October 31, 2024

ERCOT Stakeholders OK Change to DC Tie Curtailments

By Tom Kleckner

AUSTIN, Texas — Despite opposition from independent generators and competitive retailers, ERCOT stakeholders last week approved a protocol change that clarifies that the ISO can curtail DC tie loads without having to declare an emergency condition.

The Technical Advisory Committee on Thursday approved a nodal protocol revision request (NPRR818) that specifies that ERCOT may curtail DC tie loads during a watch, before declaring an emergency condition.

| ERCOT

Representatives from two independent generators (Luminant and Dynegy) and three competitive retailers (Direct Energy, Just Energy and Reliant Energy Retail Services) abstained from the vote but made their opposition known.

Luminant’s Amanda Frazier said she was concerned about the way in which the NPRR was developed. It was written after ERCOT operators issued a power operations bulletin (POB) on Sept. 28 that changed the ISO’s operation of its five DC ties, which have a capacity of more than 1,250 MW. The POB, which took effect two days after its issuance, particularly affected exports into Mexico over Comision Federal de Electricidad ties.

Unilateral Action

“ERCOT has been curtailing DC ties in emergency situations. Then they unilaterally decided to stop doing that — and did that by issuing a [POB], a process not reviewable by stakeholders,” Frazier said. “That materially changed market outcomes for those market participants using DC ties into Mexico. I find that problematic. I think if something needs to be changed in the protocols that has major market impacts, we should know about it. We should be able to look at it, and we should know the policy decisions behind it.”

Luminant’s written comments recommended ERCOT only curtail DC ties during a Level 2 energy emergency alert (EEA), and not during a watch. It pointed out that voluntary load curtailment is not fully deployed until the ISO declares a Level 2 EEA. Involuntary load shed should not be used ahead of other “compensated, voluntary reliability deployments,” the company said.

‘Future Fix’

“I understand that wouldn’t work in a localized problem, but this language [isn’t limited to] a localized emergency,” Frazier said, “I don’t think it’s … appropriate to curtail DC ties before an EEA2 for a systemwide emergency, but I understand that’s going to be looked at in a future fix to this.”

Shams Siddiqi, representing Rainbow Energy Marketing Corp., the NPRR’s sponsor, told the TAC that “future fix” will be an additional protocol change.

Reliant Energy’s Bill Barnes said he would not oppose the NPRR given that additional revisions would be filed. He said that would fix “the problem we see: loosening reliability actions to allow these DC ties to be curtailed sooner, which has market impacts.”

“I think the ops team took what they viewed as appropriate actions, considering some of the changes that occurred,” ERCOT COO Cheryl Mele told the TAC, referring to the issuance of the POB. “The question I’m hearing is POBs with such a significant impact shouldn’t come out [two days] before we implement it. I concur with that. We should use the proper forums and processes.”

Mele’s comments related to recent changes in ERCOT’s capacity, including the Frontera Plant’s move from ERCOT to Mexico, and an increase in DC tie capacity, ERCOT spokeswoman Robbie Searcy said after the meeting. (See ERCOT Board OKs Rio Grande Valley Fixes.)

‘Fair Request’

Garland Power & Light’s Dan Bailey asked ERCOT to report back to the committee on how often curtailments are made during watch events.

“That is a fair request,” Mele responded. She said the reports will be filed with the TAC’s Reliability and Operations Subcommittee, “so you guys will be engaged.”

Rainbow Energy contended the NPRR would “minimize inefficient wholesale market operations and consequent harm to market participants.” The revision would be effective April 5, assuming ERCOT’s Board of Directors approves it the day before.

Before ERCOT issued the operations bulletin, it would accept DC tie e-Tags up to the physical limit of the ties, rarely curtailing the tags close to the operating hour.

Under the POB, e-Tags have been denied when day-ahead prices were relatively high while real-time prices were depressed and DC tie capacity was under-utilized, according to Siddiqi’s “business case” for the change. The result: “an avoidable inefficient outcome for the market and loss for the market participant,” Siddiqi said.

Siddiqi also said ERCOT prefers to take action in advance to avoid the chance of an emergency condition “and subsequent [NERC] scrutiny of why ERCOT did not act in advance to avoid the emergency.”

“Market participants wanting to export power have to procure power in the day-ahead market without knowing whether the e-Tag will be approved or denied,” according to the NPRR. “In turn, they are subjected to a loss and contractual difficulties with their counterparties if the e-Tag is denied.”

By allowing e-Tags to be curtailed in a watch before an EEA2, “ERCOT can revert back to its pre-POB operating procedure of approving e-Tags up to the physical limits of the DC ties,” Siddiqi said. “E-Tag approval can again be done prior to DAM [the day-ahead market] — allowing market participants to correspondingly procure energy in DAM and have the added certainty in its contractual obligations.”

