October 31, 2024

PJM Grid 20/20 Panelists Debate Solar, New Rate Structures

solar
David Owens, left, of the Edison Electric Institute and Ralph Cavanagh of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

WASHINGTON — Nowhere is the issue of rooftop solar subsidies more acute than in Hawaii, where state and federal tax credits and net metering means that about 85% of the cost of rooftop solar is subsidized. “Which is why we have five times the [solar] penetration of any place in the nation,” Richard M Rosenblum, recently retired CEO of Hawaii Electric, told PJM’s Grid 20/20 conference last week.

About 12% of the utility’s customers have rooftop solar, and one-third of distribution circuits run “backwards” at least some of hours of the year, Rosenblum said. By 2030, the company expects 30% of customers to be generating solar power, “and virtually every one of our circuits will run backwards.”

“The problem, of course, is that it distorts the market and brings on resources that are not truly cost-effective for all consumers and leads to massive shifting of costs from one set of customers to another set of customers.”

Rate Design

Evolving the system in a way that is fair will require real-time pricing and fair compensation for net-metered solar generators, David Owens, executive vice president of the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), told the conference. Basing solar compensation on the cost of carbon (a price above the current cost of power), as some solar tariffs propose, is “totally absurd,” he said, and results in a “false and distorted price signal.”

Ralph Cavanagh, co-director of the Natural Resources Defense Council’s energy program, opposes an “all-you-can-eat approach” in which a high fixed charge reduces incentives for saving energy.

Instead, he favors a “minimum bill” approach in which customers pay based on consumption — after satisfying a minimum to cover fixed costs. “The difference between [the minimum bill] and a high fixed charge is that once you get above that very small threshold of consumption, you’re back paying based on how much you use again and the rewards for saving energy are unaffected,” he said in a lunchtime discussion with Owens.

David Kolata, executive director of the Illinois Citizens Utility Board, said solar power has been unfairly targeted for criticism over cost-shifting.

“It is a little bit revealing that this sort of reverse Robin Hood perspective focuses solely on solar and not on general rate design,” he said. “In Illinois right now, our rate design — because of the way we cover capacity costs — has the exact reverse effect and we don’t hear about that. I’m not saying there’s not an issue, but I do think it’s unfairly picking on solar and unfairly overlooking a lot of the value it provides.”

Company Briefs

3M3M is offering discounts of 30 to 35% for employees who want to install solar panels on their homes. The Solar Community Initiative will also provide help with planning and installation, the company said.

“Renewable energy is an interest to employees, we know, and we want to increase our engagement with employees around sustainability in general,” said 3M’s global sustainability advisor, Keith Miller, who helped develop the program for the company’s more than 35,000 North American employees.

3M joins two other North American companies offering similar programs: Cisco of San Jose, Calif., and Kimberly-Clark of Irving, Texas.

More: The Star Tribune

Construction Starts on 1,000-MW Combined-Cycle Plant in Md.

wildcat point proposed facilityConstruction has started on a 1,000-MW combined-cycle power plant at the site of an existing Old Dominion Electric Cooperative plant in northeastern Maryland.

The natural gas-fired Wildcat Point Generation Facility will be adjacent to ODEC’s 672-MW Rock Springs Generation Facility near Rising Sun. The $675 million Wildcat Point facility received Maryland regulatory approval in May. It is expected to go into operation in 2017.

More: The News Journal

Utilities Serving Pot Growers: Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

Indoor marijuana growers expanding to meet the now-legal recreational pot market in Washington state are cranking up the lights and heaters, and utility companies are trying to plan for increased load growth. But marijuana is still an illegal drug by federal standards, and utilities are wary of working directly with growers.

“There are definitely some concerns,” said Bryan Jungers, a research analyst. But he said utilities don’t want to ask too many questions. “They’re still supplying the power, but it’s sort of a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ approach.”

A study by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council estimates marijuana operations could increase demand for power in Washington by 60 MW, to 160 MW over the next 20 years. It said regional demand from growers could climb to 250 MW by 2035.

More: UtilityDive

GM to Build 2.2-MW Solar Facility Atop Ohio’s Lordstown Plant

General Motors is building a 2.2-MW rooftop solar facility at its Lordstown assembly plant, the largest photovoltaic system in the company’s U.S. inventory.

The project will install 8,500 solar panels on the roof, part of GM’s plan to roll out 125 MW of worldwide solar production by 2015. It has an 11.87-MW solar facility at a plant in Spain and a 1.8-MW solar array on the roof of its Toledo Transmission plant.

