November 14, 2024

Storage Technology Still Outracing RTO Metrics, Rules

By Michael Kuser

CARROLL, N.H. — Energy storage technology is still moving faster than state regulators and the markets can accommodate, speakers told the 70th Annual Symposium of the New England Conference of Public Utilities Commissioners (NECPUC) on Tuesday.

Fioravanti | © RTO Insider

“Markets are moving at the pace of entrepreneurs, while states are moving at the pace of bureaucracy,” said Richard Fioravanti of energy consultancy Exponent.

The technology is changing so fast that CAISO recently had trouble qualifying a new lithium-ion battery storage project for California’s ancillary services market.

“You may think of some complicated reason why, but it was actually very simple,” said Jason Allen, vice president of operations and power for AltaGas Services U.S. The company’s 20-MW, 80-MWh facility in Pomona, Calif., holds 12,240 lithium-ion batteries. “We were ramping so fast they couldn’t” get an accurate data reading.

Allen | © RTO Insider

CAISO needs three data points to qualify a project during an ancillary services test: a starting point, one point on the ramp portion of the curve and an end-point.

“I can go from 20-MW charge and 20-MW discharge every 100 milliseconds, or 10 times a second,” said Allen. “It took [almost] two months working with them to get that simple issue worked out. And instead of the 10,000-MW/minute ramp rate, we actually detuned the system to 100 MW/minute and qualified for 36 MW [per minute], which is physically where we’re sitting right now in the market.”

Allen emphasized that his dealings with CAISO were not adversarial. “They have worked very closely with us to resolve the issues,” he said.

Speed isn’t Everything

Kaslow | © RTO Insider

“If you can ramp to your full load in much quicker than five minutes, it’s interesting but not necessarily valued,” said the director of market design and policy at FirstLight Power Resources, Tom Kaslow, who also serves as chair of the New England Power Pool’s Participants Committee. “As a practical matter, participation in the energy market, it really matters what you can do in five minutes — and if you can do it consistently, when the system operator needs it.”

There is a disconnect between the performance capability of new technologies and the market need for that level of performance, Kaslow said. “As a practical matter, while some of these new technologies bring a really interesting résumé to the table, their capabilities may actually exceed their ability to be valued, at least in the wholesale ISO market.”

Bartlett | © RTO Insider

Kaslow said battery storage can also present a challenge to RTOs’ operation of regulation markets. “I was on a panel last week where [PJM officials] were indicating that they [were] having problems, because achieving the neutral state of charge while on regulation is actually yielding periods where the charging is working in the opposite direction of their actual regulation needs in that particular interval. So there are things that need to be dealt with in respect to that much smaller market.”

He explained afterward that PJM had implemented a solution in January: PJM is placing a limit on the charging function when the regulating capability is needed to manage the area control error in a direction opposite to charging. Kaslow said it is unclear whether New England will face a similar problem.

Moderator Ned Bartlett, Massachusetts undersecretary of energy and environmental affairs, said storage is a small portion of the Massachusetts electric supply compared to other commodity supply chains. Storage of “food, water, gasoline, even oil [and] natural gas distillates [is] often close to 10%” of the daily consumption of each of these commodities, he said. “In Massachusetts right now … approximately 1% of our electricity used on a daily basis [is] in a storage capacity.”

Cheap and Cheaper

Jenkins | © RTO Insider

Jesse Jenkins, a Ph.D. candidate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said his research indicates energy storage costs must fall 60 to 85% to be competitive with gas peaking plants and that the value of storage drops with its volume.

“The first gigawatt of storage that you might stick in the New England system has a very high value. It displaces our most costly resources that are used most infrequently,” Jenkins said. “And as we deploy more and more storage, the challenge of displacing additional capacity increases and the marginal value steadily falls.”

But assessing the total value of storage means looking at the long-term value of the assets, according to Allen, who explained the economics of the Pomona storage facility.

“Yes, the up-front cost is more, but you look at the operating costs,” Allen said. “Right now it’s about $5/kWh on an ongoing [operations and maintenance] basis. There’s no fuel, very little maintenance. Our technicians who used to [work] 24/7, for now they’re on day shift to do minor maintenance. … You also need to consider what it’s doing to your other assets. I’ve got a couple [cogeneration] units that I use right now that are dispatched for about 300 starts a year. We are just destroying those units; maintenance has gone through the roof. Getting the storage in place can really help dampen those curves and control our costs.”

More Interest Pushes Grid and Regulators

energy storage necpuc
Parent | © RTO Insider

Christopher Parent, ISO-NE director of market development, said the RTO is seeing increasing interest by storage developers. “The market is maybe starting to support [storage], and people are starting to look out at what the future is and the revenue opportunities and that in certain cases, now it is economic,” he said.

The message for policymakers? “For most storage stakeholders, what they really want to see is just the markets opening up, access opening up,” Fioravanti said. “Don’t try to predict where the business cases are going, where the technologies are going. Let the markets drive that.”

Why is storage complicated? he asked. Why all the questions when there is increasing deployment, with about 2.6 GW predicted to come online by 2022?

“The reason is because … it can go everywhere and do many things,” Fioravanti said. “This becomes problematic when people look to make policy off it because … we have it on the transmission side, it works on the distribution side, we’re putting it on the customer side. All of these create issues.”

Electric Utilities and More

The Pomona storage site, formerly a paper mill, illustrates the fast changes taking place in the storage business, according to Allen. Gas-fired boilers served the paper mill, he said. “In the early ‘80s they put in a cogen unit; they innovated lower cost electric. Paper mill went away, that got torn down; the cogen unit went into the deregulated California market. We now built this battery storage facility inside the warehouse that was there. The cogen unit is still there, still in the market [but] hasn’t run for a year.”

The storage facility won a contract in the request for proposals issued in mid-2016 to counter the potential loss of the Aliso Canyon storage facility.

“The big concern there was the potential loss of gas, loss of [natural gas supply for] peaking units,” Allen said. “The mandate of that arm of the [power purchase agreement] was that we could provide four hours of [reliability assurance] service with the battery, hence the 80-MWh structure. We were awarded this in June, actually started construction in early August and it went online on Dec. 31, 2016. [Southern California Edison] said it was the fastest generating asset they’ve ever had go from groundbreaking to in-service.”

energy storage necpuc
Panelists: left to right: Tom Kaslow, Director, Market Design & Policy, FirstLight Power Resources; Christopher Parent, ISO-NE Director of Market Development; Jason Allen, VP of Operations and Power for AltaGas Services U.S.; Richard Fioravanti of energy consultancy Exponent; Jesse Jenkins, PhD candidate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and moderator Ned Bartlett, Undersecretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs | © RTO Insider

Fioravanti reminded the audience of the ubiquity of batteries, saying the industry now manufactures about 5 billion a year of the type that most people have in their laptops.

