Overheard at gridCONNEXT 2018

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

Consumers not Benefiting from Smart Grid, Advocate Says

gridCONNEXT
John Gartner of Navigant Research (at podium) moderated a discussion on electrifying city bus fleets at gridCONNEXT 2018 last week. Appearing on the panel were, left to right, Lisa Jerram, American Public Transportation Association; Stephanie Medeiros, ABB; Ryan Popple, Proterra; and Michael Smith, Constellation. | © RTO Insider

WASHINGTON — When it comes to the smart grid, count consumer advocate David Springe as a nonbeliever.

He began his talk at gridCONNEXT 2018 last week with a vendor’s definition: “Smart grid is the convergence of information and operational technologies applied to the electric grid, allowing sustainable options to customers and improved security, reliability and efficiency to utilities.”

gridCONNEXT
David Springe, National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates (NASUCA) | © RTO Insider

Then Springe gave the consumer advocate’s definition: “Smart grid employs new technologies that are more expensive and less secure than the current technologies to give pricing flexibility that customers don’t want, to communicate with small and smart appliances customers don’t own.”

Although he wrote that definition eight years ago, Springe, executive director of the National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates (NASUCA), said it still applies. “The vast majority of customers don’t interact with their meters; [they] aren’t on time-of-use rates,” he said.

Customers, he said, have seen little benefit from replacing $100 analog meters that were depreciated over 30 years with digital meters that cost twice as much and are depreciated over only five years. “Frankly, all that meter infrastructure was pretty much used to read meters once a month. We spent a lot of money. If we did it under the premises of providing something that consumers wanted, we failed.

“There’s a million great ideas out there that only need somebody’s money to make it happen,” he continued. Consumer advocates “see this at the ground level where all these grand ideas that are being shared in this room show up on the utility balance sheet, show up on the utility bill.”

Instead of lusting after new technology, Springe said, utilities and regulators should focus on increasing efficiency and reducing costs through outsourcing and cloud computing. “Why does every utility have its own communication system? Meter system? Back office systems?” he asked.

Springe said consumers are seeing reduced generation costs swamped by increases in distribution and transmission charges.

Former FERC Chair Jon Wellinghoff | © RTO Insider

That’s due in part to antiquated cost-of-service ratemaking that is preventing innovations that could save consumers money, said former FERC Chair Jon Wellinghoff, who shared a panel with Springe.

Wellinghoff is much more bullish on new technology, such as transmission devices that can add capacity without reconductoring or adding new substations.

He cited a project that Pacific Gas and Electric is building in West Oakland, which will combine distribution-level storage, behind-the-meter controls for demand response and distributed generation, and the aggregation of rooftop solar to address reliability concerns over the retirement of a Dynegy generator. The $100 million project won out over a $300 million proposal to add a new 230-kV transmission line.

That was good news for consumers, but not for PG&E, which won’t get to earn a return on the more expensive transmission investment, said Wellinghoff, who served for seven years as Nevada’s consumer advocate before joining FERC.

“We have to reconcile this somehow … so that utilities will have … incentives aligned with what we all would like to have for consumers, which is [an] efficient, cost-effective system that is clean,” he said.

Narrow Window for Energy Legislation in 2019

The conference also featured discussions on prospects for energy legislation in the new Congress.

Jason Hartke, Alliance to Save Energy | © RTO Insider

The new Democratic House majority will have only a few months to work with Senate Republicans and President Trump on energy policy before the 2020 presidential election intrudes, said Jason Hartke, president of the Alliance to Save Energy.

Hartke said likely Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) will face a challenge managing the tension between “a whole lot of excited new members who want to do things like build the Green New Deal versus [veteran Rep. Paul] Tonko [D-N.Y.] talking about singles and doubles.” (See Optimism Rising on EVs as Sales Hit 1 Million Mark.)

Hartke said a bipartisan infrastructure bill that includes spending for grid modernization and electric vehicle charging is “the one opportunity for a home run.” But he said the fate of such legislation hinges on whether Trump engages and can win the support of the Republican-controlled Senate.

“We’re working hard now for a tax extenders package that makes sense. Right now, the House package is looking backwards, so it’s retroactive [extending already expired tax breaks]. We want it to look forward, so you could actually change behavior.”

Andrew Shaw, Dentons | © RTO Insider

Attorney Andrew Shaw, senior managing associate with Dentons, said new members who campaigned on bold action on climate change will be motivated to support smaller changes so they can take credit for legislative accomplishments.

“Something like an infrastructure bill — which faces a lot of hurdles undoubtedly — is a vehicle that you could maybe get some of those wins, because everybody wants to be able to go back home and be able to talk about what they’re doing,” Shaw said.

“It’s not a given that energy’s going to be in the mix” in an infrastructure bill,” said Amit Ronen, deputy chief of staff to Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) in a separate discussion. “It’s something we’ve got to educate members … on.”

Amit Ronen, deputy chief of staff to Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) | © RTO Insider

Ronen noted that Cantwell, the ranking member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, cosponsored the $7,500 passenger EV tax credit with Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

“So now we’re looking at, is there a role for the government in incentivizing electrification of other transportation? We’re talking about boats, trucks, buses, even planes, which two years ago I wouldn’t have even thought … was possible.”

Shaw said there has been some progress in the last six years in building consensus on climate change, noting the introduction last month of a bipartisan bill that would set a carbon tax beginning at $15 per metric ton in 2019. The bill is based on the carbon dividend proposal offered last year by Republican party elders James A. Baker III and George P. Schultz. (See Lott, Breaux Join Push for Baker-Schultz CO2 Dividend Plan.)

“Unfortunately, in the House we did lose some more moderate [Republicans] who do believe in climate change science and were willing to engage,” Shaw acknowledged.