“GM has made a commitment in terms of increasing our use of renewable energy by 2020,” said Sharon Basel, communications manager of GM Energy, Environment and Sustainability. Solar “reduces the impact on the environment and provides a reduction in carbon emissions and lessens the impact on the climate change.”

The Lordstown project is scheduled to be completed by the end of this year.

More: The Vindicator

Delmarva Issues RFPs for 465 MW for Standard Offer

Delmarva Power & Light, which no longer owns any generation, is looking for up to 465 MW of power supply to meet its Standard Officer Service obligations in Delaware.

Delmarva, a subsidiary of Pepco Holdings Inc., is seeking peak load contributions by customer class, including 275 MW for combined residential, small commercial and industrial customers, 145 MW for medium general service-secondary customers, 20 MW for large general service-secondary and 25 MW for general service-primary customers.

The first round of bidding is to begin Dec. 1, and the final round should conclude in early February of next year. Winning bidders start supplying electricity on June 1.

More: The Cape Gazette

Michigan’s Lower Peninsula Getting New Power Plant

Wolverine Power Cooperative said it plans to build a $100 million natural gas-fired power plant in Michigan’s northern Lower Peninsula.

The site, near the town of Gaylord, was chosen because of the proximity of natural gas pipelines and transmission lines. It said it will soon apply for necessary state and local permits, and plans to get the plant online by 2016.

The co-op said the plant will complement Wolverine’s other generating facilities in the region and help preserve reliability of the regional power grid. Wolverine supplies wholesale power to six Michigan electric cooperatives.

More: Crain’s Detroit Business

Southern Company Acquires 150-MW Solar Plant In Calif.

Southern Power, a subsidiary of Southern Co., will boost its solar fleet to 338 MW with the acquisition of the Solar Gen 2 plant in California from First Solar.

Solar Gen 2 is comprised of three, 50-MW systems on 1,450 acres in Imperial County. Construction began in 2013. First Solar is building it and will operate it for Southern. San Diego Gas & Electric has agreed to buy its power for 25 years.

More: EnergyCentral

Duke Energy Establishes $20M Energy Assistance Plan in NC

Duke Energy’s two North Carolina utilities have launched a $20 million energy assistance fund for low-income residents. The company said up to 4,000 households could qualify.

The fund, established as a result of a 2013 Duke Energy Progress and Duke Energy Carolinas rate case, will provide  up to $10,000 for individual energy-efficiency upgrades. The Helping Home Fund will pay for energy assessments, heating and cooling replacements, appliance replacements and weatherization upgrades. The N.C. Community Action Association, which is administering the program, will begin distributing the funds in January.

Duke has agreed to pay for the programs out of corporate funds rather than ratepayer money.

More: FierceEnergy

Constellation Energy to Build Solar Farm on Eastern Shore

Constellation Energy Resources is building a 4.3-MW solar project that includes a 25-year supply agreement with the National Aquarium in Baltimore.

The project, to be built on 22 acres near Cambridge, Md., is expected to supply 40% of the aquarium’s energy needs. Constellation will supply the other 60% through wholesale power purchases. The aquarium will get solar renewable energy credits.

Constellation, a subsidiary of Exelon, said the solar farm will offset about 4,409 tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year. The project is expected to be completed in March.

More: Zacks

Judge Rules Against Ameren in Missouri Tx Line Dispute

A Missouri judge says he will reject Ameren Transmission’s request to build a transmission line across northeast Missouri without a certificate from the Missouri Public Service Commission.

Ameren said it doesn’t need the commission’s approval because it isn’t regulated by the commission. Landowners have intervened to try to block construction of the line.

Cole County Circuit Court Judge Dan Green noted that the PSC hasn’t taken action yet, and so he said he would refrain from making a “hypothetical advisory opinion.” The 100-mile line is part of a longer, 480-mile line to run from Ottumwa, Iowa, to western Indiana.

More: Fox2 News; Columbia Missourian

AEP Commercial Customer Coalition Protests Price Guarantee Move

AEP logoA group of 12 large commercial American Electric Power customers is urging the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to refuse the utility’s request for guaranteed prices for some of its power plants. The large customers said AEP’s proposal is “unfair to shopping customers and harmful to competitive markets.”

AEP, along with FirstEnergy, has asked PUCO to allow it to enter into power-purchase agreements with some of its plants. It says the price guarantees are necessary to keep the plants profitable and running, and therefore are in the public interest.

But Compete Coalition, which includes companies such as Staples, Macy’s, Lowe’s Home Improvement and Boston Market, said the utility’s proposal would amount to an unfair tax and will “deny Ohio businesses the right to purchase electricity at the lowest possible price.”