“That’s going to go up, probably double, when the [Tesla] Gigafactory fully comes online,” Fioravanti said. “Of all the batteries out there — how [storage] has penetrated into our vehicle, transportation world, our aircraft world, our shipping world and all of our everyday devices — to think that we’re going to draw the line at the utility world and say it’s going to stop here, I think can be almost a little silly.”

PJM OC Briefs

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — PJM will release a request for proposals next January for new black start units intended to begin operation in 2020.

PJM Operating Committee black tie
Schweizer | © RTO Insider

PJM’s David Schweizer said the process is the second iteration of a five-year cycle that began in 2013. (See “New Black Start Units Will Have New Annual Revenue Requirements,” PJM Markets and Reliability Committee Briefs.)

“The purpose of the RTO-wide black start RFP is to look at the system every five years and essentially reoptimize the effectiveness of the cranking paths,” Schweizer said. “What really does drive the amount of black start megawatts and units needed is the critical load amount and the need to serve critical load across cranking paths.”

Existing black start units are expected to remain in service and are not required to respond to the RFP, Schweizer said. However, an approved black start unit could be issued a one-year termination notice if system changes mean that it is no longer serving critical load. The critical-load analysis is being done this year, he said, so “we should have a good idea by the time that RFP is issued what the critical load will be.”

“Even if we don’t have a shortage, the RFP gives us an opportunity to reoptimize the process,” he said.

Seiler Takes the Reins of the OC

PJM Operating Committee black tie
Seiler | © RTO Insider

Ken Seiler, PJM’s executive director of system operations, has assumed the chairmanship of the Operating Committee as of June. He succeeds Mike Bryson, who remains vice president of operations.

Seiler brings 17 years of PJM experience to the position. Prior to PJM, he worked at General Public Utilities for 14 years as a field engineer building substations and transmission lines before moving into other positions, such as managing transmission engineering, construction management and distribution system operations.

Seiler expects the committee to focus on “the evolving resource mix and its subsequent impact on how we operate the system today and in the future, along with the resilience of the power grid.”

Stakeholders Challenge PJM Decisions on Reserve-Shortage Identification

Ciabattoni | © RTO Insider

PJM’s Joe Ciabattoni said PJM’s new shortage pricing algorithm hasn’t identified any shortages, despite complaints from stakeholders that data available online appear to show shortages. (See “Shortage Rule Takes Effect amid FERC Silence,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

Citigroup Energy’s Barry Trayers asked what it takes to create a shortage case.

“You’d look at all your resources, all your ramp rates, and if you’re short of your reserve requires, you’d trigger shortage,” Ciabattoni said.

Tom Hyzinski of GT Power Group asked if there have been shortage cases that system operators haven’t approved, or if there just have not been any shortages yet.

Dispatchers have to “sanity-check” cases and approve them, Ciabattoni said, but situations haven’t warranted a shortage case.

“The cases are the cases,” he said. Dispatchers “won’t go in and play with the numbers in cases.”

However, Calpine’s David “Scarp” Scarpignato argued that PJM’s publicly available data show that several situations have shortage pricing under its new rules related to FERC Order 825. PJM staff argued that they don’t have to implement shortage pricing if the units already dispatched are ramping up to meet the increased reserve requirement, but Scarp said the wording of the order clearly states that the RTO must implement shortage pricing as the units ramp up.

Staff said part of the issue is that units aren’t following their dispatch signals, but Scarp said that’s no justification for not declaring a shortage.

Order 825 “says quite the opposite,” he said. “It says: ‘regardless of cause.’ … It’s black and white.”

Staff suggested that an operator might purposefully disobey the signals to induce shortage pricing. Scarp also dismissed that, saying such action is so egregious that the actor would “probably end up in FERC jail.”

Seiler attempted to quell the argument by saying that it’s a new procedure that will likely require ongoing adjustments.

“We’re not going to settle it here,” he said.

“There’s nothing to settle,” Scarp shot back. He asked to convene a discussion between attorneys for each side.

Staff agreed to develop a report of security constrained economic dispatch cases that were not approved by dispatchers but would have resulted in shortage pricing.

OC to Add Report on DER

Bencheck | © RTO Insider

PJM plans to produce a monthly report on its progress developing distributed energy resource rules, PJM staff said.

FirstEnergy’s Jim Benchek urged all stakeholders involved with DER to contribute to the process so they can “know what’s coming and be able to impact what’s coming.”

“When you’re talking about DER, it’s really who the DER is connected to,” he said. “If you have the potential to have DERs connected to your system, get engaged.”

PJM to Expand Data Capabilities, Discontinue Flat-File Support

Zadlo | © RTO Insider

The capabilities of Data Miner 2 are being expanded, PJM’s Thomas Zadlo explained, which means companies have a year to upgrade their internal systems before the flat files many member systems rely upon disappear.

“Data Miner 2 will become the central source for PJM public data,” Zadlo said.

The expanded database will go live in August and flat file postings will be retired in August 2018. Zadlo urged all stakeholders to send representatives to PJM’s Tech Change Forum to stay informed and be prepared.

Bryson Leads on Next Steps for Fuel Resiliency

Bryson | © RTO Insider

PJM’s Bryson laid out a roadmap through 2018 to increase grid resiliency, focusing on short-term risks — such as assuring black start service — and gradually extending the perspective to discuss long-term goals such as enhanced dispatching and strategic islanding for critical infrastructure.

The roadmap comes a little more than a month after Bryson led PJM’s publicity campaign on its recently released resiliency whitepaper. (See PJM: Increased Gas Won’t Hurt Reliability, Too Much Solar Will.)

The paper found no point at which the percentage of gas-fired units caused reliability threats, but that a capacity mix of more than 20% of solar would threaten reliability. It was narrowly focused and purposely didn’t address other topics, such as environmental issues or whether natural gas infrastructure could keep pace with the high percentage of gas-fired generators PJM’s analysis said the fleet could handle.

– Rory D. Sweeney

Regulators, Utilities See New Roles in Shifting Industry

By Michael Kuser

CARROLL, N.H. — Residential customers installing behind-the-meter generation are just the latest factor stretching electric power utilities far beyond their original role as vertically integrated monopolies, speakers said Tuesday at the 70th Annual Symposium of the New England Conference of Public Utilities Commissioners (NECPUC).

“The most intermittent resource could be the customer,” said Barbara Tyran of the Electric Power Research Institute, part of a panel that explored the future of regulation and utilities by looking at parallels between the telecom and electric sectors.

necpuc behind-the-meter generation
Janet Besser, Northeast Clean Energy Council (left) and Kathryn Bailey, Commissioner, New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission | © RTO Insider

Tyran said the electric industry’s data analytics are not sufficient for the changes coming. “It’s almost like we’re on a freeway driving 55 mph, but we’re only allowed to open our eyes once every 15 seconds,” she said. “That’s how much situational awareness is occurring. We need sensors throughout that system; we need to understand what that data is generating and what the value of it is and how to use it to improve the system performance, enhance the customer experience and also create new efficiencies.”