Corporate Decarbonization

Amy Davidsen, Climate Group | © RTO Insider

Companies are “being forced to act [on decarbonization] because government has failed us,” said Amy Davidsen, North America executive director for the Climate Group, which manages RE100, a collaborative of more than 150 businesses that have committed to using 100% renewable electricity.

Bill Weihl | © RTO Insider

Bill Weihl, former Google “green energy czar,” predicted RE 100 companies will grow to more than 300 in the next several years.

Weihl said the big innovation the last few years has been less about technology and more about development of new products, such as the two dozen “green” tariffs in 15 states.

Hans Royal, Schneider Electric | © RTO Insider

But Hans Royal, director of strategic renewables for Schneider Electric, said many of the tariffs are too expensive or put too much risk on corporate buyers to be effective.

Electrifying Bus Transit

The two-day conference also provided an update on accelerating efforts to electrify city bus fleets.

Lisa Jerram, American Public Transportation Association | © RTO Insider

“The orders for battery electric [buses] are ramping up really rapidly,” said Lisa Jerram, director of bus, paratransit and surface transit for the American Public Transportation Association.

Jerram said only about half of city transit buses are now pure diesel, down from 90% 10 years ago.

Compressed natural gas powers about 25% of fleets now, with hybrid diesel-electrics comprising about 20%, according to Jerram and Ryan Popple, CEO of electric bus maker Proterra.

Ryan Popple, Proterra | © RTO Insider

But Jerram said many transit agencies need utilities’ assistance to make the transition. “They don’t understand utility systems that well; they don’t understand rate structures,” she said. Utilities also can help bus operators manage the logistics of charging in their depots and on routes, she said.

Popple said his company has received orders from 39 states. “If you add up the cities that have already mandated that they’re going electric — that includes … cities like Seattle and New York City — 10,000 of the 70,000 buses on the road are already politically mandated to go electric. So it’s coming. And the things that we figure out on the bus side you’ll need to them again at larger scale in school bus and truck [conversions].”

Europe’s Challenges

The conference heard a keynote address from Laurent Schmitt, secretary-general of the European Network of Transmission System Operators (ENTSO-E), which he described as “kind of the FERC of Europe.” The organization has 43 transmission system operators in 36 countries.

Laurent Schmitt, European Network of Transmission System Operators (ENTSO-E) | © RTO Insider

Schmitt said although the Nordic countries are blessed with offshore wind, it is a challenge to move the power to load centers. “Our system does not get planned as efficiently as what we would like, and it’s getting very hard to get transmission lines [sited] in Europe, especially getting people from certain states understanding that they have to build the line for the sake of other Europeans,” he said.

Schmitt said Europe does not use LMPs, “but I think we will have to go into a similar model in the future” to address scarce grid capacity.

Europe also faces challenges as renewables replace traditional generation, he said. Fossil fuels (coal, gas, oil, mixed fuels and peat) were responsible for 43% of Europe’s energy production in 2017, with renewables adding 33% and nuclear 22%.

“Are we going to be able to maintain frequency … when we have no rotating mass?” he asked.

RTOs/ISOs File FERC Order 841 Compliance Plans

By Michael Brooks

WASHINGTON — Storage resources seeking to provide capacity would face much tougher requirements in some regions than others under proposed tariff revisions filed by RTOs and ISOs last week in compliance with FERC Order 841.

Storage offering capacity would have to continuously supply energy for two hours in ISO-NE, but four hours in NYISO and 10 hours in PJM.

Together, the filings by CAISO (ER19-468), ISO-NE (ER19-470), MISO (ER19-465), NYISO (ER19-467), PJM (ER19-469) and SPP (ER19-460) total more than 2,500 pages. FERC, grid operators and stakeholders now have a year to review, revise and implement the plans under a Dec. 3, 2019, deadline set by the commission when it issued Order 841 in February. (See FERC Rules to Boost Storage Role in Markets.)

FERC Order 841
Left to right: Scott Baker, PJM; Michael DeSocio, NYISO; Tanya Paslawski, Organization of MISO States; Terri Eaton, Xcel Energy; Andrew Ulmer, CAISO; and Andrea Chambers, DLA Piper. | © RTO Insider

The complexity of the revisions led some grid operators to ask FERC to rule on their proposals quickly to give them enough time to implement all the changes by the deadline.

“The implementation of the revisions proposed herein is estimated to cost SPP alone in excess of $800,000, and the magnitude of the effort requires major software and process changes to core SPP systems,” said the RTO, which requested FERC rule by March 1.

NYISO requested that FERC rule by Feb. 1, and it further asked that its implementation deadline be extended to May 1, 2020, because it is in the middle of “a significant upgrade” to its market software.

While MISO did not request an extension, it too is undergoing an overhaul of its market platform, noted Tanya Paslawski, executive director of the Organization of MISO States.

Speaking at Infocast’s Federal Energy Policy Summit on Thursday, Paslawski said “there are limits to what [the RTO] can do” to implement the order given its outdated system. For example, MISO established a 100-kW minimum size requirement for resources — the maximum allowed by the order — “because MISO’s existing market systems do not support offer or bid quantities less than this amount.”

Comments on the filings are due by Dec. 24. Several industry groups — including Advanced Energy Economy, the American Wind Energy Association and the Solar Energy Industries Association — filed a joint request to extend the comment period for another 45 days.

“The standard 21-day comment period will not be adequate for interested parties to review and comment on all of the RTO/ISO compliance filings,” the groups said. “The filings are voluminous and contain proposed revisions to several tariff provisions and market rules.” They also noted that the comment deadline is “in the middle of the holiday season, when many organizations are short-staffed.”