More: Columbus Business First

FirstEnergy Dropping Customers, but Charging them if they Drop First

FirstEnergy Solutions is dropping its retail residential customers in Pennsylvania as the company reevaluates is participation in the retail market.

But the FE subsidiary, in letters mandated by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, also reminded customers that they may face an early termination fee if they choose to leave FirstEnergy before their contract terms expire. The fees are as much as $295.

“Please note that if you cancel your existing contract with us before your December meter read date, you may incur a … termination fee,” say the letters sent to residential customers. “You can avoid this fee by remaining a valued FirstEnergy Solutions customer until the end of your agreement.” Many of those agreements expire at the end of the year.

More: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PSEG Exec Leaves to Run Illinois Generator

Donald Gaston, fossil generation director of Public Service Enterprise Group, is leaving to run Prairie State Generating Company.

Gaston, who has worked in the generation industry for more than 30 years, will become CEO of Prairie State, which operates a two-year-old, 1,600-MW coal plant and adjacent coal mine. Prairie State has been through several CEOs since May. The plant has been plagued by construction delays, cost overruns and the defection of power purchasers trying to escape contracts.

More: NJ BIz

Gates Bros., FERC Seeking Settlement?

Gates
Kevin and Rich Gates

The hedge fund twins accused of gaming up-to-congestion trades in PJM abruptly ended their public relations campaign against the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last week, announcing they had taken down their website and would no longer talk to the media or at industry conferences.

Despite their earlier vow not to settle with FERC over the allegations, the move by Rich and Kevin Gates suggests that — after spending more than $1.5 million on lawyers and consultants fighting the investigation — they may be seeking to end hostilities.

Reached by phone Friday, Kevin Gates and Larry D. Gasteiger, acting director of FERC’s Office of Enforcement, both declined to comment.

Going on Offense

In March, after being the subject of a FERC investigation for more than three years without being charged, the brothers had decided to go on offense by launching a website on which they posted correspondence with FERC and opinions from energy experts that they said proved they were being unfairly hounded. The dispute became a case study for critics, including some former FERC officials, who say the agency has sought to punish legitimate, if opportunistic, trading.

The brothers hounded now-Commissioner Norman Bay, FERC’s former enforcement chief, through his Senate confirmation, spoke at industry conferences and won support from The Wall Street Journal editorial board.

In August, the day after Bay was sworn in as commissioner, FERC staff issued a notice of alleged violations accusing the brothers and their partners in the Powhatan Energy Fund of engaging in “manipulative” up-to-congestion trades in PJM in 2010. (See PJM UTC Case Likely Headed to Court After FERC Notice.)

FERC alleged that the brothers’ investment funds placed “millions of megawatt-hours of offsetting trades between the same two trading points, in the same volumes and the same hours” to capture line-loss refunds without facing any risk from the underlying trades.

Although FERC’s confidential preliminary findings challenged $4.7 million in profits the investors made between February and August 2010, the notice cited only trades made after June 1.

The Gates brothers said their trades were legal until the loophole they exploited was closed later in 2010. They vowed to fight the allegations and said they had rejected a previous settlement offer from FERC.

With the facts not in dispute, the case would have turned on legal interpretations: Were Gates’ trades riskless, and thus improper, “wash” trades, as FERC contends, or permissible “spread” trades? Did FERC provide proper notice that seeking profits through the line-loss rebates alone was improper? And if FERC thought it had a strong case, why did it wait nearly four years to bring it?

If there is no settlement, the next major step would likely be a commission vote on whether to issue an order to show cause. (On Oct. 6, the Gates brothers filed a motion seeking to force Bay to recuse himself from the case.)

William M. McSwain, attorney for the brothers, told RTO Insider in August that if the commission decided to proceed, the case would end up in a U.S. District Court where he said the merits would be reviewed by a “neutral decision maker.”

Based on last week’s disarmament, however, it appears the brothers may never get their day in court.

One company that engaged in similar trades, Oceanside Power, agreed to settle the charges against it by disgorging profits of $29,563 and paying a fine of $51,000 (IN10-5).

FERC staff also filed a notice of alleged violations in August against City Power Marketing and its principal, K. Stephen Tsingas, for a similar trading scheme. Tsingas and his attorney have declined to comment.

Federal Briefs

Allison MacfarlaneAllison M. Macfarlane, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, is leaving at the end of the year to become director of the Center for International Science and Technology Policy at George Washington University.