“Over the past 30 years, we as a region have shifted away from vertically integrated, economically regulated utilities, the ones that were envisioned by the foundational regulatory standards of just and reasonable rates for monopolistic utilities,” said New Hampshire Public Utilities Commissioner Kathryn Bailey, who moderated the panel. “However, I think in New England, we haven’t gone as far with the transformation of the electric industry as we have with the telecom industry.”

Janet Gail Besser, executive vice president of the Northeast Clean Energy Council and former chair of the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities, said customer adoption of solar and other distributed technologies is the latest step in a process that began with competition in the generation sector following the 1978 Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act and grew with restructuring in the 1990s and the adoption of energy efficiency. She also pointed out that further changes are coming with the electrification of transportation and buildings.

Restructuring and Social Policy

One cause of the restructuring of the electric industry was the disparity between retail and the wholesale prices, according to consultant Louise McCarren, former chair of the Vermont Public Service Board and former commissioner of the state Department of Public Service.

“State regulators thought they could load anything onto” retail prices, McCarren said. “Social programs, conservation programs, you name it. And that price went up, way above the wholesale price.”

Nonetheless, McCarren said that her experience in Vermont has shown that regulatory frameworks can provide valuable public benefits, such as increased rural access to broadband service.

NECPUC behind-the-meter generation
Lorraine Akiba, Commissioner, Hawaii PUC | © RTO Insider

Hawaii Public Utilities Commissioner Lorraine Akiba said that “in the distributed energy resources paradigm shift of the future, we’ll actually be able to [support rural populations] more cost effectively because microgrids, and putting generation closer to the load saves all that transmission expense. In our jurisdiction, we require you to at least look at non-transmission alternatives.”

NECPUC Behind-the-meter generation
ISO-NE Board Member Kathleen Abernathy | © RTO Insider

Regulators need not only to look at what markets can do, but also at what they can’t do, such as addressing social policy needs, said ISO-NE Director Kathleen Abernathy, a former Federal Communications Commissioner. “But don’t decide not to do something because it’s too expensive for low-income customers … you can fix that later or provide the necessary supports,” she said.

Competition forces companies to do things that might not be in their own economic interest but that benefit the public, said Abernathy, who cited unlimited cellphone minutes as an example. “Way back when in the wireless world, we used to pay per call,” she said. “It was only when the FCC allocated additional wireless licenses that all of a sudden you got unlimited minutes. That never would have been mandated by regulators; that happened in the market place. So embrace this kind of disruption and go with the flow on it.”

As with the telecom industry, technology preceded regulation, Besser said, giving customers an alternative to using incumbents’ landline phones. One question is whether some entity other than electric distribution companies will find ways to provide customer and system data to customers, third parties and the EDCs themselves, she said.

Electric Utilities Need to Add Value

“If you shift the risk away from the customer and to the utility, in theory you should shift the reward structure,” McCarren said. “And that is really hard to do, because when the wheels come off you still have to provide adequate and reliable services to all your citizens.”

In 1970s Vermont, hot water heaters were radio controlled in an effort to smooth the load curve. “The only problem was when you had an outage and you had to go reset them. But that was load control,” McCarren said. “Now the customer can do that, so if the utility wants to stay relevant, they have to add value.

“It’s Darwinian. If [companies] can’t change, they’re going to be roadkill,” she continued. “Is it your job as a regulator to create incentives or disincentives that encourage them to participate, or is [it] their job to figure it out?”

Akiba and others highlighted the importance of utilities’ ability to use big data analytics to operate the energy networks of the future.

“I feel sometimes we’re like the Oracle, that very sage character” in the 1999 movie “The Matrix,” Akiba said. “She has to make correct decisions, and she gives cryptic advice to Neo as he navigates the Matrix. … But we do have to keep our eye on the future trends and actions transforming the energy industry.”

NECPUC behind-the-meter generation
Regulation Innovation Panel left to right: Barbara Tyran, Electric Power Research Institute; Louise McCarren, consultant; Lorraine Akiba, Commissioner, Hawaii Public Utilities Commission; Kathleen Abernathy, Board Member, ISO-NE; Janet Besser, Northeast Clean Energy Council; and moderator Kathryn Bailey, Commissioner, New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission | © RTO Insider

Abernathy said that “sometimes a corporation’s addiction to a framework that guarantees certain revenue flows actually prohibits the kind of risk-taking that is essential for survival. … There’s no question that traditional regulatory frameworks actually prevent creativity and innovation, and people who are creative and innovative, they leave those companies for other ones who are doing more interesting work.”

McCarren said the regulatory solution “isn’t just one-size-fits-all, but going back to consumerization, localized solutions and keeping very flexible. … A very simple but effective rate design, that may or not require smart meters, can get you really far. The issue now is will we have to increase the charge to cover this fixed cost. … As long as it’s adequate, efficient and fair, it’ll work.”

Overheard at NECPUC 2017 Symposium

CARROLL, N.H. — More than 300 regulators, market participants, consultants and RTO officials traveled to rainy Mount Washington last week for the 70th Annual Symposium of the New England Conference of Public Utilities Commissioners (NECPUC). Here’s some of what we heard.

NH Gov. Seeks Lower Power Prices

NECPUC nuclear waste NECPUC 2017 symposium
New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu | © RTO Insider

New Hampshire’s electric rates, among the highest in the country, are a big concern for Gov. Chris Sununu, he told a lunchtime audience on June 5.

The high cost of electricity “affects business, it affects families, it affects those on fixed income,” said Sununu, a former environmental engineer who took office in January. “New Hampshire has an aging population, with the median age older [than] Florida, believe it or not. … It tells me more folks are going to be on fixed incomes. We already have a pretty high property tax here. … That means when you talk about flexibility in discretionary income, it’s pretty minimal for some folks. So when we talk about utility costs and energy costs and where we’re going … it’s our job to provide them with as much flexibility as possible.”

At an average of more than 16 cents/kWh, New Hampshire ranked sixth in retail electric rates in 2015, according to the Energy Information Administration’s most recent available data. Only remote Hawaii and Alaska — and New England neighbors Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts — were more expensive.

Sununu blasted the state’s energy plan, calling it “terrible” and “very poorly written.” He also defended his decision not to join California, New York and other states in pledging to abide by the Paris Agreement on climate change.

“I found it humorous that the governors of California and New York — two of the worst environmental polluters in the country — thought that everyone should sign a piece of paper to reaffirm their environmental commitments,” he said, recalling his time living in smoggy California and cleaning up hazardous waste sites in New York. “We are one of the best in the country in terms of our environmental stewardship.”

Officials Hope for Progress on Nuclear Waste

Spent fuel rods and other radioactive waste from four decommissioned nuclear plants in New England sit on-site today, in some cases more than two decades after the plants were shuttered.