“We have worked with Rainbow to implement what we understand the stakeholder’s intent, so we can be very transparent in the future,” said ERCOT’s Dan Woodfin, senior director of system operations. “The protocols don’t affect how we set limits today. With this change, how we set those limits will be clarified.”

Trump Begins Attempt to Undo Clean Power Plan

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON — President Trump signed an executive order Tuesday directing EPA to begin the lengthy process of undoing its Clean Power Plan, a centerpiece of American efforts to battle climate change.

Trump signed the order following remarks in the wood paneled Map Room at EPA headquarters, surrounded by his top energy lieutenants and a group of coal miners. “You know what this says?” Trump asked the miners, pen in hand. “You’re going back to work.”

Trump’s remarks followed those of Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and Vice President Mike Pence, who noted the decline in coal mining jobs in recent years. “Those days are over,” Pence promised, “because the war on coal is over.”

“We’re no longer going to have regulatory assault on any given sector of our economy,” Pruitt said. “We’re not going to allow regulations here at the EPA to pick winners and losers.”

trump clean power plan epa
President Trump signs executive order seeking to undo the Clean Power Plan as coal miners, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and Vice President Mike Pence watch.

“Our nation can’t run on pixie dust and hope,” Zinke said.

The administration’s promises that coal mining jobs will return may be equally fanciful, however. Natural gas and renewable generation have become cheaper than coal-fired power in many regions, and the most productive mines are increasingly automated.

Years of Litigation to Come?

Trump’s bid to undo the CPP, meanwhile, could take years.

The Supreme Court stayed the rule in February 2016 pending a legal challenge by more than two dozen states that contended the rule overstepped EPA’s regulatory authority. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments in the case in September. (See Analysis: No Knock Out Blow for Clean Power Plan Foes in Court Arguments.)

Legal experts differ on whether the D.C. Circuit will dismiss the states’ challenge based on the Trump administration’s withdrawal of support for the CPP. Environmental groups immediately promised to fight the reversal of the plan.

Trump’s order will put EPA officials in the odd position of having to contradict the findings the agency cited when it issued the final rule in August 2015, which incorporated feedback from 4.3 million comments and months of meetings with state regulators, utilities and RTO officials. (See Revised Clean Power Plan Allows More Time, Sets Higher Targets.)

EPA also will have to overcome its 2009 finding that greenhouse gases endanger the public health and must be controlled.

Paris Agreement Threatened

Although the order does not indicate whether the U.S. will withdraw from the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, eliminating the CPP would make it far more difficult for the nation to meet its obligations to cut its carbon emissions to 26% below 2005 levels by 2025. The CPP requires a 32% reduction in power plant CO2 emissions from 2005 levels by 2030.

Economic consultancy company Rhodium Group estimates the U.S. would reduce carbon emissions by 21% below 2005 levels in 2025 under the CPP but that the reduction would flatten at 14% under Trump’s rollback.

| Rhodium Group Analysis

The Paris Agreement is intended to prevent the planet’s temperature from increasing by more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, which many experts say would lead to an irreversible future of rising oceans and extreme weather, leading to drought, flooding, and food and water shortages.

Other Provisions

The executive order also ends a moratorium on federal coal leasing and eliminates the requirement that federal officials consider the impact of climate change when making decisions.

Press Secretary Sean Spicer said the order directs federal agencies to review all rules “that put up roadblocks to domestic energy production and identify the ones that are not either mandated by law or actually contributing to the public good.”

It also orders a review of the standards for new generators, which effectively banned new coal plants without carbon sequestration. The levelized cost of a new coal generator with sequestration is about double the cost of new solar PV and wind, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Coal Jobs

EIA’s annual coal report last November found that U.S. coal production dropped 10.3% in 2015 to less than 900 million short tons, the lowest annual production level since 1986. Employment at U.S. coal mines dropped 12% in the year to less than 66,000, the lowest since the agency began collecting data in 1978.

More than 21 GW of coal generation retired in 2015 and 2016, largely as result of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards, and EIA says another 14 GW is at risk of retirement by the end of 2028.

Energy economist Robert W. Godby, of the University of Wyoming, told The New York Times that Trump’s order could delay the closing of some endangered coal mines for as long as a decade. But because of increasing mechanization, “they’re not hiring people,” he said. “So even if we saw an increase in coal production, we could see a decrease in coal jobs.”

Economic Impact

Trump’s cabinet members portrayed the Obama administration’s environmental policies as a drag on the economy, with Perry decrying “poorly designed government policies, distorted markets” and a power grid whose reliability is being “tested because fuel diversity has been diminished in order to benefit one technology over the other.”

“The executive order will begin the process to unravel the red tape that’s been keeping investment on the sidelines and innovation stymied,” Perry said.

EPA’s Regulatory Impact Analysis of the CPP — which is not given credence by the agency’s critics — predicts the rule would produce economic and health benefits far exceeding its costs.

Critics say walking away from the Paris Agreement would hurt American leadership in clean energy technologies.

