disputed cost components were covered in the settlement agreement, saying that NPPD had failed to demonstrate that without its proposed modifications, the settlement “seriously harms the public interest.”
SPS Gets Partial Approval to Issue Refunds
FERC granted one of Southwestern Public Service’s three waiver requests related to the issuance of customer refunds, but it rejected a second and dismissed a third as unnecessary (ER18-2377).
The Xcel Energy subsidiary requested the waivers in September, saying it had received a $12 million refund from El Paso Natural Gas (EPNG), which provides fuel to SPS and third-party-owned gas-fired plants on its system. The utility said each wholesale requirements customer has a power supply agreement that contains a fuel cost adjustment clause, through which SPS recovers fuel transportation costs.
The commission accepted SPS’ request for a waiver of section 35.14 of FERC’s regulations, which limits the fuel cost adjustment clause to the recovery of current fuel costs. That clears the way for the utility to issue about $3 million in refunds to eight of its current and former wholesale customers.
FERC rejected the utility’s request for a waiver of section 35.19a of its regulations and its methodology for computing interest on refunds. SPS requested the waiver to avoid paying interest for the period between its receipt of the refunds from EPNG and the distribution of refunds to SPS’ wholesale customers.
The commission said the utility’s arguments were insufficient to explain why it should be exempt from paying interest.
Finally, FERC dismissed SPS’ request for a waiver from the utility’s fuel cost adjustment protocols as unnecessary, saying they don’t conflict with providing EPNG refunds to wholesale requirements customers.
FERC last week accepted a revised generator interconnection agreement (GIA) between MISO and a Michigan wind farm, avoiding complex analysis from the fallout of a vacatur of the commission’s previous orders covering transmission owners’ ability to fund network upgrades.
The Dec. 20 order allows Invenergy’s 150-MW, 60-turbine Crescent Wind Farm near the Michigan-Ohio border to interconnect to the MISO system under a revised agreement that eliminates TO Michigan Electric Transmission Co.’s (METC) “unilateral right to elect to provide initial funding for network upgrades” (ER18-2340). The new GIA allows METC to provide initial funding for network upgrades “only upon mutual agreement with the interconnection customer.”
In approving the GIA, FERC focused on the requested effective date, not the issues still in flux around agreements executed between mid-2015 to mid-2018, after the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals early this year vacated FERC orders dealing with TOs’ rights to fund upgrades.
MISO in July submitted a pre-emptive Section 205 filing to retain the option to allow new generators to self-fund interconnection transmission upgrades. (See MISO Files Revised Upgrade Funding Provisions.) FERC dismissed that filing as moot after deciding TO initial funding should be included in MISO’s pro forma GIA only prospectively as of Aug. 31, 2018. It instituted a briefing schedule to determine how to address GIAs, facility construction agreements and multiparty facility construction agreements that were entered into between June 24, 2015, and Aug. 31, 2018.
FERC said because MISO and Crescent Wind filed for an Aug. 15, 2018, agreement effective date, MISO’s previous pro forma GIA should be followed, which allows TOs to provide initial funding for network upgrades “only upon the mutual agreement of the interconnection customer.”
“We find the amended agreement to be just and reasonable because such language was not included in MISO’s pro forma GIA as of the effective date of the amended agreement,” FERC said.
METC had requested FERC reject the amended agreement, arguing that MISO’s removal of the funding language is premature because the commission is still working through whether to include language allowing the initial TO funding of network upgrades for all GIAs executed between June 24, 2015, and Aug. 31, 2018. METC also pointed out that the agreement does not contain any network upgrades that would be subject to TO initial funding. FERC did not address the argument.
The Crescent Wind GIA is also exempt from FERC Order 842 primary frequency response requirements because MISO requested an exemption for all projects having reached at least the second decision point in its interconnection queue before May 15, 2018.
FERC last week voted 2-1 to approve ISO-NE’s cost-of-service agreement with Exelon for its Mystic Generating Station Units 8 and 9, including payments to the company’s Distrigas LNG facility. It also ordered a paper hearing on the issue of return on equity for the plants.
FERC Chairman Neil Chatterjee and Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur approved the order — issued after the commission’s open meeting Thursday — with Commissioner Richard Glick dissenting (ER18-1639). The agreement becomes effective June 1, 2022.