Nuclear Waste Panel left to right: Rod McCullum of the Nuclear Energy Institute; Anthony J. O’Donnell, Commissioner, Maryland Public Service Commission; Ed Mayer, Holtec; Robert Capstick, Yankee Atomic Electric Company, Maine Yankee, and Connecticut Yankee; Katrina McMurrian, Nuclear Waste Strategy Coalition; and panel moderator Sarah Hofmann, Member of the Vermont Public Service Board | © RTO Insider

That provided the context for a panel on the status of commercial nuclear waste disposal titled “The Slow and the Furious,” the former referring to the federal government, the latter to unhappy utilities and state officials.

American electricity users paid more than $20 billion into the Nuclear Waste Fund between 1982 and 2014, a figure that has more than doubled as interest has accrued. About $11 billion of the $46 billion in the fund has been spent on the program so far, said Katrina McMurrian, executive director of the Nuclear Waste Strategy Coalition, an organization of state and utility officials formed in 1993 to push for a final resting place for radioactive waste.

Robert Capstick (left) and Katrina McMurrian | © RTO Insider

McMurrian and other speakers saw reasons for optimism.

Plans for a permanent waste repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada were squelched in 2009 when President Barack Obama ordered the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to stop work on a licensing permit, a move taken at the behest of then-Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.). The license application for the site, 140 miles northwest of Las Vegas, was the product of 30 years of work and billions in spending. Obama’s decision outraged nuclear operators and state regulators.

With Reid retired and a new president in office, two major political obstacles to Yucca are gone. President Trump’s proposed 2018 budget seeks funds for both the permanent repository at Yucca and “consolidated interim storage,” McMurrian said.

She outlined several bills have been introduced or are under discussion in Congress.

A comprehensive Senate bill, which was introduced in two prior Congresses, hasn’t been introduced again yet this session, but a comprehensive House “discussion draft” is expected to be filed soon, she said.

Neither specifically identify permanent disposal facilities. The House draft, the Nuclear Waste Policy Amendments Act of 2017, builds on existing NWPA direction to move ahead with Yucca. The Senate bill proposed seeking locations to volunteer for both permanent disposal and interim storage.

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) has introduced a narrower bill on private interim storage, the Interim Consolidated Storage Act (H.R. 474).

Ed Mayer | © RTO Insider

NRC Chairwoman Kristine Svinicki has asked Congress for $30 million to review a revived license application for Yucca Mountain. At a congressional hearing Wednesday, she said it could take three to five years to resolve more than 300 legal challenges to Yucca Mountain, many of which were filed by the state over alleged risks to groundwater.

Svinicki also said it would take three years to complete licensing on sites in Texas and New Mexico, where private contractors are seeking to temporarily store waste.

One of those companies is Holtec International, whose program director, Ed Mayer, briefed NECPUC on the company’s New Mexico project, a 1,000-acre site he said was capable of storing all the waste from all the commercial reactors in the U.S.

Spent fuel rods must be cooled in 40-foot-deep water tanks for at least five years before being put into dry casks, where they need to be air-cooled by natural ventilation for at least another five years before being buried deep underground.

Robert Capstick, director of regulatory affairs for Yankee Atomic Electric Co., Maine Yankee and Connecticut Yankee, presented slides showing the challenge of moving nuclear waste. Dry transportation casks weigh about 100 tons, but Capstick noted that the decommissioning of the Yankee plants has already resulted in the transportation of radioactive reactor pressure vessels weighing between 300 and 1,000 tons.

“While the removal of the reactor pressure vessels from the Yankee sites was certainly a challenge, the slides showed that the transportation of large radioactive components during plant decommissioning was safely completed – and those packages far exceeded the size and weight of the future spent fuel transportation casks,” Capstick explained afterward.

— Michael Kuser

PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — It took another hour of debate, but stakeholders at last week’s Market Implementation Committee meeting found just enough consensus to approve a problem statement and issue charge developed by PJM to analyze potential changes in how energy efficiency resources can participate in wholesale markets.

The vote was precipitated by a Kentucky Public Service Commission order saying state retail electric customers have no authority “to participate directly or indirectly in any wholesale electric market.”

The Advanced Energy Economy has also petitioned FERC to issue a declaratory order on the topic.

Foster | © RTO Insider

“There was a state commission that was being asked to clarify its requirements” for letting in-state energy efficiency aggregators bid into the RTO’s energy efficiency market, PJM’s Denise Foster said. “We looked at the rules in PJM and realized there was no way for us to respect any determination that came out of that process. … There was a lot of discussion about jurisdiction … but there was also a lot of discussion about how proscriptive the problem statement and issue charge was — so we cleaned up the problem statement.”

Foster was careful to clarify that PJM doesn’t want to get involved in the regulatory process but seeks to move the analysis forward to be ready to take action as soon as FERC has made a decision. (See “Energy Efficiency Proposal Sparks Debate over State Jurisdiction, Stakeholder Identification,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

Representatives of utilities involved in the issue — including Dana Horton of American Electric Power, Chuck Dugan of the East Kentucky Power Cooperative, Jim Benchek of FirstEnergy and Brian Garnett of Duke Energy — all voiced support for the problem statement. Benchek pointed out that rule changes should be careful to avoid unintended effects on electric distribution companies.

Rick Drom, an attorney representing AEE along with an unnamed energy efficiency aggregator in Kentucky, reiterated his position that the activity is premature.

“I was glad to hear [the utilities] say that once the FERC jurisdictional issues are resolved, then we can move forward with the problem statement, because I think it’s very clear that until FERC jurisdictional issues are resolved, it would be difficult to modify the Tariff,” he said. “To me, this is a simple educational issue.”

Energy efficiency resource providers contract with manufacturers and wholesale retailers, not with retail customers, Drom said, suggesting that the Kentucky PSC might not be aware of that nuance. He warned that by moving forward with the problem statement, “PJM stakeholders will be spending resources on a problem that simply does not exist.”

Dugan | © RTO Insider

Dugan said retail customers’ rates will be adversely impacted by energy efficiency providers.

“I don’t think any education is going to change their mind,” he said of the Kentucky PSC. “I truly believe they knew what they were talking about.”

Other stakeholders raised points on both sides of the issue, including EnerNOC’s Katie Guerry, who said PJM’s demand response processes still have “kinks” to be worked out. “I do see value in working out the kinks in advance,” she said.

CPower’s Bruce Campbell motioned to defer a vote on the problem statement until after FERC has ruled, a measure seconded by Tom Rutigliano, who represents energy efficiency providers. That measure failed.

Stakeholders discussed whether the problem statement’s language should be further neutralized. Foster said PJM was very deliberate in its word choices because it didn’t want to be in a position of determining whether participants need to be in compliance.

The measure eventually passed with 85 votes in favor, 81 opposed and 14 abstentions.

All DR Registration Changes Fail

After months of discussion in the Demand Response Subcommittee, all three proposals for increasing flexibility to add and subtract resources from aggregators’ portfolios failed to garner necessary stakeholder support. The three options differed on registration deadlines and testing requirements. (See “DR Open Registration Under Consideration,” PJM Market Implementation Committee Briefs.)