“I think it’s probably likely that the comment deadline gets extended,” Scott Baker, senior business solutions analyst for PJM, said at the summit.

FERC Order 841
U.S. energy storage annual deployments will reach 3.9 GW by 2023, according to a report released last week by Wood Mackenzie. The report attributes the estimated increase in part to tariff changes spurred by FERC Order 841. | Wood Mackenzie

Requirements Vary

Each grid operator submitted a participation model for storage resources to provide any services of which they are capable, but requirements vary.

“RTOs have largely allowed storage to provide the same services, under the same conditions, as a provided by other types of resources. Sometimes this creates barriers to storage participation,” the New York School of Law’s Institute for Policy Integrity said in an analysis of the filings.

PJM’s “onerous” 10-hour requirement is only possible for most resources “through significant derating of capacity, and even then may not facilitate cost-effective participation in the capacity market,” the institute said.

“PJM also has proposed an accounting framework that effectively requires all charging by energy storage resources participating in PJM’s participation model that are not owned by load-serving entities to discharge (sell their energy) back to PJM,” it continued. “These resources cannot sell to others or use the stored power themselves.”

As for energy markets, resources would have flexibility under the proposals, with some grid operators allowing suppliers to participate in different “modes.” How many modes — and what they’re called — depends on the region.

PJM, for example, proposed to allow three modes: continuous, charge or discharge. In continuous mode, resources can both charge and discharge, with no limitations on start-ups or ramp rate.

NYISO would offer four modes: ISO-committed fixed, ISO-committed flexible, self-committed fixed and self-committed flexible. In the ISO-committed modes, suppliers would leave it up to NYISO to determine the most optimal dispatch times for their resources. In the fixed mode, the ISO would schedule them in the day-ahead market and dispatch them no more frequently than every 15 minutes in the real-time market. In the flexible mode, NYISO would dispatch resources in the real-time market based on LMPs. In the self-committed modes, suppliers would make these decisions themselves.

MISO would allow for eight “commitment statuses”: discharge, emergency discharge, charge, emergency charge, continuous, available, not participating and outage (offline). (See MISO Offers Storage Proposal, Promises to Exceed Order 841.)

Under the proposals, resources will able to participate in any market they choose, without having to participate in others. For example, Baker noted that PJM currently requires resources wishing to provide synchronized reserves also participate in the RTO’s energy market. “In other words, if you were just a battery that didn’t want to participate in the energy market, but you were sitting there and have the capability to respond within 10 minutes to a synchronized reserve signal, we didn’t have the ability for a resource like that to do that,” he said.

In part because of California legislation requiring investor-owned utilities to procure storage, CAISO filed the fewest revisions among the grid operators. One of the more significant changes was that it reduced its minimum size requirement from 500 kW to 100 kW, Andrew Ulmer, ISO director of federal regulatory affairs, noted Thursday.

SPP noted that it gave storage resources in its footprint — all of which are currently pumped hydro and not able to vary their dispatch mode — the ability to stick with its current model for participation or register as a market storage resource (MSR).

Xcel Pledges to Go 100% Carbon Free

By Hudson Sangree

Xcel Energy committed last week to providing its customers with carbon-free energy by 2050, becoming the first large investor-owned utility to make such a pledge.

The company also said it would cut its carbon emissions 80% by 2030.

“This is an extraordinary time to work in the energy industry, as we’re providing customers more low-cost clean energy than we could have imagined a decade ago,” Xcel CEO Ben Fowke said in a news release. “We’re accelerating our carbon-reduction goals because we’re encouraged by advances in technology, motivated by customers who are asking for it and committed to working with partners to make it happen.”

Xcel says its transition to 100% carbon-free power will be aided by its “advantaged geography,” noting that wind resources in its territory have a lower levelized cost of electricity than fossil fuels. | Xcel Energy, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Another likely motivation is that Xcel has faced dissent from some of its service areas. Boulder, Colo., is attempting to condemn the utility’s assets and create a municipal utility, with the goal of providing residents with all-renewable energy by 2030.

On Dec. 6, the same day that Xcel made its clean-energy announcement, the Boulder City Council authorized city staff to proceed with the acquisition of Xcel’s assets.

“This process will allow the city to determine a price for the assets prior to the community decision on Local Power, currently scheduled for November 2020,” the city said. It scheduled a meeting Dec. 13 to discuss its plans.

A joint application to separate Xcel’s assets in Boulder is pending before the Colorado Public Utilities Commission.

Xcel’s commitment to carbon-free energy allows its two nuclear plants in Minnesota to be part of the mix. Boulder’s pursuit of 100% renewable energy would not.

The company, which has 17,000 MW of generation, says it has reduced its emissions by 35% since 2005. About 40% of its electricity currently comes from carbon-free sources, led by wind (21%), nuclear (13%) and solar (2%). Coal is responsible for 37% and natural gas provides 23%.

Headquartered in Minneapolis, Xcel serves 3.6 million customers in eight Western and Midwestern states: Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin.

In a presentation to investors in New York last week, the company touted its “advantaged geography” for making a “cost-effective clean energy transition,” noting that wind resources in its territory have a lower levelized cost of electricity than fossil fuels. It has targeted 4,400 MW of coal capacity for retirement and plans to add 3,550 MW of additional wind capacity by 2021.

In total, the company says it will need to invest $20 billion to $30 billion to add 12 to 18 GW of wind, solar, storage and natural gas capacity.

Investors appeared unperturbed by the company’s plans. Xcel shares closed Friday at $53.19, up 33 cents (0.6%) from its price before the announcement.

MISO Members Split on Regulator Cooling-off Period

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — MISO’s 10 sectors are split over whether state regulators should be subjected to a one-year moratorium before they’re eligible to serve on the RTO’s Board of Directors.