Observers credit Macfarlane with bringing peace to the five-member commission, which was embroiled in controversy under the previous chairman, Gregory B. Jaczko. Macfarlane helped push for safety improvements at U.S. nuclear plants following the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan. But she lost a battle to expedite transfer of used fuel rods from on-site cooling ponds to dry cask storage.

“I came to the commission with the mission of righting the ship after a tumultuous period and ensuring that the agency implemented lessons learned from the tragic accident at Fukushima Daiichi, so that the American people can be confident that such an accident will never take place here.”

Before becoming NRC chair in 2012, Macfarlane was a professor at George Mason University. “I accomplished what I wanted to do at the NRC and I really miss academia,” she said. There is no word on her replacement yet.

More: The Washington Post

DOE Eyeing New Conservation Standards for Water Heaters, Lamps

The Department of Energy said it is developing updated energy-efficiency standards for water heaters and fluorescent lamps.

The department is examining the standards for fluorescent ballasts, as well as new energy conservation standards for solar-thermal water heating systems, commercial water heaters, hot water supply boilers and hot water storage tanks.

More: The Hill

MOX Recycling Plant Asks NRC for 10-Year Extension

MOXThe contractor working on a project to recycle Russian nuclear warheads into reactor fuel at the federal Savannah River site has asked for another 10 years to get up and running, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said.

Shaw AREVA MOX Services said the South Carolina facility is about 60% complete, but the company said it still needs to construct several buildings and safety systems. The plant was started in 2007, part of a plan to repurpose weapons grade plutonium into nuclear reactor fuel in a process called mixed-oxide fuel, or MOX.

The facility was supposed to have been completed by 2015. The company blamed budgetary constraints, vendor shortages and difficulty finding qualified construction workers for the delays. Cost overruns are already into the billions of dollars. President Obama placed the project in “cold standby” earlier this year, but it was rescued by Senate and House committees that found millions of dollars to keep it going.

More: Greenville Online

Limerick Security Problem Results in Closer NRC Oversight

LimerickThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission said it will perform an inspection of Exelon’s Limerick Generating Station to “ensure Exelon fully understands the root causes … and has implemented long-term corrective actions” following an unspecified security issue.

The security issue occurred between June 16 and June 20, but no details were given. The NRC doesn’t provide specifics of security problems at plants, a change that occurred after the 9/11 attacks. Plant spokeswoman Dana Melia said the problem has been corrected.

“Due to security precautions, we are unable to provide additional details, but Limerick stakeholders should know that at no time was the security of the facility, our workers or local residents compromised,” she wrote. “Our comprehensive corrective action program ensures that we identify and correct issues, including those of low safety significance.”

The announcement came just three days after the commission granted the two Limerick units 20-year license extensions, allowing operations until June 2049.

More: The Mercury News

DOE Says URS, Bechtel Refuse to Turn Over Hanford Documents

Department of Energy Inspector General Gregory Friedman says two contractors at the center of a whistleblower dispute concerning the Hanford site cleanup are refusing to turn over more than 4,500 documents that investigators requested.

Friedman said in a memo to Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz that Bechtel National and URS Energy Construction have withheld documents that his office sought to determine whether URS employee Donna Busche was terminated in retaliation for disclosing problems with a plan to treat radioactive waste at the Washington state site.

“[W]e did not have access to the full inventory of documents, which we felt were necessary to conduct our review,” Friedman wrote. “Thus, we were unable to complete our inquiry and accordingly disclaim any opinion regarding the circumstances of Ms. Busche’s termination.”

Bechtel said that it had gone “above and beyond in cooperating with the … investigation” and blamed its subcontractor, URS, for the firing decision. URS said the employee’s claim of wrongful termination is “without merit.”

More: The Washington Post

Moniz Announces $53 Million in Solar Research Funding

MorizEnergy Secretary Ernest Moniz announced more than $53 million in grants for research aimed at driving down the cost of solar energy.

Moniz, speaking at the Solar Power International 2014 conference in Las Vegas, said the projects are investigating next generation photovoltaic cells, new manufacturing processes and the “soft” costs of solar installation.

“The projects announced today will help the U.S. solar energy industry continue to grow, ensuring America can capitalize on its vast renewable energy sources, cut carbon pollution and continue to lead the world in clean energy innovation,” Moniz said.

More: Renewable Energy Focus

NY Pipeline Gets Final FERC Environmental OK

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission published its final environmental review of the Constitution Pipeline, a 124-mile line connecting the Marcellus Shale natural gas region in northeastern Pennsylvania to New York. The action is a key step toward the commission’s decision on the project, which is expected as early as November.