The RTO sought the agreement after Exelon said in March that it would retire the 2,274-MW plant when its capacity supply obligations expire on May 31, 2022 (ER18-1509).
The agreement would allow the gas-fired units in Massachusetts an annual fixed revenue requirement of almost $219 million for capacity commitment period 2022/23 and nearly $187 million for 2023/24. But the commission found the information Exelon provided to support those figures insufficient and ordered the company to submit a compliance filing within 60 days of the order.
In the most recent order, the commission directed Mystic to adopt Exelon’s capital structure for ratemaking purposes, include an amortization of excess deferred income taxes and amend the agreement to state that it will recover 91% of the costs of Distrigas as Mystic fuel costs, determining that other New England beneficiaries of the LNG terminal should bear some of its operational costs.
Glick’s Dissent
In his dissent, Glick argued the commission “cannot and should not use its authority over wholesale sales of electricity to bail out an LNG import facility. … The commission concludes that it can use the [Federal Power Act] to bail out an LNG import facility simply because that LNG import facility has an undefined and unexplained ‘extremely close relationship’ to the Mystic facility.”
The commission is attempting to regulate the costs incurred and sales made by a non-jurisdictional facility, he said.
“A more reasonable construction of the commission’s jurisdiction would be to limit its reach to the entities that can or actually do participate directly in the wholesale market for electricity,” he said.
“The jurisdictional puzzle in which the commission now finds itself only reinforces the fundamental mistake that the commission made in rushing to seize control of the debate over fuel security in New England and dictate a particular outcome. That outcome, ‘individual, ad hoc contracts with particular resources whose retirement might, under the most conservative assumptions, create a fuel security concern,’ is no way to address a region’s long-term fuel security,” Glick said, quoting from his previous dissent in the commission’s July tentative acceptance of the agreement.
FERC on Dec. 3 approved ISO-NE’s interim proposal to use an out-of-market mechanism to address concerns about fuel security (ER18-2364). (See ISO-NE Fuel Security Measures Approved.) The RTO’s Tariff had previously only allowed cost-of-service agreements to respond to local transmission security issues, with the interim proposal developed in response to FERC’s July denial of a request for waiver to allow for the Mystic agreement. (See FERC Denies ISO-NE Mystic Waiver, Orders Tariff Changes.)
New Mexico regulators on Thursday gave Public Service Company of New Mexico (PNM) permission to join the Western Energy Imbalance Market, clearing the way for the state’s largest electric utility to begin participating in the interstate real-time market in April 2021.
The Public Regulation Commission voted 5-0 to allow the move by PNM, which declared its intent to join the EIM in August. (See PNM Seeks to Join Energy Imbalance Market.)
CAISO, which administers the EIM, welcomed PNM in a news release, saying the utility’s participation would increase the EIM’s efficiency in trading resources across the West. New Mexico is fast becoming one of the West’s largest producers of wind power, and California has a legal mandate to gather an increasing share of its electricity from renewable resources.
PNM generates about 2,580 MW of electricity, including 800 MW from low- or zero-carbon resources, CAISO said.
“The diversity and location of PNM’s resources, along with the transmission connectivity to the rest of the EIM footprint will provide significant benefits to their customers,” CAISO said in its statement.
The EIM has generated a half-billion dollars in benefits for its members since its founding in November 2014, including $100 million in the third quarter of 2018 alone, CAISO has said.
The EIM’s current members include Arizona Public Service, Idaho Power, NV Energy, Portland General Electric, Puget Sound Energy and Powerex. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District and several other entities are scheduled to join between 2019 and 2021.
The Transportation Security Administration’s oversight of natural gas pipeline security is hampered by staffing constraints and vague criteria for identifying critical facilities, the Government Accountability Office reported last week.
TSA’s Pipeline Security Branch, which is responsible for more than 2.7 million miles of natural gas, oil and hazardous liquid pipelines, currently has only six full-time equivalent employees. Staffing has fluctuated from a high of 14 in fiscal year 2013 to only one in 2014. The agency, part of the Department of Homeland Security, also lacks a “strategic workforce plan” to identify the skills required of its employees, such as cybersecurity expertise.
GAO also found TSA has not updated its risk assessment methodology since 2014 to reflect current threats to pipelines and that its data sources and underlying assumptions on threats and vulnerabilities are not fully documented. Its risk assessment has not been peer reviewed since it was initiated in 2007, the report said.