Guerry and NRG Energy’s Brian Kauffman were quick to register their opposition.

“At the outset of this discussion, we had reservations because we knew it was going to be very complicated” and create administrative problems along with additional costs that must be passed on to customers, Guerry said. “From our perspective, it just sort of spiraled out of control.”

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring challenged Guerry’s opposition, asking whether she opposed the idea of requiring removal of resources that can no longer reduce load.

“Do I have a specific opposition to that? No, I do not … but these are the additional layers of complexity that we believe are unnecessary just to allow the registration window to be open beyond the window that it’s open to right now,” she said.

“One person’s complexity is another’s solution to a problem, but I understand what you’re saying,” Bowring said.

Campbell, who proposed the problem statement, acknowledged that he hadn’t foreseen some of the issue’s complexity but was simply attempting to make DR comparable to generators, which can enter PJM’s markets at any time.

FTR Revisions Continue Forward

Bleiweis | © RTO Insider

Three new proposals for revising financial transmission rights rules moved forward, although one didn’t advance as easily as the rest.

The wave of FTR actions began when stakeholders endorsed by acclamation revisions to Manual 28 regarding allocation of balancing congestion.

A problem statement and issue charge presented by Direct Energy’s Jeff Whitehead to review the allocation of surplus funds for day-ahead congestion and FTR auction revenues received a little more discussion. GT Power Group’s Dave Pratzon asked if the adjective “alternative” could be substituted for “appropriate” in describing the disposition of the surpluses. The issue, which had received substantial debate previously, was subsequently approved. (See New FTR Task Force on the Way for PJM?)

The final measure, resolving delayed results for periods of the year when there are several overlapping FTR products available, didn’t fare as easily. Bruce Bleiweis of DC Energy suggested the issue might be technological.

“We think that PJM may not be using the most efficient clearing engine,” he said.

PJM Market Implementation Committee
Scarpignato | © RTO Insider

Other stakeholders offered differing perspectives. Eventually, Calpine’s David “Scarp” Scarpignato threw up his hands to register his confusion.

“I can’t vote to approve this problem statement because too many people are interpreting it in too many ways,” he said. “I hate telling people to come back with another rock, but this doesn’t do it for me.”

As the meeting broke for lunch, stakeholders debated the issue and eventually agreed upon a two-phased problem statement and issue charge. The first phase would explore reducing the overlapping periods while maintaining liquidity through other market enhancements, and the second would explore other ways to solve the issues, such as through algorithm or technological changes. The revised document subsequently received endorsement.

PJM’s Asanga Perera noted that a special session of the MIC will be held on June 23 to begin exploring the issues.

Started from the Bottom, Now We’re at the MTSL

PJM and the Monitor remain at odds over how much compensation black start units should be allowed to receive for storing fuel.

The RTO is willing to cover storage costs for the oil units require to meet its black start requirement — usually 16 hours of operation — plus the minimum tank suction level (MTSL), which is the lowest amount of fuel needed to provide adequate supply to the generation unit, PJM’s Tom Hauske said.

Bowring argued that the incremental cost of keeping the level of fuel needed for black start capabilities is zero. The tanks are often used for multiple units and are so large that the black start needs are but a small fraction of the tank’s overall MTSL.

Bowring later added that his office agrees with PJM that black start units should be paid carrying charges on the fuel required to meet the 16-hour obligation and for the MTSL when there are tanks dedicated to them.

“But the PJM approach can require customers to pay for more than 10 times the MTSL required for the black start unit, depending on the size of the tank,” he said. “The PJM approach assigns to the black start unit the MTSL for a very large tank that was designed to serve another unit and continues to serve that other unit. The actual MTSL does not change by even a gallon when a black start unit is added for such a unit. The result is unfair to all the customers who pay for black start service.”

Balancing Differences

A PJM analysis of FTR data became a battleground when Roy Shanker, an industry consultant, took exception to the numbers suggesting that auction revenue rights holders benefited from a recent FERC order that allocated the costs for balancing congestion to load.

Perera | © RTO Insider

Perera presented the analysis, which suggested that the value of FTRs for the 2017/18 delivery year would have increased by $91 million compared to the previous year, during which balancing congestion was allocated to the ARR holders.

While other stakeholders defended the analysis as an important backward-looking review, Shanker complained that it seemed to be sending a message.

“I do mind when [the numbers are] represented as a metric of the benefit to the ARR holders,” he said.

“I agree it’s a material difference in perspective: I’m paying for balancing congestion and you’re not,” Direct Energy’s Whitehead countered.

“And you always should have been!” Shanker immediately shot back.

Bowring said the numbers should be neutral, but analysis should still be done. “I would be shocked if there’s a net benefit, but if there is, there is,” he said.

– Rory D. Sweeney

PJM Planning Tx Expansion Advisory Committees Briefs

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. — While some components remain to be finished, the major elements of PJM’s proposed structure for its competitive planning processes moved past the Planning Committee at last week’s meeting.

PJM’s Michael Herman presented the final version of the new Manual 14F, which outlines rules for competitive bidding on transmission projects as established in FERC Order 1000. The committee finally endorsed the manual, which has struggled to gather momentum and was sent back to staff for revisions several times in recent months.

Members have criticized the manual for its silence on how project bidders might include cost-containment provisions in their proposals and any preferential treatment such assurances might provide, but PJM has pushed to make the manual active prior to opening a competitive-bidding window later this summer. Staff have organized a series of special sessions of the committee to develop cost-containment rules, which will later be added to the manual. (See PJM Kicks off Transmission Cost Cap Initiative.)

Glatz | © RTO Insider

John Farber, who represents the Delaware Public Service Commission, asked if construction contractors must meet any standards. PJM’s Sue Glatz assured him the manual includes prequalification standards for bidders.

Members also endorsed a series of design standards to be included in designated entity agreements, which successful bidders must sign with PJM. The endorsement covers standards for overhead lines, substation construction and system protection. The Designated Entity Design Standards Task Force is still developing standards for underground and HVDC lines, Herman said.

PJM is planning to transition the task force into a subcommittee that would continue to review and update standards based on biennial reviews instead of being disbanded following the completion of its charter, Herman said.

PJM Planning Committee forecasted summer peaks
Tatum | © RTO Insider

Steve Lieberman and Ed Tatum, who represent American Municipal Power, reiterated previous concerns that the design standards will not require additional endorsement from the Markets and Reliability Committee, which is the standard procedure for most rule implementation at PJM.

“I think that’s really inappropriate,” Tatum said.

Glatz explained that the standards are referenced in revisions to Manual 14C, which will require MRC endorsement. Those revisions, which require that all designated entities follow the design standards, subsequently received planning committee endorsement. (See “DEDS Task Force Ends at PC,” PJM Planning Committee/TEAC Briefs.)

McGlynn Becomes PC’s New Chair

Paul McGlynn, PJM’s senior director of system planning who has long overseen the Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee, has assumed duties as the chairman of the Planning Committee. He succeeds Steve Herling, PJM’s vice president of planning.