“The Trump administration is turning the nation’s back on the historic opportunity to build a clean energy future — a future that will modernize our energy system, offer consumers better value for their energy dollars and invest in state and local economies while taking the right steps to reduce climate pollution,” said Daniel Sosland, president of Acadia Center, which supports clean energy policies.

EIA predicts renewable electricity generation will grow 3.9% annually through 2030 without the CPP and 4.7% a year with it.

| EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2016

Regardless of what happens with the CPP, utilities, major corporations and many states are likely to continue their efforts at decarbonizing the generation mix.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and California Gov. Jerry Brown issued a joint statement reaffirming their commitment to exceed the CPP’s targets.

“Climate change is real and will not be wished away by rhetoric or denial,” they said. “Together, California and New York represent approximately 60 million people — nearly one-in-five Americans — and 20% of the nation’s gross domestic product. With or without Washington, we will work with our partners throughout the world to aggressively fight climate change and protect our future.”

Reaction

Other reaction to Trump’s order was, unsurprisingly, mixed.

Environmentalists said the order could damage climate change efforts while producing no benefits for the coal industry.

“The fact that major utilities in Ohio are planning to shut down a number of dirty coal-fired power plants throughout the state should be an indication that the market is moving on to less costly and cleaner resources,” said Shannon Fisk, managing attorney for the Earthjustice coal litigation program. “We will be advocating to maximize energy efficiency and renewable energy as the best options for replacing coal plants, and for providing a just economic transition for coal workers and communities.”

David Doniger, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Climate and Clean Air Program, tweeted: “Coal country needs a path to the economy of the future, not false hopes Trump won’t deliver.”

Paul Bailey, CEO of The American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, called the CPP “the poster child for regulations that are unnecessarily expensive and have no meaningful environmental benefit.”

The American Public Power Association also supported the president’s action. “Public power has previously voiced its legal objection to the rule for requiring utilities to fundamentally alter the way they generate electricity. In some cases, utilities would have been forced to abandon functional power plants while continuing to pay them off,” the group said.

ISO-NE Planning Advisory Committee Briefs

WESTBOROUGH, Mass. — ISO-NE planners will make a several changes in their procedures in 2017, including revisions to Planning Procedure 3, incorporating probabilistic planning, a review of how the RTO identifies Bulk Power System (BPS) assets and a streamlined method of developing models, Director of Transmission Planning Brent Oberlin told the Planning Advisory Committee last week.

The process changes and the incorporation of updated load, energy efficiency and photovoltaic forecasts may have a significant impact on both the system’s identified needs and their year of need, Oberlin said.

Responding to stakeholder concerns about too much time being required for ISO-NE to complete needs assessments, Oberlin said that planners will move from a work flow based on serial preparation to one based on parallel modeling.

“We’re stealing from PJM here, which has inspired us to create generic case studies to look at all of New England at once rather than state by state,” he said at the March 22 meeting. “Right now, our start-to-finish case study process takes six months.

“After we talked to PJM, [we] kind of hit [ourselves] in the head” for not making the change sooner, Oberlin said. The current process is “serial, it’s slow and I don’t think it’s effective.”

ISO-NE plans to create a “library” of generic cases and study files for use in the future. Once the RTO and its transmission and other facility owners update the system topology data, the generic cases and study files will be updated with the latest load, energy efficiency, photovoltaic and resource data and posted for stakeholder review.

The RTO also is comparing its assumptions for classifying assets as BPS with those of other transmission operators in the Northeast Power Coordinating Council (NPCC). “It’s not lost on us that New England has more than half of the BPS classified substations within the NPCC, so we may revise the definition of what is a BPS,” Oberlin said.

The changes to Planning Procedure 3, which took effect Feb. 10, reduced the types of contingencies required for second contingency testing, limiting them to those with the greatest potential to impact the identification of system needs.

No longer required to be tested as the second contingency: the loss of two adjacent circuits on a multiple circuit tower and a permanent phase-to-ground fault with breaker failure. These second contingencies must still be tested under NPCC requirements, but solutions will be required only when the problems impact BPS facilities.

After more than a year of work with the PAC, the RTO will begin incorporating probabilistic dispatch methods in late spring, starting with the inclusion of probabilistically based local dispatches in the base system conditions used in needs assessments. The use of probabilistic methods will likely increase in the future, Oberlin said.

Eversource Towers Show Their Age

Eversource Energy engineering manager John Case showed slides of rusting steel and deteriorating concrete foundations to prove the need for replacing four aging towers carrying transmission lines over the Thames River in Connecticut.

Part of rusted transmission tower | Eversource

About half a mile of the 1410/100 lines from Montville to Gales Ferry Junction shares double-circuit steel lattice towers that straddle the river at the Montville-Ledyard border.

“These structures were constructed in 1921 and have exceeded their planned life, and may have done [so] before I was born,” Case said to laughter. “And I am not a young man.”