“FERC’s Final Environmental Impact Statement confirms that the Constitution Pipeline can be constructed in a manner that minimizes environmental impacts, while adding a key piece of natural gas infrastructure to the U.S. Northeast,” the project sponsors, Constitution Pipeline and Leatherstocking Gas, said in a joint statement. The pipeline will allow interconnection with two other major gas pipelines, the Iroquois and Tennessee pipelines.

The pipeline’s builders say it could deliver natural gas to New York and New England for the winter 2015-2016 season.

More: MarketWatch

New York Utilities Increase Gas Hedges Ahead of Winter

By William Opalka

new yorkALBANY — Chastened by January’s price spikes, New York’s electric utilities are hedging 70% of their natural gas purchases this winter, up from 55% last year.

Last year, about 35% of gas was bought on the spot market; this year, utilities intend to cut that down to 20%. The change is intended to insulate the companies from price volatility as natural gas demand for home heating and power generation continues to rise.

“Utilities are better prepared and have modified their portfolios,” said Raj Addepalli, the New York Public Service Commission director of the Office of Electric, Gas and Water, during a briefing at last week’s commission meeting.

After the havoc wrought by last winter’s polar vortex, New York officials say they are ready for severe weather that may come.

New York set a winter peak of 25,738 MW last year, breaking a record set a decade before. The PSC is reporting a capacity margin of 10,400 MW for this winter.

Last year’s cold weather caused electricity prices to rise to unprecedented levels in New York.

Average prices for customers receiving default service or on variable rate contracts with competitive suppliers jumped by an average of almost 12 cents per kWh from December 2013 to January 2014, a 175% increase. Gas prices have stabilized as new production from the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania and Utica Shale in Ohio has reached eastern markets. Price projections are 21% to 27% lower than last winter’s forecasts.

That could change some of the fuel mix in New York. Dual-fuel capable power plants frequently switched to oil last winter as natural gas prices jumped above oil 18 times in January.

PSC staff said the Department of Environmental Conservation has promised faster response to requests for fuel waivers needed to switch from natural gas to the more polluting oil. The department took longer to grant waivers than generators and power market officials would have liked last winter, according to PSC officials.

The PSC said it is looking at neighboring regions for long-term policy refinements. “The incentives in place may not be enough” to ensure reliability, Addepalli said, mentioning New England’s pay-for-performance program as a possible model.

NYPSC Upholds Dunkirk Repowering Ruling

dunkirkALBANY — The New York Public Service Commission Thursday reiterated its approval of NRG Energy’s request to convert the Dunkirk coal-fired generator to natural gas.

The commission unanimously rejected a rehearing request by the Sierra Club and a community group, which contended the state’s environmental review was deficient and that ratepayers would be unfairly subsidizing the plant’s owner (12-E-0577).

The Sierra Club and the community group also filed suit in the state Supreme Court last month to block the $140 million conversion. The PSC approved the repowering in June.

Just one of the four coal units at the 635-MW plant is currently in use. NRG plans to convert three of the units to natural gas, to bring its total generating capacity to 475 MW.

State and NYISO officials say Dunkirk, 47 miles southeast of Buffalo, is needed to maintain the reliability of the transmission system in western New York.

Wisconsin Utilities Seek Rate Changes in Rooftop Solar Battle

By Chris O’Malley

New U.S. Electric Generation Capacity, 1st Half 2014 (Source: SEIA, Solar Market Insight)Wisconsin’s 18 MW of solar power represents only one-tenth of 1% of the state’s installed generation capacity. But the state’s utilities are joining those in sunnier climes in treating distributed solar as an existential threat.

Milwaukee-based We Energies is among three utilities facing pushback over proposals to increase fixed costs and reduce how much the company pays customers for their own solar generation fed back to the grid.

Madison Gas & Electric this summer asked the state Public Service Commission to more than double its fixed charge from $10.44 a month to nearly $22 for a typical residential customer. After an earful from consumer and environmental groups, MG&E lowered its request to $19 a month, an 82% increase.

In Green Bay, Wisconsin Public Service also proposed more than doubling its fixed charge, to $25 a month from $10.40.

We Energies has proposed increasing monthly fixed charges by more than 75%, to $16 a month from $9. It also proposed a new “capacity demand” charge and restrictions on solar energy financing options. (Docket #5-UR-107)

Environmental group Renew Wisconsin said the capacity charge would offset nearly 30% of a customer’s savings from solar. It also complains that the utility would pay those who generate their own solar just 4.2 cents for each extra kilowatt-hour of electricity they create, while reselling the electricity to other customers for as much as 28 cents during peak summer hours.