The controversy surfaced in early fall with the nomination Minnesota Public Utilities Commission Chair Nancy Lange. Last month, MISO membership elected Lange to the board, though some stakeholders said she should be subject to the same one-year moratorium that the RTO requires of directors coming from member companies. (See MISO Elects Lange to Board; Keeps 2 Incumbents.) This is the first time MISO has elected a sitting commissioner from one of the states in its footprint.

The board’s Corporate Governance and Strategic Planning Committee has agreed to consider expanding the moratorium in 2019.

Lange has not yet resigned from the Minnesota PUC, though MISO’s new director orientation begins Dec. 11. MISO will hold another two-day orientation session in late January. Lange’s term ends Jan. 7 and overlap between her PUC appointment and MISO training seems inevitable. MISO officials had promised an early resignation in order to avoid overlap. Meanwhile, 14 applicants are vying for Lange’s seat in Minnesota.

Lange did not respond to RTO Insider’s calls to her Minnesota office.

During a Dec. 5 Advisory Committee meeting, MISO Senior Vice President and Board Secretary Stephen Kozey said the cooling off period was introduced in 1996 to prevent conflicts of interest by member companies offering their former executives to serve on the board. While the stay-out period was not required by FERC, the commission accepted MISO’s language.

Mark Volpe, representing the Independent Power Producers sector, pointed out that state regulators in MISO are on equal footing with dues-paying members through sector voting. He said that even though Environmental sector representatives are not dues-paying members, it would nevertheless be inappropriate for an environmental representative at the Advisory Committee to immediately transition to a director position.

Though Volpe said he had no reservations about Lange personally, he said she could have been seated at one of the four regulator seats at the Advisory Committee days before joining the MISO board.

“It’s the spirit of the rules that’s the real concern here,” Volpe said.

Mark Volpe and Beth Soholt | © RTO Insider

Chris Plante, representative of the Transmission-Dependent Utilities sector, said he agreed with Volpe’s observations.

“The sense of confidence that the membership and stakeholder body have in the MISO Board of Directors is very important to the legitimacy of the board’s guidance to management,” Kozey said. “If there’s something that can improve that legitimacy, I expect that the next incarnation of the Corporate Governance and Strategic Planning Committee will be interested in hearing that.”

Missouri Public Service Commissioner Daniel Hall, however, said regulators bring valuable experience and do not stand to benefit from MISO decisions. Hall was one of two stakeholders this year on the board’s Nominating Committee, which is charged with selecting board nominees.

“This shouldn’t be an issue at all. I don’t see how a commissioner serving on the board after their tenure is a conflict,” Hall said.

Tia Elliott (left) and Audrey Penner | © RTO Insider

Others said additional rules are unnecessary because many in MISO’s stakeholder community maintain professional licenses that instruct individuals to avoid conflicts of interest and the appearance of impropriety. Advisory Committee Chair Audrey Penner said possible revisions to the Transmission Owners Agreement might include language about board nominees recusing themselves when they face conflicts of interest.

Arkansas Public Service Commission Chairman Ted Thomas said that while commissioners could decide to sit at the Advisory Committee table, Lange has not. Lange’s colleague, Commissioner Matthew Schuerger, currently serves in the Organization of MISO States and is one of four commissioners representing the State Regulatory sector.

Thomas said regulators that have not been involved with MISO’s stakeholder process should be free to accept director appointments.

Daniel Hall (left) and Ted Thomas | © RTO Insider

“If we’re going to draw the line, let’s draw it in the right place,” he said.

Advisory Committee Vice Chair Tia Elliott agreed that regulators that are not involved in the State Regulatory sector through OMS probably have little idea about MISO’s inner workings. But she said the appearance of the situation is something members should consider. She pointed out that MISO transmission projects come before regulatory bodies in those states.

But Eligible End-Use Customers sector representative Kevin Murray said he thought the current situation is rare. “I think the odds of it happening again are extremely slim. I think we’re making a big ado about nothing,” Murray said.

Citigroup Energy’s Barry Trayers, of the Power Marketing sector, said MISO may benefit from a person with a less steep learning curve joining the board.

Thomas Rainwater | © RTO Insider

Clean Grid Alliance’s Beth Soholt asked if it’s difficult for the RTO to attract qualified candidates. “We had a very wide and very deep pool, so it’s not like we had to shake the bushes and rattle the trees to get candidates,” said Madison Gas and Electric’s Megan Wisersky, the other stakeholder who sat on this year’s Nominating Committee.

Director Thomas Rainwater, who chairs the Corporate Governance and Strategic Planning Committee, asked members to come to a consensus on whether they would prefer a one-year sit-out.

“The board very much wants to be viewed as independent,” he told stakeholders.

SPP Stakeholders: Stick with Dec. 2019 Date for Western RC

By Tom Kleckner

The Western Reliability Executive Committee, which is overseeing SPP’s effort to provide reliability coordination (RC) services to more than a dozen Western Interconnection entities, pushed back last week against the Western Electricity Coordinating Council’s suggestion that the RTO coordinate its go-live date with that of CAISO.

SPP, CAISO and Canada’s BC Hydro have agreed to provide RC services in the West in response to Peak Reliability’s surprise move this summer to wind down its operations by the end of 2019. (See CAISO RC Wins Most of the West.)

CAISO will become the RC for its existing territory on July 1, 2019, and take over RC services for many areas outside of California on Nov. 1. SPP will take responsibility for about 12% of the region on Dec. 3.

BC Hydro will become the RC for most of British Columbia on Sept. 2.

Bruce Rew, SPP | © RTO Insider

SPP Vice President of Operations Bruce Rew told the committee during its Dec. 7 meeting that Peak is concerned that staff attrition may hinder its ability to continue providing RC services as it approaches its wind-down date.