Recent inspections of the structures revealed severe degradation of the foundation, towers and hardware. The four towers will be replaced with six galvanized steel poles at an estimated cost of $8.5 million (-25%/+50%).

– Michael Kuser

MISO Stakeholders Debate Postage Stamp Cost Allocation

By Amanda Durish Cook

NEW ORLEANS — A debate over the fairness of the postage stamp cost allocation method and how to quantify transmission benefits took center stage at the MISO Advisory Committee’s quarterly hot topic discussion.

MISO Vice President of System Planning and Seams Coordination Jennifer Curran noted that the RTO has not changed cost allocation rules since the integration of MISO South.

Jennifer Curran explains cost allocation | © RTO Insider

“Are there benefits that are no longer relevant? Are there benefits that we haven’t even realized yet? These questions are critically important,” Curran said during the March 22 discussion.

As part of a review of its cost allocation procedures, MISO is considering lowering the 345-kV threshold on market efficiency projects and replacing the footprint-wide postage stamp rate with a method that assigns costs to benefiting transmission pricing zones. It is also seeking to identify other economic benefits in addition to production cost savings, including eliminating the need for future fixes by pursuing a long-term project over a short-term project and projects that aid planning reserve margins. (See MISO Changes to Queue, Auction, Cost Allocation to Dominate 2017.)

Curran said she didn’t expect unanimous sector support on any revised cost allocation procedure, but there is some consensus within sectors. “The biggest challenge we face is a common definition given the challenges we face,” Curran said.

For the Love of Money

Julia Johnson | © RTO Insider

Discussion facilitator Julia Johnson, president of regulatory advising firm Net Communications, introduced the topic, saying it was “incredibly hot and had incredible significance.” She then cued the O’Jays’ “For the Love of Money,” eliciting applause.

Transmission Owner sector representative Matt Brown of Entergy pointed out that MISO changed aspects of its transmission cost allocation in 2003, 2007, 2009 and 2012. “This is not a static set of rules, and MISO has shown the ability to change and adapt,” Brown said. But he said that “experimental” changes should not be made to MISO’s “mature” cost allocation process.

“There is a lot that works with what we have now, and I caution everyone not to lose sight of that,” Brown said.

Northern Indiana Public Service Co.’s Paul Kelly cautioned MISO against “speculating” on transmission benefits, saying they should be represented with an equation that can be repeated across projects.

WEC Energy Group’s Chris Plante said most in his Transmission Dependent Utilities sector support a postage stamp rate because many benefits of transmission projects are not quantifiable or are realized later.

“Today’s reliability project could be tomorrow’s multi-value project,” Plante said.

Brown said the TO sector is not interested in pursuing a postage stamp allocation, which assesses a uniform rate on all MISO transmission owners, simply for the sake of benefits that may be missed. “If you can’t measure it, it’s not a benefit that should be considered. Benefits need to be demonstrable, repeatable and non-duplicative,” he said.

Thomas: Postage Stamp not Always Best

Arkansas Public Service Commission Chairman Ted Thomas, the delegate for the Regulatory sector, said MISO should conduct extensive analysis before implementing any change.

“The business is changing, but modeling is changing too, and we have more operational history. If there need to be sub-zones — better ways of how a true beneficiary pays — then we need to do that,” Thomas said.

Thomas also said postage stamp allocation is not always the most equitable method. “Let’s not use a postage stamp when we can’t figure [benefits] out. Let’s go back to the lab and figure it out,” he said.

MISO Director Michael Curran said he understood stakeholder frustration if too many benefits are swept into a “common good” category and applied on a postage stamp basis.

Devin McMakin | © RTO Insider

Plante said that while MISO’s modeling has improved and can identify a beneficiary “right down to a point of delivery,” the modeling is only as good as the assumptions on which it is based, including forecasting natural gas prices and impacts of future regulations.

Public Consumer sector representative and attorney Kevin Lemley said postage stamp allocation fails to recognize that non-transmission alternatives can solve some problems.

ITC Holdings’ Devin McMackin said MISO’s list of project types is probably too “rigid” and said he supports more flexibility or an expansion of project types.

Allocation by Project Type

MISO’s allocation procedures vary by project type:

  • Costs of market efficiency projects 345 kV and above are split 80% to local resource zones based on benefit and 20% to load through postage stamp.
  • Generation interconnection projects above 345 kV assign 90% of costs to the interconnection requestor, with 10% allocated to load on a postage stamp basis.
  • Multi-value projects are allocated entirely to load via postage stamp.
  • Baseline reliability projects are allocated entirely to local pricing zones.
  • Projects arising from transmission service requests are paid for by transmission customers, but the transmission owner can elect to roll costs into local pricing zone rates.

Participant-funded projects are left out of cost allocation procedures entirely, and projects not eligible for allocation can be recovered through a zonal transmission rate.

| MISO

Plante said cost allocation needs to be resilient, able to survive an expanding footprint and shifting resource mix. Stakeholders again brought up MISO’s hourglass-shaped footprint and constrained MISO South interface, which some maintain precludes a benefits ratio from being applied to the footprint uniformly.