Although TSA issued revised guidelines in March 2018 incorporating most of the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s “Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity,” it did not include all of the framework and lacks a formal process for revising the guidelines on a regular basis. “Without such a documented process, TSA cannot ensure that its guidelines reflect the latest known standards and best practices for physical security and cybersecurity, or address the dynamic security threat environment that pipelines face,” GAO said.
Critical Facilities
The guidelines also lack clear definitions to ensure that pipeline operators identify their critical facilities — one reason, auditors speculated, that one-third of the 100 largest pipeline systems have not identified any critical facilities.
TSA’s eight criteria lack “additional examples or clarification … to help operators determine criticality,” the report said.
GAO said pipeline operators told it that pipelines may interpret one TSA criterion, “cause mass casualties or significant health effect,” differently. “One of these operators that we interviewed stated that this criterion could be interpreted either as a specific number of people affected or a sufficient volume to overwhelm a local health department, which could vary depending on the locality. Another operator reported that because TSA’s criteria were not clear, they created their own criteria which helped the operator identify two additional critical facilities.”
GAO said one unnamed industry association it met with is working with TSA to develop supplementary guidance for its members to clarify the agency’s critical facility criteria. The American Gas Association (AGA), which represents more than 200 local distribution companies, confirmed it is the group mentioned.
TSA conducts security reviews of the largest 100 companies, but it hasn’t checked in the last five years whether its recommended improvements are being followed, leaving it unable to know whether its efforts are reducing risks, the report said.
Based on the company reviews, TSA may also review the security on a company’s critical facilities. Although the reviews are voluntary, TSA told auditors no company has ever rejected an inspection request.
The agency conducted 23 corporate reviews and about 60 facility reviews in fiscal year 2018 (through July 31). In 2014, when the safety unit had only one FTE, it conducted no corporate reviews and about 30 facility reviews.
Dispute on Mandatory Rules
At FERC’s open meeting Thursday, Chairman Neil Chatterjee said the GAO report “reiterated” concerns he and Commissioner Richard Glick expressed in a June op-ed calling for mandatory reliability standards for natural gas pipelines like those the commission and NERC enforce on the grid. “Despite having the authority to enforce mandatory cybersecurity standards, the TSA relies on voluntary ones,” they wrote.
Glick said TSA performs a valuable role in airport security but is ill-suited for overseeing pipeline security. “I continue to believe that Congress should … consider moving authority over gas pipeline cybersecurity to another agency such as the Department of Energy.”
Chatterjee said that although the GAO report identified gaps, he has been pleased by recent efforts by industry and DHS to improve pipeline security, including the creation of a risk assessment program that includes DHS, TSA, DOE and FERC.
In a press release, Don Santa, CEO of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA), also cited what he called his group’s “partnership” with TSA, DHS and DOE to conduct cybersecurity assessments of pipelines, saying, “This interagency approach will bring to bear the particular expertise of each agency, along with those of the industry itself.” INGAA says its 26 members represent most of the interstate natural gas transmission pipeline companies in the U.S. and Canada.
But he rejected the idea of mandatory standards. “In this environment of rapidly evolving cyber threats, it is important that we take an approach that enables flexibility and allows us to quickly adapt and update protocols,” he said. “Experience shows that mandatory standards are all too often outdated almost as soon as they are introduced. We need the flexibility and ability to build on our baseline practices to look forward towards addressing the threats of the future.”
AGA said in a statement that GAO’s criticism “is missing the mark.”
TSA officials “understand the industry and have a strong working relationship with natural gas utilities,” said AGA CEO Dave McCurdy, who called for expanding the agency’s budget and staff “so that they can come into our member companies and make the assessments themselves. In addition to our numerous voluntary programs in the cybersecurity arena, we believe that this is the best way to build upon the success of this public-private partnership.”
A Government Accountability Office report on geomagnetic disturbances released last week found a lack of consensus on how much of a risk they pose to the U.S. electric grid, in part because of limited modeling capabilities.
GMDs, which occur when the sun ejects charged particles that change Earth’s magnetic fields, can cause geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) that produce voltage instability and damage connected equipment.