At a WECC meeting last week, Jim Shetler, chair of Peak’s Member Advisory Committee, also said the staggered go-live dates do not afford the organization any room for error. (See related story, RC Transition Fraught with Pitfalls, WECC Hears.)

Rew said that during a recent Western RC-to-RC meeting, WECC said it may offer a streamlined recertification process to Peak and the new Western RC providers during footprint modifications. He said WECC’s actions should mitigate some of the concerns.

“Peak will have already gone through July 1 and Sept. 2 transitions,” Rew said. “As for [Peak] staff, they should have financial incentives to stay until January 2020. I don’t see a significant difference in risk between Nov. 1 and Dec. 3 … but I’m not in Peak’s shoes, either.”

Committee members pointed out that by Dec. 3, Peak will only be handling RC services for a small portion of its footprint. Committee Chair Keith Carman, with Tri-State Generation & Transmission Association, urged SPP to “hold fast and steady” on the Dec. 3 date.

“I’m struggling with what the issue is,” Carman said. “As the footprint gets smaller, they have less to worry about.”

Calif., Ill. Top Grid Modernization Index

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON — California and Illinois won the top spots on the GridWise Alliance’s fifth annual Grid Modernization Index, standing out for their initiatives on energy storage, distributed generation, non-wires alternatives and ratemaking innovations.

Minnesota jumped to 10th place from 21st, and Colorado also jumped several spots to No. 11 in the index, which ranks states and D.C. on policies, customer engagement (rate structures, customer outreach and data collection practices) and grid operations (deployment of technologies such as sensors and smart meters).

GridWise announced the results at the gridConnext 2018 conference, where attendees heard about some of the projects exciting grid technology advocates.

gridConnext 2018
The GridWise Alliance’s Grid Modernization Index ranks states on state policies, customer engagement and grid operations. | GridWise Alliance

‘Trailblazer’

gridConnext 2018
GridWise Alliance CEO Steve Hauser | © RTO Insider

GridWise CEO Steve Hauser said California “continues to be the grid modernization trailblazer,” citing its distribution system planning requirements and “multi-pronged approach to support distributed energy resources, including competitive solicitations, multiple DER demo projects, a self-generation incentive program, a net metering tariff, and an energy storage target and default time-of-use rates.”

Speaking at the conference, Courtney Prideaux Smith, chief deputy director of the California Energy Commission, noted that the CEC had just received approval to implement a requirement that new homes include solar panels beginning in 2020.

The new standards require that the solar systems be sized to meet each home’s energy usage and encourage battery storage and heat pump water heaters. The CEC says the new rules and other energy-efficiency initiatives will reduce energy use in new homes by more than 50%.

“It is going to save Californians money starting on day one,” Smith said.

gridConnext 2018
Courtney Prideaux Smith, California Energy Commission | © RTO Insider

Smith also touted the microgrid developments in the state, citing Borrego Springs, a desert community 90 miles east of San Diego that sits at the end of a transmission line, where frequent outages can leave elderly residents without air conditioning.

After a wildfire knocked out the line in 2007, San Diego Gas & Electric applied for a grant to create what Smith said is one of the world’s largest utility-owned microgrids, which integrates generation and storage and has reduced the community’s greenhouse gas emissions by 20%.

When lightning and flooding knocked out the transmission line again in 2013, Smith said, “the microgrid did exactly what we wanted it to. It islanded, and it directed power to critical infrastructure” — a gas station, a library that served as a cooling center for those who couldn’t relocate, and an elderly community.

Smith also cited a tenant-owned mobile home park in Bakersfield where the state helped add solar power with storage, reducing the low-income community’s net energy consumption by 30%.

gridConnext 2018
Solar panels at Borrego Springs microgrid | San Diego Gas & Electric

Cluster of Microgrids

gridConnext 2018
Anne Pramaggiore, CEO of Exelon Utilities | © RTO Insider

Anne Pramaggiore, who oversees Exelon’s six utilities, told the conference about a pilot to build “the world’s first microgrid cluster,” which will connect a solar-powered microgrid in the Bronzeville neighborhood of Chicago to an existing microgrid at the Illinois Institute of Technology. The project was approved by the Illinois Commerce Committee in February.

Solar panels located on a Chicago Housing Authority building will provide power to both the building residents and the microgrid. The plan also includes a “first-mile, last-mile” electric vehicle rideshare program for senior citizens and solar- and battery-powered lighting in areas without streetlights, a STEM education program at local schools, and an energy-efficiency program.

Pramaggiore said Exelon’s utilities also are “beginning to make investments to accelerate the conversion of distribution circuits from 4 kV to 12 kV to accommodate more distributed generation; build[ing] out smart inverters to better integrate diverse resources into the grid; … [and] standing up hosting capacity maps to help customers and developers see where the grid has capacity for solar.”

GridWise also cited the ICC’s approval of an order allowing utilities to recover the costs of cloud-based computing services “seen by many observers as a key pathway to move toward a service orientation (versus the traditional infrastructure focus core to most regulatory regimes).”

gridConnext 2018
Bronzeville microgrid schematic | Commonwealth Edison

Ohio and Rhode Island Cited

GridWise gave Outstanding Progress Awards to Ohio and Rhode Island for recent initiatives.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio is pursuing regulatory changes “to support innovation while envisioning the distribution grid as an open-access platform enabling various levels of customer engagement,” GridWise said.

The group said Rhode Island regulators addressed their changing distribution system with new rate design principles and a benefit-cost framework.

MISO Board OKs Full MTEP 18 over Stakeholder Complaints

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — MISO’s Board of Directors voted unanimously last week to approve the $3.3 billion, 442-project 2018 Transmission Expansion Plan in its entirety despite stakeholder objections to three projects.