Alliant Energy’s Mitchell Myhre, representing the TDU sector, said adjusted production cost benefits should remain the primary metric when deciding allocation. All other benefits should be secondary considerations in cost allocation, Myhre said.

Director Paul Bonavia asked for a future session between the board and MISO staff on a preliminary cost allocation proposal.

‘Rough Justice’

Director Curran urged MISO and stakeholders to create a proposal, citing an adage: “‘Done is better than perfect.’”

Several stakeholders said that any cost allocation revision that MISO files with FERC would be an example of “rough justice,” meaning it would be generally fair but not acceptable to all parties.

MISO stakeholders are discussing possible allocation changes in the Regional Expansion Criteria and Benefits Working Group (RECBWG). Group chair Carolyn Wetterlin said the working group is considering simplifying its name to the Transmission Cost Allocation Working Group.

Mark Johnson, MISO CEO John Bear in foreground | © RTO Insider

A day earlier, during a presentation on the 2017 MISO Transmission Expansion Plan (MTEP 17) at the March 21 Markets Committee of the Board of Directors, Director Phyllis Currie asked what MISO’s biggest challenge is when it comes to transmission planning.

“At the end of the day, I think it comes back to who pays,” Jennifer Curran said.

Director Mark Johnson asked for a review of MTEP-approved projects to determine if their projected cost benefits had been realized. Curran said MISO could collect that information.

Director Thomas Rainwater said he liked the idea of cost allocation post mortems, in which MISO staff would examine whether transmission benefits are being distributed as they were estimated.

PJM Filing Renews MISO Monitor’s Call for Pseudo-Tie Elimination

By Amanda Durish Cook

NEW ORLEANS — MISO Independent Market Monitor David Patton last week used PJM’s proposed pro forma pseudo-tie agreement to renew his call for an end to pseudo-ties.

On March 9, PJM made a Section 205 filing with FERC to add criteria for accepting pseudo-ties (ER17-1138). PJM would require that it have dispatch control over new and existing pseudo-ties from NYISO and MISO. (See PJM to Tighten Pseudo-Tie Rules Despite Stakeholder Pushback.)

On Thursday, PJM officials delayed a stakeholder vote on the agreements. (See related story in PJM Markets and Reliability and Members Committees Briefs.)

Having NYISO units dispatched by PJM — which may not be fully aware of all the ISO’s data — is not a sound idea, considering New York’s transmission congestion, Patton said. He added that at least 18 units in MISO would be dispatched by the other RTO in the 2017/18 planning year beginning June 1. PJM currently dispatches 13 MISO units.

“It’s very inefficient. … It’s just a terrible idea,” Patton told the Markets Committee of the Board of Directors on Thursday.

MISO PJM pseudo-ties
Curran | © RTO Insider

Patton said PJM’s filing signals a good time for MISO to again propose replacing pseudo-ties with a firm capacity delivery procedure. MISO’s proposal would guarantee the delivery of the capacity purchased by PJM by the host RTO scheduling a firm export in the real-time market and having the external capacity supplier settle the export with both RTOs. Patton said MISO’s proposal is an “attractive” idea. (See “MISO IMM Warns Again of PJM Pseudo-Ties,” MISO Market Subcommittee Briefs.)

MISO Director Michael Curran said the creation of pseudo-ties itself was an “emotional response” to manage electricity flows from different balancing authorities in the early days of RTOs. “It’s difficult to try to get this to work, because it never worked in the first place. It sounds like it’s coming to a critical point here, and we’ll have to work with New York to bring some sanity to the situation,” Curran said.

Patton said MISO and NYISO might face resistance from PJM because PJM staff and stakeholders generally view the pseudo-tie concept as a way to maintain control of the quality and reliability of the generation on its system.

“I wouldn’t be opposed to a megawatt limit” on the volume of exports from MISO to PJM, Patton added.

Curran did not let the comment go unnoticed. “I’m shocked by that. You’re a fundamentalist, and suddenly you’re in favor of limits,” Curran said lightheartedly. “I’d hate to see you close the borders.”

MISO PJM pseudo-ties
Krumsiek | © RTO Insider

Director Barbara Krumsiek asked which of PJM’s neighbors support the RTO’s proposal.

“That’s a good question,” Patton said laughing. He added that NYISO has no pseudo-ties with PJM and would most likely want to keep it that way.

Director Baljit Dail asked when the pseudo-tie issue might be solved.

Richard Doying, MISO executive vice president of operations and corporate services, said resolving the issue would be a long-term project. He said MISO would consult both its Monitor and stakeholders before proposing a Tariff solution to FERC.

Tornadoes, Wind Generation Drive MISO Tx Congestion

By Amanda Durish Cook

NEW ORLEANS — MISO experienced a quiet winter, aside from early February tornadoes in Louisiana and high congestion charges from a MISO-PJM constraint.