Although such coronal mass ejections occur regularly, GAO said there have been only four GMDs worldwide since 1932 that significantly affected the grid with large-scale service disruptions or equipment damage. The only instances in the U.S. were GMDs in March and September 1989 that damaged four single-phase transformers at one power plant, with no loss in electric service.
‘Key Gaps’
“The magnitude of potential damages from a large GMD is not fully understood, in part because there have been few examples worldwide of GMDs that have caused equipment damage or large-scale blackouts,” GAO said. “Determining how GMDs will interact with and harm the electric grid is challenging because the magnitude of the ensuing GIC is influenced by several factors. The reaction of specific components of the electric grid to GIC and its secondary effects is also challenging to accurately model.”
GAO said there are “key gaps” in the understanding of variables that impact severity, such as data on local geoelectric fields. The U.S. Geological Survey has only 14 ground-based observatories measuring local magnetic fields.
“The relatively sparse coverage of magnetic observatories, particularly in the contiguous United States, limits the ability to monitor GMD in areas without magnetic observatories,” GAO said. “Even when the GMD is measured at nearby magnetic observatories, Earth resistivity required to calculate the geoelectric field … is often the dominant source of uncertainty in GIC calculations. … Earth resistivity varies by about a factor of 10,000 within a Midwest region otherwise described by a single, one-dimensional ground resistivity model.”
Because extreme GMDs are rare, researchers have attempted to extrapolate the impact of extreme events from available data on moderate events. But GAO said, “Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory found that the probability of extreme events is not accurately described by statistical models of historical records.”
Worst Case?
The worst-case scenarios from a solar-induced GMD — or an electromagnetic pulse produced by the detonation of a nuclear device 25 to 250 miles above Earth’s surface — sound like the stuff of disaster movies.
“A large GMD might have long-term, significant impacts on the nation’s electric grid,” GAO said. “Given the interdependency among infrastructure sectors, such a disruption to the electric grid could also result in potential cascading impacts on fuel distribution, transportation systems, food and water supplies, and communications and equipment for emergency services, as well as other communication systems that utilize electrical infrastructure.”
But the auditors said recent research suggests that the worst GMDs might have only limited impact. “The most persuasive studies we reviewed concluded that the most likely effects of a large GMD would be service interruptions that are neither long-term nor large-scale,” GAO said.
Two National Laboratory studies that evaluated the impact of an extreme GMD event on the Eastern and Western interconnections concluded “that the disconnection or loss of transformers experiencing high GIC would avoid equipment damage and maintain grid stability. … It is possible to use operating procedures or GIC-blocking technologies to protect transformers and grid stability.”
NERC cited operational procedures such as increasing operating reserve margins, modifying protective relay settings and removing vulnerable equipment from service.
A study by an unnamed electric power supplier “concluded that failures in generators or capacitors are unlikely during a 100-year storm,” GAO added.
NERC’s Geomagnetic Disturbance Task Force concluded that the most likely worst-case system impacts from a severe GMD event would be voltage instability and potential blackouts. But GAO noted that “blackouts that originate in the transmission grid in the absence of substantial equipment damage are generally restored within three days and often much sooner.”
FERC, NERC Actions
GAO’s findings on the limited data echo frustrations FERC and the Department of Energy have expressed.
In 2016, DOE said traditional power system planning models are flawed because they do not include substation grounding or transformer configuration details, which are essential to modeling GIC flows.
In November, FERC approved NERC’s revised GMD reliability standard, which broadens the definition of GMDs, requires grid operators to collect certain data and imposes deadlines for corrective actions (RM18-8, RM15-11-003). (See Revised NERC GMD Standard Approved.)
The standard seeks to create a benchmark for estimating the impact of a large GMD. But GAO said “conducting such estimates is challenging because the wide variety in transformers, including model, age and power capacity, could lead to significant variability in the effects [of] GIC on specific transformers.”
At FERC’s direction, NERC has joined with the Electric Power Research Institute to develop a research plan to improve the benchmark GMD event and Earth resistivity models.
Technological Fixes?
An October 2016 executive order by President Barack Obama directed DOE and the Department of Homeland Security to develop a plan to test and evaluate technology that could mitigate the effect of GMDs. The GAO report came in response to a request by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs to examine the availability of such technologies and the challenges of using them.