McGlynn acknowledged Herling “will certainly be a tough act to follow” but was confident stakeholders won’t notice much of a change in leadership styles.

He brings a decade at PJM and three decades of industry experience to the position, having started in 2007 as a manager of transmission planning and being promoted to his current position two years later. Prior to that, he worked at PECO Energy for 20 years in various engineering and operations positions.

He expects the committee to focus on evolving the planning process as needs change to integrate new technologies, such as distributed energy resources, storage and system resilience. He also plans to work with stakeholders on refining PJM’s Order 1000-compliant competitive bidding processes “to improve efficiency and transparency.”

PJM Reconsidering Planning Assumptions

PJM staff announced plans to revisit several of its planning assumptions in light of new data. The revisions come as the RTO analyzes how it plans to address resilience in system planning. PJM’s Mark Sims said the goal will be to consider potential events and create simulations to study system performance in the face of infrastructure failures such as voltage collapse or thermal issues.

“We want to think about what could happen and run the simulations,” he said. “From a planning point of view, [the focus will be to] absorb and adapt.”

“Resilience is a really broad topic,” McGlynn said. “What we want to focus on, obviously, is what resilience means from a planning discussion.”

First on the list is PJM’s light-load reliability analysis criteria, which were established in 2011. A lot has changed since then, Sims explained, including EPA’s publication of its Mercury and Air Toxics Standards and the emergence of the shale gas boom.

“At the time, the data was telling us that natural gas was barely operating during the [light-load] period,” he said.

Demand has also dipped significantly in the interim. Several of PJM’s 27 zones experience light-load conditions of less than 35% of the forecasted summer peak load for a “significant number” of hours, he said. That difference can create voltage spikes that cause problems for grid operators.

PJM plans to begin updating its light-load criteria with several changes, Sims said. First, the load-modeling assumption will be reduced from the current 50% of forecasted summer peak to a more appropriate percentage. Next, natural gas’ capacity factor for base generation dispatch will be increased from the current 0% to a percentage more in line with current usage. Additionally, PJM plans to establish a ramping limit for natural gas based on statistical data.

Finally, the deliverability ramping limit for wind would be increased from 80 to 100% of nameplate capacity.

Sims acknowledged there are other tweaks to be made, but they would be “sharpening the pencil” beyond addressing the concerns at hand.

“We have some definite issues, for example, with the lower loads and natural gas that are here today,” he said.

PJM also plans to revise its capacity emergency transfer limit (CETL) calculation methodology. Currently, PJM models firm existing transfers and assumes non-firm flows will materialize up to the transmission system’s capacity limits. But data confirms that those external zones will likely be experiencing the same capacity emergencies and unable to provide support. NYISO’s eastern region and PJM have peaked on the same day, and sometimes the same hour in four of the past six years, Sims said.

“A lot of questions came out of the [Regional Transmission Expansion Plan] planning parameters,” he said. “We’re assuming our neighboring systems can support us, but maybe that doesn’t make sense.”

Sims also noted that, unlike HVDC lines that can adjust power flows quickly, phase-angle regulators must be manually adjusted and “take time.” Several of the ties between NYISO and PJM are controlled by PARs.

Many of the insights Sims noted were pointed out by Public Service Electric and Gas in a letter the utility sent to PJM’s Board of Managers in May. (See “Following PSE&G Complaint, PJM to Discuss Updated CETL Requirements,” PJM Planning Committee/TEAC Briefs.)

Analysis Strategy Announced for Market Efficiency Projects

PJM Planning Committee forecasted summer peaks
Dumitriu | © RTO Insider

The plan for analyzing market efficiency project proposals in the 2016-17 window begins with interregional projects, PJM’s Nick Dumitriu said at last week’s meeting of the Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee. The window is part of PJM’s RTEP.

Interregional projects will be considered first, he said, because they require the most lead time when factoring in interregional coordination. Both energy and potential capacity benefits will be examined, he said.

Proposals for the PPL region will be analyzed next, followed by those in the Baltimore Gas and Electric region. “Slam dunk” projects — considered low-cost upgrades with high benefit-to-cost ratios and minimum competition — will be analyzed in parallel. All other regional projects will be analyzed last.

Responding to an inquiry from LS Power’s Sharon Segner, Dumitriu confirmed that PJM will re-evaluate previously submitted projects in parallel and present them after the base case is completed, likely at the July or August TEAC meetings. PJM hopes to have the interregional, PPL and “slam dunks” ready for presentation to the board at its meeting in October, with BGE and all other projects ready for the board’s December meeting.

Accelerated AEP Project Won’t Increase Costs

PJM staff noted that an American Electric Power proposal to speed up the timeline of a planned reconductoring project won’t incur any incremental costs.

The previously approved baseline projects 1-11B and 1-11C to reconductor the Dequine-Eugene-Meadow Lake 345-kV line in western Indiana will provide Reliability Pricing Model benefits by improving CETL values, along with energy benefits for reducing congestion. The projects are scheduled to be in service by 2021, but AEP has offered to complete them by 2019, saving two years of congestion costs.

“Anything divided by zero turns into a pretty big number pretty quick, so I think we’d continue to recommend that the project get done by 2019,” McGlynn said.

Detail of Proposal Descriptions Still a Concern

Stakeholders reiterated concerns about what they felt was a lack of information about project details. While PJM staff were attempting to clarify the complicated history of proposals to alleviate constraints on the Olive-Bosserman 138-kV line in northern Indiana, Tatum took the opportunity to log the frequent complaint.

PJM Planning Committee forecasted summer peaks
Sims | © RTO Insider

“You are aware, though, that we don’t share your opinion that the information provided and the methodologies shared so far are adequate?” he asked Sims in reference to the information AEP provides about its proposals.

“I thought we were getting pretty close,” Sims said, noting that AEP has held several regional meetings — attended by Tatum — at which company representatives have explained their internal methods. Tatum acknowledged that the meetings were informative, but he asked for a greater level of detail in the TEAC slides.

Mark Ringhausen of Old Dominion Electric Cooperative asked when PJM plans to implement meetings for localized planning and stressed the importance of seeking input throughout the process from the stakeholders such as ODEC and AMP, who pay for the upgrades.

Sims acknowledged the importance of getting their buy-in. “We want to know upfront what are the expectations so we can work toward that instead of getting to the end and having to change things,” he said.

Segner noted that because some states don’t have certificates of public convenience and necessity, local planning is even more important there.

Project Delay Creates Controversial Cost Increase

Recent analysis by PJM shows that a once-approved Virginia project is still needed to alleviate reliability violations but will now cost nearly twice as much.

The PJM Board of Managers in 2014 approved rebuilding Station C in the Dominion zone along the Potomac River and installing a new 230-kV line from there to the Glebe station at a cost of $165.4 million.

The project was never constructed. Since then, the estimated cost has nearly doubled.