Demand peaked at 100 GW, about 9 GW below MISO’s all-time winter peak during the 2014 polar vortex.

Bladen | © RTO Insider

“We had a relatively mild winter and that turns into relatively mild operating conditions,” MISO Executive Director of Market Design Jeff Bladen said during a quarterly operations report at the March 21 Markets Committee of the Board of Directors meeting.

Average LMPs rose to $28/MWh from $21/MWh last year as gas prices rose 55% year-over-year, Markets Committee Chair Paul Bonavia said. He said MISO’s plentiful wind output kept prices from ticking further upward.

Independent Market Monitor David Patton said the most significant event in the quarter was a series of tornadoes in Louisiana on Feb. 7 that resulted in multiple transmission outages and pushed Louisiana Hub prices above $1,000/MWh for three hours. The storms led to $19 million in real-time congestion.

Patton said the storms caused real-time prices to be 30% higher than day-ahead prices for all of February.

“An event like this can cause a huge spike in balancing congestion charges,” Patton said. Balancing congestion charges, which normally average $1 million per month, totaled $11 million.

MISO board of directors wind output
| MISO

Bladen said the weather incident caused MISO’s monthly market efficiency metric to increase by $15 million. “The impact was appreciable due to the outages,” Bladen said.

Director Baljit Dail expressed worry that an “act of God” caused such havoc on MISO’s markets, and said the Human Resource Committee of the Board of Directors could look into purchasing insurance against it. “When you consider the world we live in, more of these severe weather events will happen,” he said.

“We certainly do quite a bit to prepare for these severe conditions,” Bladen replied.

Director Michael Curran asked if approved transmission projects in Louisiana would help relieve congestion in future emergency conditions. MISO staff agreed that they would.

Real-time congestion in the quarter increased 48% over last year but dipped 21% when compared to fall, when outage rates were high in MISO South. (See IMM Report Highlights Outages, Wind Over-Forecasting.)

Wind Causes Congestion on PJM Seam

Not all of MISO’s winter real-time congestion could be attributed to severe weather. Most congestion occurred along the MISO-PJM seam and was caused by transmission outages and high wind output, Patton said.

A single MISO-PJM market-to-market constraint alone accounted for $40 million worth of congestion and was “difficult to manage because it is dominated by PJM resources,” Patton said. On Feb. 7 — coincidentally the day of the tornadoes — MISO transferred control of the constraint to PJM, “reducing congestion on the constraint and improving the dispatch,” according to Patton.

MISO board of directors wind output
MISO Markets Committee of the Board of Directors in session | © RTO Insider

The Monitor said he would like to see MISO, PJM and SPP become more active in transferring monitoring of constraints “but it requires agreement and improved processes.” There are a number of cases where the non-monitoring RTO has all of the transmission loading relief on a flowgate, he said.

Patton also said there are several instances in which MISO and a neighboring RTO have to manually control flowgates, which is not as efficient.

“We feel the RTOs should develop better software and procedures” to switch control of the constraint to the RTO with the most relief, Patton said.

A jump in wind production also contributed to higher congestion in the quarter. Wind output rose 21% from the fall and 20% over last winter as MISO set an all-time wind output record of 13.7 GW on Dec. 7, beating the previous 13.3-GW record set in late November.

Patton said wind output contributed to $47 million of real-time congestion costs. He said the increase in wind output was most significant near the MISO-SPP seam where MISO wind resources are plentiful. SPP had difficulties controlling power flows from MISO into SPP.

“We get into situations where it’s difficult because we have a lot of wind resources that whip the flows around,” Patton said, adding that SPP sometimes will control the flows manually, which is more expensive.

“When your neighbor is dominating the constraint, you should hand the constraint over. SPP in particular has been resistant to this. PJM has been more willing to do this than SPP,” Patton said.

He said MISO and SPP should continue to work together to address monitoring control of constraints rather than “abandon economic coordination.”

MISO and SPP are working together on transfers of monitoring control and hope to agree on a smoother process later in the year, MISO staff said.

Calif. Bill Would Introduce ‘Clean Peak Energy Standard’

By Robert Mullin

A top California lawmaker last week introduced a bill that would require the state’s utilities to meet an increasing amount of their peak energy demand with renewable resources and energy storage systems.

The proposed law would set a “clean peak energy standard” to reduce the reliance on flexible, gas-fired peaking plants to meet peak ramping needs as the state seeks to obtain 50% of its electricity consumption with renewable energy resources by 2030 (AB 1405).

State Assembly Speaker Pro Tempore Kevin Mullin (D), the bill’s sponsor, said that while California’s renewable energy and ambitious greenhouse gas reduction goals are “laudable,” they are “ultimately incongruous in the absence of a policy framework and new market mechanisms” that would allow CAISO to manage the impacts of increasing renewable penetration on the grid.