The utilities argue they need more revenue to cover their fixed costs as customers improve energy efficiency and generate more of their own power.

NRDC-EEI Agree on Decoupling

At least some renewable advocates, such as the Natural Resources Defense Council, agree with the idea of “decoupling” revenue from consumption. In February, the NRDC and the Edison Electric Institute, lobbying arm of the nation’s investor-owned utilities, issued a joint statement urging state regulators to adopt new rate designs to protect utilities’ finances when they accommodate distributed generation and prevent cost shifts. (See related story, Postcards from the Future.)

Agreeing on the details of those new rate designs has proven far more difficult.

About half the states have decoupled revenue from consumption, often after “ferocious” fights, says Ralph Cavanagh, co-director of NRDC’s energy program.

wisconsinThe battle was on display at a public hearing in Milwaukee earlier this month on We Energies’ proposal. More than 200 people attended the session, at which both the utility’s supporters and opponents claimed to be protecting the poor.

We Energies says that only 25% of its fixed costs are covered by the “facilities” charge on customers’ bills. The increased fixed charges, it says, would eliminate the cost shift that has low-income consumers subsidizing wealthier homeowners’ rooftop solar panels.

Opponents say the proposed increase in fixed charges is too high. Because low-income consumers generally use less electricity, they say, the proposed change is regressive. The Chicago-based Environmental Law & Policy Center says the Wisconsin utilities would have by far the highest fixed costs in the Midwest if the proposed increases are approved. (See chart.)

Opponents also contend the change would discourage rooftop solar and cripple the state’s budding solar industry. The Environmental Law & Policy Center says there are more than 12,000 Wisconsin jobs tied to about 300 solar and wind power supply chain businesses.

Brad Klein, senior attorney at the center, said utilities are attempting “to support and protect an outdated business model.”

In an Oct. 10 editorial, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel recommended a smaller increase, noting that less than 700 of the company’s 1.1 million customers have distributed generation systems. The shortfall from subsidizing those customers is $116,000, a rounding error compared to We Energies’ $4.52 billion in revenue.

“The harm that’s being caused by the unfairness in the current system is too small right now to warrant the changes in the proposal by the utility (and similar proposals by two other utilities),” the paper wrote. “Some increase in the monthly charge for fixed costs makes sense, but that increase should be more modest than the proposed increase.”

Solar’s Growth

While solar is barely a blip in Wisconsin, the number of installations nationwide have soared by 1,600% since 2006, according to the Solar Industry Association. Distributed residential installations increased 61% in 2012, most of them leased from companies such as Solar City rather than through electric utilities.

Some experts say that by as soon as 2016, installed distributed solar photovoltaic capacity could reach 30 GW, nearly one-third the U.S. nuclear generation capacity.

Steven Kihm, director of market research and policy at the Energy Center of Wisconsin, warns that utilities fighting solar firms that threaten their monopolies may no longer be able to count on sympathetic state regulators, as some of their battles are finding their ways into the courts.

In July, the Iowa Supreme Court shot down objections posed by Alliant Energy and Iowa regulators over Eagle Point Solar’s plans to install panels on the roof of a Dubuque government building. The utility argued the solar company was unfairly competing with Alliant’s monopoly footprint, but the court ruled in favor of the solar company.

Strategic Choices

In a recent Energy Law Journal paper co-authored with Arizona State University professor Elisabeth Graffy, Kihm says that utilities face “two very different strategic choice pathways.”

One reaction can be to take “backward-looking, defensive” positions to protect past infrastructure investment. The other would be to look for new ways to create value in seeking opportunities in the renewables market.

They point to cable television companies that were wise enough to capitalize on the coaxial cable’s wide bandwidth that satellite couldn’t deliver. Those companies added high-speed Internet and other services that helped them thrive in the more competitive new environment.

Kihm argues that utilities that take defensive positions to discourage their customers from adding solar panels run the risk of alienating them such that they sever connections to the grid all together — particularly as solar providers offer them more advanced and compelling product offerings.

“There is no imminent death spiral or disruption,” agrees Cavanagh. “There is no reason why utilities cannot be engaged and effective partners in the clean-energy [future].”