Several alternatives were considered, Sims said, but ultimately the cheapest option turned out to be connecting the two stations via a line under the river. However, local regulations require expensive “micro tunneling” for the line, and Station C must be rebuilt as a gas-insulated substation. Add in construction of a PAR, and the new estimated cost is nearly $300 million.

Given the substantial cost increase, Ringhausen asked PJM to revisit the alternative solutions and see if any of them are comparatively cheaper now.

“I think we owe it to the folks paying the bill to look at it again,” he said.

“I’m not sure it’s going to be fair to put them all side by side,” Sims said, as it would compare the current estimate for the proposed solution with 2014 estimates for the alternatives. But Ringhausen suggested updating the estimates should be a quick process.

Stakeholders also inquired whether the project could be reopened to a competitive bidding window, but PJM staff were concerned it might throw off project timing.

– Rory D. Sweeney

ISO-NE: Won’t Override States on Public Policy Tx Needs

By Michael Kuser

ISO-NE on Friday rejected a request that it conduct an independent analysis on whether state renewable energy and carbon reduction policies are creating a need for additional transmission.

The RTO acted in response to the Conservation Law Foundation’s May 16 letter asking it to conduct the analysis despite a May 1 submission by the New England States Committee on Electricity, which said there are no current transmission needs, although some could arise in the future.

Conservation Law Foundation FERC Order 1000 ISO-NE
Rollins Wind Farm in Maine | Reed & Reed, Inc.

“The ISO disagrees with the conclusion reached in the May 16 CLF letter,” Theodore J. Paradise, ISO-NE assistant general counsel for operations and planning, said in a June 9 letter to CLF Senior Attorney David Ismay. “The Tariff is clear that while there is a process for stakeholders to request an ISO review of the NESCOE letter regarding federal public policies, there is not a similar review provision for state public policy determinations made by the New England states and communicated through NESCOE.

“What NESCOE did provide satisfies, and exceeds, what is required by the FERC-approved Tariff language,” Paradise added. “Not only was a written communication regarding the existence of public policies that may drive transmission provided [by NESCOE], but each New England state submitted, as part of that communication, a thorough and reasoned explanation of why each of the identified statutes and regulations are not driving the need for new transmission in the regional planning process.”

Ismay had said NESCOE’s report was “legally insufficient for purposes of the regional system planning determinations that [FERC] Order 1000 requires.”

NESCOE responded to the CLF letter on June 1, saying that ISO-NE should only evaluate potential projects after states have indicated transmission needs resulting from their policies. (See NESCOE Defends Role in Identifying Public Policy Tx Needs.)

Ismay told RTO Insider on Monday that CLF is considering filing a complaint with FERC in response to the RTO’s determination. It “is obvious to all in the region … that state public policies, particularly those of Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, are driving the procurement of large volumes of renewable and other low-carbon generation that are directly impacting regional transmission,” he said.

UPDATE: Trump Fights Congress, History with Tx Sale Bid

By Jason Fordney and Robert Mullin

Donald Trump is the fourth president since Ronald Reagan to propose selling off assets of the federal power marketing administrations (PMAs). Based on congressional response, he is unlikely to be the first to make it happen.

About three dozen members of Congress have joined publicly owned power utilities in opposing Trump’s plan, part of his proposed fiscal 2018 budget released May 23. It would sell the transmission assets of the Bonneville Power Administration, Southeastern Power Administration, Southwestern Power Administration and Western Area Power Administration to private investors for an estimated $5.5 billion over a decade.

CAISO trump congress
President Donald Trump | © RTO Insider

The four agencies own a combined 34,000 miles of transmission, nearly all of it belonging to BPA and WAPA. About 1,200 public power utilities and rural electric cooperatives in 34 states purchase electricity from federal hydropower plants via the PMAs.

The elected officials and public utilities disagreed with Trump’s rationale that increasing the role of the private sector would encourage more efficient allocation of resources and lower taxpayer risk.

Twenty-one senators, including Democrats Maria Cantwell of Washington and Dianne Feinstein of California, as well as Republican James Risch of Idaho, last week wrote Energy Secretary Rick Perry to oppose the plan. “There are improvements that can and should be made to the operations of some PMAs, but the dismantling of them is simply not sound governmental policy,” says the June 7 letter.

Power marketing is one of the few federal programs that pays for itself, and it actually benefits the government’s balance sheet, they said. The PMAs also support flood control, navigation, irrigation and other critical services at federal dams.

Cantwell in a tweet called the proposal “a short-sighted plan that will take money out of the pockets of consumers and businesses in our states.”

CAISO trump congress
BPA Transmission Line in Klickitat County, Washington | © RTO Insider

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) last week voted to oppose the nomination of Dan Brouillette as deputy secretary of energy because Brouillette would not commit to keeping BPA in public hands in response to a written question from the senator.

“I cannot support a nominee who won’t even say whether he opposes a proposal that would hike energy prices for Northwest customers who have invested in a system that runs successfully on its own,” Wyden said in a statement.

Wyden called the proposal to sell off BPA assets a “non-starter.”

Fifteen members of the House of Representatives from Northwestern states also wrote Perry to oppose the plan, saying it would “harm individuals and businesses, divert capital needed for further infrastructure investment in the Northwest and undermine regional utility coordination.” They include Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), ranking member on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Scott Corwin, executive director of the Portland-based Public Power Council, which represents publicly owned utilities in seven Western states that benefit from low-cost power sold by BPA, said there has been “excellent engagement from Congress” in opposing the proposal.

“On a bipartisan basis, every senator from the Northwest, and every member of the House from Oregon and Washington signed letters of opposition,” Corwin told RTO Insider. “I have not yet heard of anyone pushing [the sale of the PMA transmission] on the Hill.”

Publicly owned utilities also oppose the proposal, saying it is more likely that private owners would increase transmission rates for the same service they now receive.

“These arguments are merely a pretext for actions that would raise electricity costs for millions of people and businesses,” says a June 6 letter to Perry from the American Public Power Association and the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Customers have paid “all power program expenses, plus the interest on any capital projects, and have ensured continued investment in the federal infrastructure,” they said.

The administrations of Presidents Reagan, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush also proposed selling off the PMA assets, but the efforts did not gain traction in the face of heavy Congressional opposition.

Even so, Corwin was cautious about dismissing the prospects for this latest move.

“There are a couple of things that are different this time that makes the proposal worth watching closely,” he said. “First, the fact that it was limited to the transmission systems lends a different dynamic. And, second, the level of uncertainty in Washington, D.C., in general means that it is wise to take nothing for granted.”

Portland-based energy economist Robert McCullough estimates that the budget’s proposed $4.9 billion in revenues from the sale of Bonneville’s transmission network represents just 80% of the value of those assets, based on the power agency’s own published estimates.

“This raises the question of why these valuable assets would be sold at a discount — and who would get the benefit of the discounted price,” McCullough Research said in a June 13 report.