Mullin

“As more renewables are built toward the 50% [renewable portfolio standard] goal, more fossil fuel power plants will be built to provide flexibility and reliability, which is incompatible with the GHG reduction and cost-effective goals,” Mullin said in a statement.

The legislation defines a four-hour “peak load” time period that includes the hour leading up to, and two hours following, the hour of peak demand.

The law would require the California Public Utilities Commission to determine by Dec. 31, 2018, the percentage of “clean peak resources” — renewables and storage — being used by each of the state’s utilities to serve demand during the peak load period.

Each utility would have to meet increasing clean peak targets every three years beginning in 2020 and reaching 40% in 2029. The first year of the program would entail a 5% increase in such resources. Utilities would be required to meet the minimums for at least 15 days every month.

The rules would also apply to the state’s publicly owned utilities, which are not subject to CPUC oversight.

Use of clean peak resources would be subject to CAISO-approved measurement standards, while the CPUC would be charged with devising an “appropriate mechanism” for determining compliance with the clean peak standard, which could include a program of tradeable credits.

The bill also requires the PUC to consider developing other targets that would encourage the use of clean peak resources to provide additional flexibility and ancillary services.

A similar but less comprehensive bill has been introduced into the State Senate.

SB 338 would require the CPUC and California Energy Commission to consult with CAISO and “establish policies or procedures to ensure that electrical service providers meet net-load peak energy and reliability needs while minimizing the use of fossil fuels and utilizing low-carbon technologies and electrical grid management strategies.”

Under the Senate bill, “net-load peak energy” is defined as a daily period of three hours in which the last hour represents the interval of highest demand. The bill would permit the use of demand response and energy efficiency measures, in addition to renewables and energy storage.

ERCOT Reaches 50% Wind Penetration Mark

ERCOT set a new record for wind penetration last week when it hit 50% at 3:50 a.m. March 23. The ISO was generating 14,391 MW of wind energy at the time.

The Texas grid operator reported a peak load of 45,257 MW that afternoon. Wind was responsible for 15,477 MW at its peak that day.

ercot wind penetration mark
| ERCOT

ERCOT has produced as much as 16,022 MW of wind generation, which happened on Christmas last year. It manages more than 17 GW of wind energy and has 28.6 GW of proposed wind capacity in its interconnection queue.

The ISO had been in competition with SPP to see which would be the first North American grid operator to reach 50% penetration. However, SPP eclipsed that barrier Feb. 12 and has established several new records since then, the last coming March 19 when it reached 54.22% penetration with 12,078 MW of wind energy.

SPP has 16 GW of installed wind capacity and another 21 GW in the interconnection queue.

— Tom Kleckner

EE, Renewables Flattening ISO-NE Demand for Next Decade

By Michael Kuser

WESTBOROUGH, Mass. — Energy efficiency, lower economic growth and burgeoning home solar installations will reduce ISO-NE’s net load through at least 2026, Manager of Load Forecasting Jon Black said Wednesday.

While the region’s gross annual load is expected to rise by 8.5% to 152,593 GWh by 2026, load net of behind-the-meter solar and passive demand resources will drop 5.2% to 120,181 GWh. “There were no methodology changes in the [gross load] forecast since last year,” Black told the Planning Advisory Committee on March 22. “It’s just refreshes of the data.”

ISO-NE Renewables passive demand resources
| ISO-NE

The region’s weather-normalized net electric consumption declined 1.5% in 2016 versus 2015, according to the RTO’s draft 2017 Capacity, Energy, Loads and Transmission energy and summer peak forecast. The completed forecast will be published by May 1.

Compared to last year’s forecast, the new report projects the 2025 annual energy demand will be 3.9% lower. The summer 50/50 forecast is approximately 3% lower, while the 90/10 forecast is 2.7% lower.

ISO-NE Renewables passive demand resources
| ISO-NE

Reasons for the drop include a 15% increase over last year’s forecast in projected behind-the-meter solar for 2025 and an 11% increase in projected energy efficiency, the latter due to a revised production cost escalation methodology.

The grid operator projects approximately 2,444 MW of PV development over the coming decade, for a total of 4,362 MW in 2026.

Black said that they are now getting more granular data on load reduction because of PV after increasing the number of installations monitored from 1,200 to 9,000. The RTO counts distributed solar — those less than 5 MW — as reducing net load.

Passive demand resources climbed 11% last year to 14,380 GWh. Passive demand resources include the use of energy-efficient appliances and lighting, “smart” cooling and heating technologies that cycle air conditioners on and off, and measures to shift electricity use to off-peak hours.

Paul Peterson of Synapse Energy Economics asked RTO officials about the projected annual increases in PV resources. The report shows a 445-MW increase in 2017 PV versus 2016, a 23% jump.