DOE told the auditors that it completed a plan for a pilot program to test commercially available technology in April and has hired contractors to implement the plan.
The GAO researchers reported that three-phase transformers may be less vulnerable than single-phase units, but it said the larger, heavier three-phase units present shipping challenges.
GAO said series capacitors, used to improve the transfer capability of long transmission lines, can also block GIC. “However, care must be exercised in placing series capacitors in the electric power transmission system because blocking GIC in one section of the grid can affect GIC flow in other sections of the electric power transmission system. Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate the effect of series capacitors in sections of the electric power transmission system on other sections of the electric power transmission system before they are installed,” GAO said.
VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — PJM Board of Managers member Susan Riley asked RTO members for continued patience with the board’s ongoing investigation into the historically large default of GreenHat Energy’s financial transmission rights portfolio. (See PJM Board Investigating GreenHat’s Record FTR Default.)
Speaking via phone to attendees at the RTO’s Markets and Reliability Committee meeting Thursday, Riley said the Special Board Committee is progressing — having completed 30 interviews — but has little to offer yet publicly. It anticipates preparing a draft for board members to review in early January.
The final report, targeted for publication in early February, is intended to provide “a great deal of confidence” about what happened and ensuring it doesn’t happen again, Riley said.
“If it takes a little longer, I hope that you’ll bear with us,” she said. “Our goal here is to be comprehensive … complete and unbiased.”
FTR Mark-to-Auction Credit Requirements Endorsed
Members approved without discussion a proposal endorsed by the Market Implementation Committee to increase FTR credit requirements with the addition of a “mark-to-auction” provision. (See “FTR Collateral,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs: Dec. 12, 2018.)
The vote, taken by acclamation, included one objection.
Must-offer Exception Process Deferred
Members voted to defer consideration of a proposal endorsed by the MIC to revise the capacity market must-offer exception process. The changes would allow participants to specify multiple auctions when making exception requests. Resources that cannot be made Capacity Performance-capable by the start of the delivery year will be permitted to seek an exception. (See “Must-offer Exception Changes,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs: Nov. 7, 2018.)
Susan Bruce, representing the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition, requested deferring the vote until the April 29 MRC meeting and remanding the issue back to MIC to discuss resources wanting to move between capacity- and energy-only status. Despite the request, Bruce said the issue “feels like something to get wrapped up before [capacity market] auctions start.”
Asked to specify which member company made the deferral motion among those she represents, Bruce named industrial gas producer Praxair. Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, via Carl Johnson as the representative of the PJM Public Power Coalition, seconded the motion. It was approved in a sector-weighted vote with 3.74 in favor.
Asked by Marji Phillips of Direct Energy whether the Independent Market Monitor could address any withholding issues if the proposed rule passed, Monitor Joe Bowring responded that strong and clear rules are needed in order to be enforceable and that the Monitor would not be able to prevent the exercise of market power through withholding if the proposed rule were implemented.
FTR Forfeiture Rule Deferred
A second long debate, on a proposed change to the FTR forfeiture rule, ended in another vote deferral after some stakeholders expressed fear it could unintentionally create exploitable market loopholes.
The proposal, endorsed by the MIC, would revise the trigger for forfeiture of FTRs from virtual trades that create a penny’s worth of impact on the value of an FTR to those whose impact exceed 10%. (See “FTR Forfeiture Proposal Endorsed,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs: Nov. 7, 2018.) Bruce said certain physical suppliers have been very vocal about wishing to revise the trigger, but stakeholders haven’t heard from others about how “endemic” the issue is. Several financial-only traders responded.
“I think that there is a broader impact than just [on] companies like [proposal co-sponsors] Exelon and NextEra [Energy],” Appian Way Energy Partners’ Abram Klein said.
“We don’t think we’re striking the right balance today,” PJM’s Stu Bresler said in support of the proposal. As evidence of the revision’s necessity, proponents had provided an example of issues around taking positions at the RTO’s Western Hub.
“I think that the Western Hub is the most liquid location in the system,” Bresler said. “If there isn’t enough liquidity there, we should probably all pack our bags.”
The Monitor continued its longstanding defense of the current rule, including the so-called “penny test,” pointing out that the existing rule has a 10% test for the impact of a company’s portfolio on a constraint and that the penny test is simply a test for a positive impact on the value of an FTR. That test could reasonably have been zero, but a penny was implemented.