McCullough’s firm also calculated that the sale would increase transmission rates by either 44% under a “most likely scenario” in which the transmission is valued at its actual worth or 26% based on a “less likely scenario” in which FERC reduces the regulatory value — or rate base — of the assets to the proposed sale price.

“Most importantly, privatization of BPA would increase costs for consumers,” the report said. “BPA currently sells and delivers its power at cost; under a private regime, an investor-owned utility would likely charge a higher rate of return.”

Wyden called BPA a “key part” of his state’s economic future and that selling off its assets would “strangle the power supply for businesses” and “stretch” the budgets of residents.

“Pacific Northwesterners have fought this battle before and we’re going to fight these malicious efforts again,” Wyden said.

CAISO Boosts Reserves After August Event Report

By Jason Fordney

CAISO will temporarily increase its daily procurement of operating reserves in response to findings that the erroneous tripping of solar generation caused the loss of 1,200 MW of output as the Blue Cut fire burned in Southern California last August.

operating reserves caiso solar
SolarStar Utility Scale Solar Project | BHE Renewables

Beginning June 14, the ISO will procure more operating reserves in response to last week’s NERC report showing that solar inverters — which convert photovoltaic DC output to utility frequency AC — are susceptible to erroneous tripping during transients caused by faults on the power system. The ISO did not say how long it will keep the measure in place.

A NERC/Western Electricity Coordinating Council task force said the loss of inverter power injection was caused by a perceived low-frequency condition and low-voltage blocking of inverters. The inverter manufacturer recommended changes to inverter settings to prevent the erroneous tripping, and CAISO and Southern California Edison are working to develop a corrective plan.

The inverters tripped on Aug. 16 as the Blue Cut fire raged in the Cajon Pass and quickly moved toward an electric transmission corridor containing lines owned by SCE and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. There were 13 faults on 500-kV lines and two 287-kV faults that took down 1,200 MW of solar. The facilities did not de-energize, but they ceased output because of the system faults, with the most significant losses occurring around 11:45 am. Four of the faults (see chart) caused losses of PV generation.

Utility-scale solar PV output in SCE footprint on Aug. 16, 2016. Four of 15 faults that day caused losses of PV generation. | NERC

CAISO said it will increase its reserves “to minimize the potential impact due to loss of inverter power injection during a single transmission contingency event.” More reserves will be procured during solar operating hours, and the total target reserve amount will be up to 25% of forecast solar production.

The task force recommended a minimum delay for frequency tripping to ensure an accurate system frequency measurement and that inverters be equipped to quickly return to operation if they cease supplying power during voltage excursions.

It also said generation owners and operators should receive an alert to ensure they are aware of recommended changes to inverter settings.

“With the proliferation of solar development in all interconnections across North America, the results of this disturbance analysis need to be widely communicated to the industry highlighting the present potential for widespread solar resource loss during transmission faults on the [bulk power system],” NERC said.

The growing use of inverter-based technologies that operate in microseconds is rapidly changing the characteristics of the power grid and presents some new challenges, NERC Vice President of Reliability Risk Management James Merlo said in a statement. The loss of generation was a “previously unknown risk to reliability,” and NERC is taking steps to mitigate the risk, he said.

Experts ID New Cyber Threat to SCADA Systems

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

Two cybersecurity firms on Monday disclosed what may be the most dangerous cyber threat yet to U.S. power systems: malware that can take control of circuit breakers without any manual involvement.

Maryland-based Dragos and ESET, a Slovakian anti-virus software provider, said the malware — which the former is calling CrashOverride and the latter Industroyer — was likely the cause of a disruption last December that cut about one-fifth of Kiev’s power consumption for about an hour.

| Dragos, ESET

Unlike the December 2015 hack of the Ukraine system — caused by the BlackEnergy program that took advantage of vulnerabilities in Microsoft Office and required manual intervention to control circuit breakers — the new threat takes advantage of the simplicity of supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA).

Dragos said CrashOverride is the first malware framework designed specifically to attack electric grids and the fourth ever piece of malware tailored for industrial control systems. It follows BlackEnergy 2, Havex and Stuxnet, the last of which was believed deployed by the U.S. to hack centrifuges used in Iran’s nuclear weapons program.

Dragos founder Robert M. Lee told Reuters that the malware could be used to attack power systems across Europe as is and in the U.S. “with small modifications.” It could cause outages of up to a few days in portions of a nation’s grid, he said.

The program can be detected if utilities monitor their networks for abnormal traffic, such as indications that it is searching for the location of substations or sending messages to breakers, according to Dragos.

The program’s “dangerousness lies in the fact that it uses protocols in the way they were designed to be used,” wrote Anton Cherepanov, senior malware researcher for ESET. “The problem is that these protocols were designed decades ago, and back then industrial systems were meant to be isolated from the outside world. Thus, their communication protocols were not designed with security in mind. That means that the attackers didn’t need to be looking for protocol vulnerabilities; all they needed was to teach the malware ‘to speak’ those protocols.”

Cherepanov said the program can remain undetected and eliminate traces of itself after its work is complete.

“For example, the communication with the [command and control] servers hidden in Tor can be limited to non-working hours. Also, it employs an additional backdoor — masquerading as the Notepad application — designed to regain access to the targeted network in case the main backdoor is detected and/or disabled,” Cherepanov wrote.

Part of the “dark web,” the Tor network allows users to access the Internet through “virtual tunnels” rather than making a direct connection, allowing them protect the privacy of their communications. It has been used to circumvent government censorship and by journalists to communicate with whistleblowers and dissidents. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said TOR IP addresses were used by the Russian hackers who stole data from the Democratic National Committee before last year’s presidential election.

“What makes this thing a holy-crap moment is the understanding of grid operations encoded within it,” Lee told the Daily Beast. The program can run continuously, requiring manual overrides to interrupt it. “It’s like a popup on a website, where you close it and it just keeps opening again. That’s what they’re doing to circuit breakers.”

In a statement Monday from Marcus Sachs, chief security officer for the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center (E-ISAC), NERC said it is aware of the threat but that “there are no reported instances of the malware in North America.”

NERC said it will update its Ukraine Defense Use Case report, issued in March, to reflect the new information.

“There is no question that cyber threats like the one in Ukraine are real and that constant vigilance is needed to protect the reliability of the North American grid,” Sachs said.

It is not certain who authored the malware.

Dragos tied it to a group called Electrum, the same group behind the 2015 Ukraine attack that left 225,000 customers in the dark. The group is believed to be tied to the Russian government. (See How a ‘Phantom Mouse’ and Weaponized Excel Files Brought Down Ukraine’s Grid.)

But a spokesman for Ukraine’s state cyber police told Reuters it had not been able to confirm Dragos’ claim because the security firms hadn’t provided authorities with samples of the code they analyzed.

Lee told The Washington Post the outages caused by CrashOverride would probably not last more than a few days in the U.S. because the electric industry is prepared to respond to disruptions from violent weather. “They’re used to having to restore power with manual operations,” he said. While it is “a significant leap forward in tradecraft, it’s also not a doomsday scenario.”