“The PV is going to eat up large number of megawatt-hours. That will affect generation developers. If the pie continues to shrink, it becomes very difficult for generators to earn the same amount of revenue from energy sales,” Peterson said. “Generators need to know if solar will be five, six or eight thousand megawatts in 2026. Will the trend accelerate?”

“There’s a lot of uncertainty over that, around when this stuff becomes economic,” responded Black. “A lot depends on rate structuring. We’re waiting for clearer signals.”

ISO-NE officials told Vermont legislators in January that the capacity market “will be an important revenue-balancing mechanism to ensure resource adequacy as renewable resources drive down revenues in the energy market.”

Black said expectations of lower economic growth were based on a Moody’s Investor Service’s forecast that predicts New England’s share of the U.S. gross domestic product declining from more than 5.7% in 2000 to just more than 5% by 2026.

CAISO Sees Ups and Downs in Q4 Real-time Prices

By Robert Mullin

CAISO’s real-time market experienced an uptick in volatility during the fourth quarter of 2016, as five-minute prices at times spiked to well above day-ahead and 15-minute levels on unexpected variability in output from solar resources.

On the flip side: Solar generation increasingly sent mid-day prices into negative territory during the quarter, a trend that the ISO’s internal Market Monitor says is continuing into this year.

CAISO day-ahead market negative prices
CAISO’s Q4 negative prices occurred most frequently during mid-day, the period of highest solar output. | CAISO

“November did see a fairly high frequency of prices above the $250 level in the five-minute market,” Gabe Murtaugh, a senior analyst with the ISO’s Department of Market Monitoring, said during a March 22 call to discuss his group’s quarterly market issues report. “You’d have to go back to the beginning of 2015 to see this frequency.”

In November, real-time prices surged to $250 or higher during nearly 1.5% of intervals, compared with fewer than 0.4% of intervals during the same period in 2015. Prices hit $750 or more during 0.6% of intervals, up from 0.3% a year earlier.

Murtaugh attributed the prices spikes to more cloud cover than was forecast by CAISO, translating into lower solar output than was accounted for in the day-ahead market during specific intervals. The ISO was forced to move up the bid stack to secure higher-priced resources in real-time to cover the shortfall — especially during the afternoon ramp as solar resources began to reduce output.

“This outcome resulted in part from a combination of solar deviations and tight supply conditions during intervals when system ramping needs were greatest,” the department said in its report.

Contributing to the price discrepancies between the five- and 15-minute markets were differences in the solar forecasting methodologies used for each, an issue the ISO addressed through changes to its forecasting software in December.

Still, instances of high prices during the fourth quarter were “fairly irregular,” according to Murtaugh. More frequent were intervals of negative prices, the Monitor noted.

The department observed negative prices during 4.7% of intervals during the five-minute market and 1.8% of those in the 15-minute market. By comparison, during the same period a year earlier, negative prices occurred in 2% and 1% of five- and 15-minute market intervals, respectively.

The last quarter of 2016 also saw five-minute prices go negative nearly 20% of the time during the 10 a.m. interval — the beginning of the mid-day period most subject to solar-drive price dips.

CAISO day-ahead market negative prices
Graph shows that CAISO Q4 real-time prices consistently outpaced those for the day-ahead and 15-minute markets during the afternoon ramp. | CAISO

Nearly all of the negative prices were the result of the ISO’s market mechanisms — and not the result of out-of-market operations to curtail output.

“These are conditions where an economic downward dispatch is issued to a unit with a negative marginal cost, so negative marginal cost units are setting the marginal price in the system,” Murtaugh said. “This is a solution that is arrived at from the market optimization and it’s similar to any other solution that we would see in the market during other times of the day when marginal costs are set at a marginal level.”

The Monitor’s data showed that most of the negative prices held to a range between $0 and -$50/MWh.

Carrie Bentley of Resero Consulting wondered where most of the negative prices clustered — closer to $0 or $50?

“Off the cuff, it tends to be more clustered between the $0 and $25 range,” Murtaugh responded. “That typically tends to be the amount of tax incentives that are given out on a per-megawatt-hour basis to solar facilities and wind facilities — and those tend to be the ones we see setting the price more frequently.”

Murtaugh also offered call listeners a “teaser” regarding the first quarter: “For the data that we’ve already looked at in 2017, the [negative price] numbers are fairly high for the first quarter as well.”

Wei Zhou, a senior project manager with Southern California Edison, probed Monitor staff about an observed increase in negative prices in the ISO’s day-ahead market this year.

“What’s the expectation for the frequency of negative pricing in the day-ahead market?” Zhou asked.

Keith Collins, CAISO manager of monitoring and reporting, called the development an “improvement” that would allow the ISO to better align resource commitments in the day-ahead market with actual conditions in real-time, decreasing the potential for oversupply.

“So shifting [negative prices] to the day-ahead is not necessarily in and of itself a bad thing, but it’s not a trend that was observed prior to the last few weeks,” Collins said, adding that it was a topic that could be covered in a future Market Performance Planning Forum.