In response to assertions by Exelon and NextEra that the proposal would improve market efficiency, Bowring pointed out that “there is no evidence that the rule would improve the efficiency of the market. … The proposed rule would substantially weaken the FTR forfeiture rule and permit the exercise of market power.”
Exelon’s Jason Barker said such logic suggests it would also be more efficient to send people directly to jail when arrested, but that such a bypassing of due process ignores important nuances like intent and tenet of being “innocent until proven guilty.”
“We don’t have those things in our system because we have to judge the reasonableness of those actions,” Barker said. “[The penny test] is efficient, I’m sure, for Joe to monitor and for PJM to apply, but it’s not fair.”
“I didn’t quite get that, but it sounded pretty dramatic, pretty draconian. That’s not what we’re doing here,” Bowring said. He questioned why “10% is a good threshold for guilty but a penny is not?”
Gabel Associates’ Mike Borgatti, representing NextEra, motioned for deferral to the MRC’s Feb. 21 meeting to discuss a compromise of a 5% threshold for triggering forfeiture. The motion passed without objection or abstention.
PFR Task Force on Hiatus
Members agreed to a PJM proposal to put the Primary Frequency Response Senior Task Force on hiatus for one year to gather data and subsequently determine whether to reconvene. The hiatus was suggested after stakeholders in the task force failed to come to consensus on any proposals to require existing units to provide primary frequency response. (See PJM SHs Seek End to Frequency Response Debate.)
Many generators already provide the service such that there is no additional need for it in PJM, and those that don’t argue that being forced to install the necessary equipment would be a financial hardship that isn’t supported by reliability needs. PJM staff anticipate that outreach to unit owners will result in performance improvements over the next year and that NERC might issue enhanced standards.
The motion was endorsed by acclamation.
Transmission Replacement
Transmission owners remain at philosophical odds with load interests and merchant transmission operators about end-of-life (EOL) and replacement procedures for aging infrastructure.
American Municipal Power’s Ed Tatum and Lisa McAlister presented proposed revisions, developed in concert with ODEC to Manual 14B in a package that retains the position as the first option to receive a vote on the topic. The proposal would add language in section 1.5.4 of the manual to provide sufficient information to enable stakeholders to replicate transmission owners’ results on the need for proposed supplemental projects, as well as strike the word “useful” throughout in manual references to “end of useful life.”
“We don’t need folks replacing well-maintained assets simply because they are at the end of their depreciable life,” Tatum said.
PJM’s Aaron Berner, who presented the RTO’s alternative proposal endorsed by TOs, worried the slight wording difference could lead to reliability issues.
“Getting rid of ‘useful’ is going to leave us with ‘end of life.’ It means something failed,” he said.
The PJM proposal was moved for consideration by FirstEnergy and seconded by Public Service Electric and Gas.
LS Power’s Sharon Segner proposed a friendly amendment to either proposal that would limit the ability for supplemental projects — which are developed by TOs based on their own internal needs criteria — to supplant competitively bid projects accepted by PJM to address regional reliability violations or other criteria. She said LS is concerned about an apparent “blur” of the lines between such projects.
“We accept that some supplemental projects are needed. We accept that FERC has made the decisions that they have made,” Segner said. “But supplemental projects cannot be displacing regional projects.”
Stakeholders will vote on the issue at the Jan. 24 MRC meeting.
Resilience and Fuel Security
PJM’s Jonathon Monken presented an update on the RTO’s efforts to increase system resilience, noting several initiatives planned for 2019. Among them are an infrastructure interdependency analysis, a pilot to test distributed energy resources for resilience and identification of resilience attributes for fuel-secure generation resources.
Responding to stakeholder questions, Souder acknowledged that the units included in the report’s retirement scenarios were just the least-profitable units rather than “underwater” facilities. He said scenario templates for each of the 324 analyzed scenarios are expected to be published in mid-January. Staff also plan to introduce a problem statement and issue charge on the issue for stakeholder consideration in the first quarter.
That would precipitate creating a senior task force to examine the topic with any potential market rule changes targeted to be filed with FERC in early 2020. A third phase of the initiative is occurring in parallel to consider further scenarios based on classified information about credible risks to fuel security that could impact the grid.