Last month, the Planning Advisory Committee withheld endorsement of two MTEP 18 projects: the rebuild of the Wabaco-Rochester 161-kV line in southern Minnesota, and American Transmission Co.’s proposal to replace a 138-kV circuit connecting Michigan’s Upper and Lower peninsulas in the Straits of Mackinac. (See MTEP 18 Advancing with 2 Contentious Projects.)

MISO executives report to the Board of Directors. | © RTO Insider

At the board’s System Planning Committee meeting on Dec. 4, and again at the Dec. 6 board meeting, Xcel Energy’s Carolyn Wetterlin insisted that the Wabaco-Rochester area is “not ripe for a project yet,” asking directors to delay the project for a year so planners can find a better solution to ease congestion in the area. Dairyland Power Cooperative representatives also reiterated their concern that the co-op’s customers would have to pay for an unnecessary line, complaining that MISO staff and board were ignoring stakeholder voices.

MISO’s 10 most expensive projects range from the Mount Pleasant Tech Interconnection ($140 million) to the Natchez SES-Red Gum 115-kV Rebuild ($46 million). | MISO

Meanwhile, Consumers Energy challenged a third project, a $21 million, 138-kV interconnection near the Michigan-Ohio border.

Consumers’ Donald Lynd said Michigan Electric Transmission Co.’s (METC’s) Morenci line is a distribution line under the seven-factor test of FERC Order 888 because the line would be radial in nature.

“If MISO approves the project, Consumers Energy does intend to seek a determination from FERC,” Lynd announced during a public comment period.

The RTO responded that it had no authority to address Consumers’ request.

“MISO legal staff has reviewed this objection and has determined that under the terms of the Transmission Owners Agreement, asset classification is a matter to be determined between the transmission owner (METC) and FERC,” it said.

Mark Johnson | © RTO Insider

“Clearly, we’re at an impasse for at least a few of the projects,” Director Mark Johnson acknowledged before the SPC approved the full MTEP 18.

But he noted that the committee ensured that RTO leadership responded to the stakeholders and followed the MTEP procedure as outlined in the Tariff and Business Practices Manuals.

“I don’t think we should ever have grand illusions that we will have 100% consensus with the size and scope of the projects in Appendix A,” Johnson said.

Director Phyllis Currie said stakeholders should not view the board’s approval of the projects as brushing aside member concerns. “We acknowledge there’s going to be times when there’s disagreement,” she said.

Fuel Security the Focus at ISO-NE Consumer Liaison Meeting

By Michael Kuser

BOSTON — Fuel security topped the agenda at the quarterly meeting of ISO-NE’s Consumer Liaison Group on Thursday.

“While the calendar might not say winter yet, the cold season starts Dec. 1” for the RTO, said Anne George, ISO-NE vice president for external affairs. She highlighted three new ways the RTO is dealing with winter this year, including new measures on fuel security that were approved by FERC earlier in the week. (See ISO-NE Fuel Security Measures Approved.)

First, the Winter Reliability Program was discontinued as Pay-for-Performance incentives took effect June 1. Second, a new energy availability forecasting and reporting framework has been added to the operating procedures to improve situational awareness and encourage proactive measures to avoid energy shortages.

“The third one is a way for resources to price in their opportunity costs for having fuel,” George said. “It was not fully available to do that in the energy market last winter, and we hope that by doing this it gives resources the opportunity to value their fuel and … that the energy market will reflect that value.”

“The wholesale energy markets were not designed to deal with fuel security at all,” said Mark Karl, the RTO’s vice president for market development. “We need to look at where we’ve come from. … The world has changed and so the design objectives need to change.”

In a concurrence on the commission’s Dec. 3 fuel security order, Commissioner Richard Glick wrote that “ISO-NE’s apparent need to retain units for fuel security is the result of a market failure” and that the RTO’s “ultimate approach to fuel security will need to be more sophisticated than the interim approach we approve today.”

Karl said the long-term solution the RTO is considering has three components: multiple day-ahead markets, a new ancillary service that’s integrated into that, and a new, voluntary, forward seasonal auction.

The RTO plans to launch a quantitative and qualitative analysis on its proposal, including potential cost impacts, next year and file a proposal with FERC by July 1, 2019, he said.

The new ancillary service would seek “to maintain an inventory — what we call a buffer stock in economics — of fuel that can be converted into electricity.”

While current markets optimize over a single day, the new design will optimize fuel supplies and stored energy over five or six days, Karl said. The voluntary auction is intended to provide an incentive for resource owners to procure fuel inventory for the next winter.

FERC’s ruling, which approved an out-of-market agreement to keep Exelon’s 2,274-MW Mystic plant running after its capacity obligations expire in May 2022, endorsed the ISO-NE proposal and rejected all of the New England Power Pool’s suggestions, said Paul Peterson of Synapse Energy Economics, which serves numerous NEPOOL participants, mostly in the End User and Alternative Resources sectors.

The NEPOOL alternative proposals approved by stakeholders and filed with FERC would limit the retention of resources for fuel security to Forward Capacity Auction 14, covering 2024-2025, and add FCA 15 only if necessary. NEPOOL also recommended requiring generators to report fuel status for winter; raising the threshold for triggering a fuel security reliability contract; and allocating reliability costs to the transmission portion of bill to reduce risk premiums from suppliers.

“Time will tell,” Peterson said. “We’ll have an opportunity four or five years from now to see whether or not the levels of fuel security that the [RTO] used to justify retention of Mystic really were true.

“And that’s one of the concerns on the ongoing back-and-forth between NEPOOL stakeholders and ISO-NE: What level of risk? What level of reliability? What level of cost? How are those things balanced out in a way that makes the region reasonably secure in the delivery of electricity?” Peterson said.