Cumulative U.S. Solar PV Installations by Market Segment 1st Half 2012 Versus 1st Half 2014 (Source SEIA)Theodore F. Craver Jr., CEO of Edison International, parent of Southern California Edison, told PJM’s Grid 20/20 conference last week that maximizing the best features of distributed resources — flexibility, resiliency and customer engagement — with the efficiency and installed base of the bulk power system is a central task for his company. “There’s a seam between those two systems that can certainly be problematic.”

David Owens, executive vice president of the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), sees distribution utilities assuming a role akin to RTOs as “distribution system operators” to integrate the two and make decisions about planning and building the system. “There’s got to be an architect of that distribution system that Wall Street understands” to ensure sufficient investment, he said.

If You Can’t Beat ‘Em…

Some traditional electric utilities are now treading on the turf of solar firms. For example, Arizona Public Service recently said it plans to install solar panels on up to 3,000 homes in Phoenix.

We Energies is looking for the upside. We Energies’ parent, Wisconsin Energy, will acquire a rooftop solar business if it wins regulatory approval for its acquisition of Integrys Energy Group, of Chicago. (See related story, Michigan Gov.: Wisconsin Energy-Integrys Merger Could Stifle Competition.)

“We’s strategy would be to do renewable — on their side of the meter,” Kihm said.

State Briefs

State Holds Delayed Hearing on PSEG New Nuke Plans

Artificial Island from DelawareThe state’s Congressional delegation arranged for a public comment session on a possible new reactor at Public Service Enterprise Group’s Artificial Island site in New Jersey after lawmakers realized that only Garden State residents had been given the opportunity to talk. A session was held Thursday in Middletown to let residents speak out about the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s draft environmental impact review. Although PSEG has not made firm plans for a new reactor at the site – home of the Salem and Hope Creek reactors – it is pursuing NRC site approval.

Richard Cathcart, manager of Delaware City and a former state representative, said he supports construction of a new reactor on the Artificial Island site across the state line. “We know that the construction workforce could grow to over 4,000 jobs, many of which could go to Delawareans,” he said, noting that he was speaking as a private citizen. “And we know new construction could bring a much-needed and major boost to the economy.”

But environmentalists question how an early site approval can be given when PSEG hasn’t even determined what type of reactor design it would deploy.

More: The News Journal

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

New Office of Consumer Services Chief Named by Public Service Commission

The Public Service Commission appointed a program analyst as the interim Director of the Office of Consumer Services.

Susan Nelson, who started as an analyst in the PSC’s Office of Technical and Regulatory Analysis in May, was elevated to fill the position after Linda Jordan retired earlier this month. The Office of Consumer Services handles consumer complaints and inquiries and operates outreach programs. Nelson held numerous customer care and billing positions in the telecommunications industry before joining the PSC.

More: PSC

ILLINOIS

Grand Prairie Gateway Wins ICC Approval

Grand Prairie Locator (Source: ComEd)The Commerce Commission approved Commonwealth Edison’s Grand Prairie Gateway Project, a 70-mile transmission line running across four Illinois counties. Construction of the $251 million project is scheduled to begin next year and be completed in 2017.

The 345-kV line “would allow greater access to renewable energy west of Illinois, which should enhance competition in the electricity markets,” a commission news release said. Terence Donnelly, ComEd executive vice president, said the line will relieve congestion that impedes the flow of low-cost energy, and reduce costs for delivering energy to customers.

The line would start from a substation near Byron Nuclear Generation Station and continue to a substation near Wayne. Byron is owned by ComEd’s parent company, Exelon.

More: Kane County Chronicle

INDIANA

Vectren Customers See Big Spike in Energy Bills

VectrenDroves of Vectren customers have applied for energy assistance after many complained about dramatically higher bills to make up for underpayments in previous months.

The Utility Regulatory Commission is monitoring Vectren’s action plan after hundreds of customers complained. Vectren officials say that the problem stems from inaccurately estimated bills. The company has been swamped with requests to meet with customer service representatives, and community service organizations say they’re experiencing record numbers of requests for emergency energy subsidies.

A single mother of three children said her Vectren bill was around $11 for three straight months then jumped to more than $700.

More: WTVW

KENTUCKY

LG&E/KU Adjusts Generation Construction Plans

Louisville Gas & Electric and Kentucky Utilities updated plans with the Public Service Commission, telling the PSC they will need to build between 368 MW and 737 MW of natural gas generation starting in 2020. The PPL subsidiaries filed the updated resource assessment report with the PSC last week.

The companies said they plan to retire two units at the E.W. Brown coal-fired plant and still plan to go forward with a 10-MW solar project on the plant site. Uncertainty about the effect of the recent Environmental Protection Agency emissions rules make it difficult to be more specific, the utilities said. Further load growth studies could force them to consider building more natural gas-fired generation before 2020.