Manual Approvals
Stakeholders endorsed two manual revisions by acclamation:
Manual 14E: Upgrade and Transmission Interconnection Requests. Revisions developed as part of a triennial cover-to-cover review. The revisions include changing the manual name to align it with the structure of Manuals 14A and 14G and explaining how to apply to the interconnection queue via Queue Point.
Clarifications of market participation rules for DERs in Manuals 11 and 14D and the Open Access Transmission Tariff. Among the changes are a consistent definition of on-site generators.
WASHINGTON — Bernard McNamee attended his first open meeting as a FERC commissioner on Thursday, where he was greeted by protests and questions of whether he would recuse himself from the agency’s dockets on grid resilience.
McNamee, who was sworn in Dec. 11, declined to vote on the commission’s consent agenda for the meeting, which did not feature any discussion items or presentations by staff. Instead, he simply marked himself as “present.”
“Some have asked me what’s going to be my agenda here at FERC. That always seems to be the first question I get asked by most people,” McNamee said in his opening remarks. “I can sum it up in one word: ‘listen.’”
He said he is still interviewing potential staff and didn’t want to rush his decisions on issues. “I expect to fully participate in the commission’s proceedings and decisions soon, but for now, I just plan to listen.”
McNamee left the room almost immediately after the meeting ended, declining to answer a reporter’s question. It fell to Chairman Neil Chatterjee to address multiple calls for McNamee’s recusal from the resilience dockets. Those calls have come from Senate Democrats, environmental groups, the Harvard Law School’s Electricity Law Initiative and several protesters at Thursday’s meeting — though the last group did not say from what he should recuse himself. (See Enviros Seek McNamee Recusal in Resilience Dockets.)
Chatterjee said, “All I know is, on his very first day at the commission, [McNamee] went and received ethics training and sat down with our legal counsel here at the commission to discuss these matters, as we all did on our first days at the commission.” He repeatedly emphasized that the decision to recuse lies with individual commissioners, and that the chairman has no say in the matter. “I don’t have the capacity to deny another commissioner their vote or their ability to participate in a proceeding. That is between Commissioner McNamee and ethics” staff.
“And I have complete confidence in the lawyers in this building to ensure on all these fronts that whatever actions we take will be with an eye toward ensuring the maximum ability to withstand legal scrutiny,” Chatterjee said.
But Chatterjee also noted that upon his own arrival at FERC, there were also questions concerning his ability to be impartial given his previous job as energy adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), “and I probably wasn’t always helpful to dissuade those.” He said he felt that his record at FERC has proven he can make impartial decisions based on the record.
“So all I would ask is that he be given an opportunity to demonstrate that, like myself, [McNamee] will be an earnest public servant,” Chatterjee said. “And I think that based on my getting to know him and his remarks today, I truly feel he will be that earnest public servant.”
Chatterjee was referring to McNamee’s closing remarks at the meeting, after the commission had honored two retiring staff members.
McNamee said agency staff are “sometimes not given the due that they should be given. … Public service is a calling, and often people don’t respect it the way they should. You don’t get paid as much as you could in the private sector, but … you come each day to do what’s right for the country and give your best advice. And that’s something that’s very noble. Personally, I’m grateful for it, and I’m looking forward to working with all of you.”
Tension over LNG; No Update on McIntyre
Meanwhile, the partisan divide at the commission over natural gas facilities continued, as Chatterjee struck from the consent agenda a vote on Venture Global LNG’s application to build its Calcasieu Pass LNG export facility in southwestern Louisiana’s Cameron Parish (CP15-550).
In her opening remarks, Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur (D) said she was “disappointed we are not voting on the project today. Based on the record before us today, and my assessment of the legal requirements under the Natural Gas Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, I was prepared to cast a vote on the project. Without getting into internal deliberations, I think I made clear what I believe is required of us when considering whether to authorize this LNG project.”
Both LaFleur and fellow Democratic Commissioner Richard Glick have repeatedly disagreed with their Republican colleagues about the consideration of greenhouse gas emissions in gas infrastructure approvals. If the vote on Calcasieu Pass had been like previous votes, Chatterjee would have been outnumbered without McNamee and Commissioner Kevin McIntyre, who was again absent from the monthly meeting and has not voted on any items since stepping down from the chair in October because of what he called a “serious setback” in his battle with a brain tumor.