“How do we get an adequate supply of natural gas? How long is it going to take to build the offshore wind projects?” asked Massachusetts Rep. Thomas Golden, House chair of the state legislature’s Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy.

“There’s a misperception that New England is seeing a continually increasing demand for natural gas to generate electricity,” Peterson said.

“Since 2010, the share of power generated by natural gas has grown, but overall consumption of gas has declined and will continue to do so,” Peterson said. “By our projections, demand for natural gas in 2030 will have declined 41% from 2015 figures.” Peterson’s projection assumes the operation of a Massachusetts “clean hydro” transmission line by 2023 and the addition of 1,600 MW of offshore wind in 2027.

Millstone

Eric Annes, a technology analyst with Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP), said that both DEEP and the state’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority have found Dominion Energy’s Millstone nuclear plant to be at risk and that the 2,111-MW plant “is critical to our carbon goals and to winter fuel security.” (See Connecticut Likely to OK Millstone for Zero-carbon RFP.)

“No one has had experience with the winter we’re about to experience this year or will experience the next couple of years,” Peterson said. “Suppliers don’t know what kind of costs they’re going to be facing. When they go to customers to offer them a bid for energy supply for 18 months or two years in the future, they’re going to put a risk premium on that because of the costs they don’t know whether they can take care of or not — they don’t even know how big they’re going to be.”

The CLG on Thursday elected a new coordinating committee for the 2019-2020 term. The new members and their respective states are: Deena Frankel (Vt.); August Fromuth (N.H.); Douglas Gablinske (R.I.); D. Maurice Kreis (N.H.); Erika Niedowski (R.I.); Guy Page (Vt.); Robert Rio (Mass.); Joseph Rosenthal (Conn.); Mary Smith (Mass.); Rebecca Tepper (Mass.); Mary Usovicz (Mass.); and Liz Wyman (Maine).

MISO Board of Directors Briefs: Dec. 6, 2018

By Amanda Durish Cook

Market Platform Replacement Enters Year 3

CARMEL, Ind. — The MISO Board of Directors last week approved the RTO’s 2019 capital and operating budgets, allocating $20.5 million for another year of the RTO’s ongoing effort to replace its market platform.

MISO sought a $312.6 million operating budget, a 3% decrease from 2018, and a $27.2 million capital budget, an 8.3% decrease. The RTO’s administrative fee will continue to be 40 cents/MWh in 2019, the same as 2018’s rate.

Kevin Caringer, executive director of MISO’s technology team, praised early-phase vendor General Electric for attracting the usual levels of talent to the company despite its publicized troubles.

During a meeting of the board’s Technology Committee on Dec. 4, Caringer said MISO is currently “withholding judgment but having healthy skepticism” about GE’s ability to deliver software needed to clear the day-ahead market until future platform deliveries are evaluated by the RTO. GE is supposed to have an updated delivery schedule to MISO by the year-end.

Further talk on GE’s schedule was held for closed session of the board at the advice of MISO General Counsel Andre Porter.

The RTO will not announce a recommended platform vendor until the fourth quarter of 2019, when it finishes evaluating alternatives.

Director Michael Curran asked MISO to create milestones to gauge GE’s progress throughout 2019. “I’m struck by the fact that it’s going to be 2019 fourth quarter before we have a sense of the performance,” he said.

Caringer said that executives will provide quarterly updates.

MISO executives also confirmed that they have deliverable expectations for GE’s work but did not reveal dates.

Director Baljit Dail said he felt more positive about GE’s plan and new employees. He said the platform replacement schedule was on a “dark” trajectory earlier in 2018. (See MISO Platform Replacement Risks Delay, Budget Overrun.)

By the first quarter of 2019, MISO will upgrade its web service to support modern browsers.

“It’s a marathon, and we’re into the first 5 miles of it. We’ve hit a really, really good pace,” Dail told MISO executives, while commending the RTO’s work on the project so far.

DART Outages

During an IT scorecard presentation, MISO staff disclosed it suffered an outage of its day-ahead and real-time (DART) application on the afternoon of Sept. 11. The RTO said a process within the program was unresponsive, causing its unit dispatch system and look-ahead commitment tool to miss the targeted solve time of five minutes. MISO said the unit dispatch system, look-ahead commitment tool and its coordinated transaction scheduler were not solving, leading the RTO to perform manual workarounds during the 40-minute outage and restart.

MISO said it experiences DART outages occasionally and the problem requires a solution from GE. RTO staff said it provided operator logs to GE detailing the outage.

Curran, Kozey Get MISO Send-off

Porter will take over as board secretary in 2019, replacing outgoing Senior Vice President Stephen Kozey, board members have decided.

The board voted in closed session on the succession decision. As a rule, all MISO personnel matters are taken up privately.

“I won’t say you have you have big shoes to fill … I would say you have a big head to fill,” Curran told Porter, and after a beat and audience laughter, he said, “That probably didn’t come out right.”

Kozey is retiring at the end of the year after more than 18 years of service in MISO. Curran said Kozey helped build the RTO’s legal team and commemorated him with some of the first written words about Kozey in the MISO record: “The candidate has been recruited without the expense of an outside recruiting firm.”

The audience laughed then gave Kozey a standing ovation.

Curran, also departing MISO at the end of the year, likewise got a standing ovation. Curran has served on the board for 12 years.

Outside board counsel Karl Zobrist lauded Curran’s insistence on “plain language and transparency” during his board tenure.

“I’ve only known you for two years, but it feels like 20. You are the most generous mentor I’ve had,” Director Barbara Krumsiek told Curran.

Director Thomas Rainwater praised Curran’s “directness” and took a benevolent jab at him for now having to deal with ISO-NE’s sloped capacity demand curve. Curran, who will join ISO-NE’s Board of Directors in 2019, has long sparred with Independent Market Monitor David Patton over his appeals to adopt a downward-sloping demand curve in the MISO capacity market.

“I actually like you,” Director Mark Johnson joked. MISO CEO John Bear borrowed a Curran phrase and called him “wicked smart.”

Curran signed off saying, “I refuse to say ‘goodbye’; it’s ‘see you later.’”

Director Phyllis Currie will take over as board chair in 2019. (See MISO Board Selects Currie as New Chair.)

6 Added to MISO Membership

The board approved into MISO membership non-transmission-owning businesses Cleco Cajun, Nuclear Development, TransCanada Energy Sales, Xcel Energy Acorn Transmission and Xcel Energy Birch Transmission. The board also approved the transmission-owning membership application of the city of Henderson. The western Kentucky municipality owns Henderson Municipal Power and Light.

MISO Stakeholders: New Blueprint Needed for Tx Planning

By Amanda Durish Cook

CARMEL, Ind. — MISO stakeholders debating whether the RTO should embark on another regional transmission package said impact to customers and solid business cases should factor prominently.

MISO is asking whether it needs another long-term regional transmission plan like 2011’s multi-value project (MVP) portfolio as it experiences a changing fleet and an increasing need to access new resources. The topic was the focus of the Dec. 5 Advisory Committee’s quarterly hot topic discussion.

Aubrey Johnson | © RTO Insider

Aubrey Johnson, MISO executive director of system planning and competitive transmission, said the approximately 37 GW of wind projects under study in the queue cannot be supported by the RTO’s current system, even considering under-construction projects in the MVP portfolio. The majority of MISO’s 17-project portfolio will be online by the end of 2019.

MISO’s transmission queue contains 483 projects totaling about 80 GW. Executive Director of Resource Planning Patrick Brown said MISO may be reaching an economic “break point” where the costs of network upgrades render projects uneconomic, especially in the wind-heavy western portion of its footprint. “The general cost of network upgrades is going to drive them out,” Brown said.

Historically, 17% of proposed generators that enter MISO’s interconnection enter the generator interconnection agreement phase.

MISO queue as of late 2018 | MISO

‘Stand by Me’

Per tradition, moderator Julia Johnson began the hot topic conversation with a song selection, this time Ben E. King’s “Stand by Me.”

“Blackout!” Johnson jokingly interjected while the lyrics “when the night has come, and the land is dark, and the moon is the only light we’ll see” played in the room. More seriously, she said the takeaway from the song was for industry players to remain unafraid and working together on regional planning.

Alliant Energy’s Mitchell Myhre said he didn’t think MISO would need an entirely new transmission planning playbook but that it should analyze transmission project alternatives and engage in conversations about them. He said more analysis on transmission project alternatives may have lessened the late-stage disagreements over at least two projects in this year’s Transmission Expansion Plan. (See related story, MISO Board OKs Full MTEP 18 Over Stakeholder Complaints.)

“We ask that those conversations [about alternatives] happen at the front end of the process so they don’t come up in the back end of the process,” Myhre said.

Dec. 5 MISO Advisory Committee meeting | © RTO Insider

Multiple stakeholders said another possible crop of MVPs, if any, will need a new business case process, especially considering the fleet change that has occurred in the intervening years and the transmission cost allocation plan MISO will file at the end of the year.

“What if customers have had enough of transmission expansion? What if they’re tired of having transmission lines going across their farms, yards. … They have more options to bypass us completely. You can talk about MISO’s value until you’re blue in the face. What customers see is rising bills,” Madison Gas and Electric’s Megan Wisersky said.

She said customers might be better served by a reinforced distribution system than more transmission projects.

“We have to remember that these transmission lines do impose on communities,” said Coalition of Midwest Transmission Customers attorney Jim Dauphinais, who agreed that overbuilding transmission will result in more expensive bills.

Dauphinais said strong business cases are a must for new regional transmission.

“We think there needs to be a study; we think there needs to be a process” to see if a long-term regional transmission plan makes sense, Missouri Public Service Commissioner Daniel Hall agreed.

However, Kevin Murray, representing the Coalition of Midwest Transmission Customers, said a strong business case can’t be built on a speculative information about where resources might be constructed.

“We need to avoid the ‘build it and they will come’ sentiment. And we’ve seen hints of that in the past,” Murray said. He said some transmission projects might be more appropriately funded by interconnection customers for planned generation.

Clean Grid Alliance’s Beth Soholt said her company will continue to support the Cardinal Hickory Creek line project in Wisconsin, which she said had a “solid as ever” business case. She urged the MISO community no to get too hung up on the infeasibility of the entirety of the projects in the queue.

“We’re always going to have a queue. We’re always going to have projects entering because of economics,” Soholt said.

NRG Energy’s Tia Elliott, a representative of the Independent Power Producers sector, said grid buildout makes sense for a growing base of customers that prefer different resource options.

Soholt suggested that MTEP 15-year future scenarios should account for sustainability goals beyond renewable portfolio standards. Other stakeholders said MISO’s “limited fleet change” future scenario, which doesn’t anticipate widespread renewable use, is outdated and too improbable to be used in transmission planning. Although MISO staff said this year’s four future scenarios were developed for reuse over multiple planning cycles, some stakeholders said all of them should be revised. (See MISO to Recycle Tx Planning Scenarios for 2019.)

Others said accessing diverse resources may require the RTO’s own transmission pathway to connect MISO Midwest and MISO South. Dauphinais said the RTO should make “deeper dives” into chronic transmission constraints that don’t always show up in its annual market congestion planning study.