Chatterjee has previously poked fun at LaFleur at previous open meetings for her reversal on the issue, as she only recently began to vote against gas infrastructure over GHG concerns. (See FERC Says Farewell to Powelson.)
But speaking to reporters on Thursday, he was subtly critical of her.
“I appreciate my colleague’s concerns, but also, when she was chairman she had a reputation of being a strong supporter of LNG exports. The policy was fine then,” he said, before moving on.
Chatterjee declined to give an update on McIntyre’s status. The commissioners in their opening remarks wished him and his family well for the holidays. But unlike at earlier meetings, none of them offered hopes of him soon returning to work.
The Bonneville Power Administration on Tuesday continued its series of discussions with stakeholders about joining CAISO’s Western Energy Imbalance Market, with a possible activation date in 2022.
Tuesday’s talks revolved around EIM settlements, with detailed presentations about invoices, charges and metering. The calculations may have appeared daunting but ultimately came down to familiar math, said Steve Kerns, BPA’s director of grid modernization.
“I want to make sure you don’t find this to be too scary,” Kerns told the dozens of stakeholders on the call and in BPA’s Rates Hearing Room in Portland, Ore. “There’s a lot of stuff going on here, but at the end of the day, it’s adding, subtracting [and] multiplying.”
Prior meetings that were part of BPA’s EIM stakeholder initiative have covered subjects such as market power, transmission and governance. Future meetings will deal with resource sufficiency and carbon obligations, with the next session scheduled for Jan. 16 in Portland.
BPA is targeting next September for issuing a final record of decision authorizing it to sign an implementation agreement with the EIM, which would allow the agency to begin spending on implementation projects without obligating it to join the market.
So far there has been little opposition among BPA stakeholders to joining the EIM, though details of the move are still being worked out. Joining would ease short-term trading of Pacific Northwest hydro power for solar energy from the desert Southwest and wind power from Rocky Mountain states.
BPA controls the Pacific Northwest’s largest hydroelectric resources — including the Grand Coulee, The Dalles and Chief Joseph dams on the Columbia River — and operates about 70% of the region’s transmission. Its balancing area covers most of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and western Montana, along with smaller portions of California, Nevada and Wyoming.
If BPA signs an agreement with the EIM, it would bring a territory the size of France into CAISO’s real-time market. The EIM has been expanding rapidly, with entities joining or seeking to join from Canada to the Mexican border.
Idaho Power and Powerex began transacting in the market in April, bringing the number of members participating to eight. (See Idaho, Powerex Began Trading in Western EIM.) That expansion equipped the EIM to serve imbalances for about 55% of load in the Western Interconnection, according to the ISO.
NV Energy, Arizona Public Service, PacifiCorp, Puget Sound Energy and Portland General Electric are already participants.
The Sacramento Municipal Utility District plans to begin participating in the EIM in April 2019. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Arizona’s Salt River Project and Seattle City Light are scheduled to go live in April 2020. Public Service Company of New Mexico recently received state regulators’ permission to join the EIM by 2021. (See PNM Seeks to Join Energy Imbalance Market.)
In debates about establishing a Western RTO led by CAISO, the EIM often has been held up as a better alternative because, unlike an RTO, the market’s transmission-owning entities retain operational control over their assets, while member generators participate in the real-time market on a voluntary basis.
The EIM has conferred a half-billion dollars of benefits on participants since its founding five years ago, with $100 million realized in the third quarter of 2018 alone, CAISO officials said in October. (See Western EIM Reports Record Benefits.)
Moreover, the EIM’s board consists of members from multiple states, while CAISO’s board is appointed by California’s governor and confirmed by the State Senate. Industry leaders and officials from other Western states don’t want to cede control to California, and California politicians don’t want to give up authority over CAISO.
A series of CAISO regionalization measures that would have broadened its governance to include out-of-state representatives have failed in the State Legislature in recent years, largely because of this impasse. Proponents of a single RTO for the West say they will likely introduce another bill in January when California lawmakers reconvene for the start of another two-year session. (See Western RTO Proponents Vow to Keep Trying.)
In the meantime, CAISO officials and EIM participants have been pushing ahead to add day-ahead trading to the EIM’s current real-time-only market, bringing it closer to conferring many of the benefits of a regional RTO without the perceived drawbacks.