More: UtilityDive

MARYLAND

PSC Holding Public Sessions on BGE’s Rate Increases

BGEBaltimore Gas and Electric is asking for its fourth rate hike in four years. The Public Service Commission has scheduled several public hearings.

The company wants to raise distribution charges to both gas and electric customers by about $15 a month. BGE says it needs the increase to pay for infrastructure upgrades. If approved, the rates would go in effect in January.

More: The Baltimore Sun

MICHIGAN

Senators Ask Feds to Delay We Energies Rate Hike

Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow have asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to reconsider its decision to force We Energies customers in the state to absorb a $97 million rate increase to pay for the company’s power plant in Marquette.

We Energies wanted to shut its Presque Isle Power Plant after its largest industrial companies switched to another provider. But MISO determined the plant was crucial to system reliability and ordered that it stay in operation. The Wisconsin Public Service Commission later ruled that a large number of Wisconsin customers should be freed from paying the plant’s costs, shifting the bill to Michigan customers. FERC upheld its ruling.

Levin and Stabenow said the rate impact on customers in the Upper Peninsula is unjustified.

More: WTAQ

NEW JERSEY

Report: Utilities Need to Give BPU More Storm Info

The Board of Public Utilities needs more information on storm responses to determine how to best improve resiliency, according to a consultant’s report.

The report, prepared by GE Energy Consulting, says the state fails to get enough information before and during storms to help it determine the most cost-effective solutions.

It also called on utilities to harden portions of the grid, especially substations. During Superstorm Sandy, 40% of Public Service Electric & Gas substations were shut down by flooding. Since then, the company has started a program to raise substations above the 100-year flood zones or to protect them with walls.

More: NJSpotlight

Utilities Spent $1.25B on Storms in 2011 and 2012, Study Shows

The Board of Public Utilities said utilities in the state spent $1.25 billion to restore and repair systems after the storms of 2011 and 2012, including Superstorm Sandy. The tally was part of the board’s review of storm costs to determine what should be recovered from ratepayers.

The board approved a New Jersey Natural Gas request to recover $48.7 million, including the costs to replace sections of natural gas distribution mains washed away by Sandy. Jersey Central Power & Light said it spent $736.1 million in storm costs. Public Service Electric & Gas said it spent $366.3 million. Atlantic City Electric put its costs at $70 million.

ACE has already received permission to increase rates to cover its costs. JCP&L has a request pending. PSE&G hasn’t asked to raise rates.

More: Asbury Park Press

NORTH CAROLINA

Duke Won’t Charge Customers for Corporate Taxes it Doesn’t Pay

Duke Energy said it will not charge customers $19 million for corporate income taxes that it doesn’t actually have to pay, even though the Utilities Commission approved the practice.

The NCUC ruled earlier this month that utilities can continue to charge customers a 6.9% tax, even though the state legislature recently cut the corporate tax from 6.9% to 5%. Duke said it could have extracted $19 million a year more from Duke Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Progress customers under the ruling.

“Duke Energy supports the NCUC’s Oct. 9 decision that explains the state of the law in North Carolina,” Duke said. “However, in this case, we have already reduced rates to reflect the decrease in corporate income taxes.”

The ruling gave utilities the option to adjust rates and set an Oct. 24 deadline for them to decide. Republican commission members said the over-collections are negligible for individual bills, but the Democrats said the state’s four utilities would generate an additional $21 million a year.

More: The News & Observer

OHIO

PUCO Drops In-State Renewables Requirement

Utilities in the state no longer have to find in-state sources for half of their renewable energy supply, the Public Utilities Commission ruled.

While making it easier for companies to reach renewable targets, the decision is another blow to the state’s solar industry, which is already feeling a downturn after legislators froze renewable targets earlier this year. “Pure financial projects are on hold right now,” said Geoff Greenfield, president of Third Sun Solar.

More: Columbus Business First

PENNSYLVANIA

PUC Eyes Extension of Utility-Based Energy-Efficiency Conservation

The Public Utility Commission opened a study to consider extending state-directed energy-efficiency and conservation targets for utilities beyond 2016.

The current programs, authorized by a 2008 law called Act 129, set targets for reductions in consumption and peak demand. The targets expire in May 2016. The law requires the PUC to re-evaluate the costs and benefits of energy-efficiency and conservation programs every five years and to consider extending the goals.

More: PUC

EDCs to Provide Customers Look at What Info is Given to Suppliers

The Public Utility Commission directed the state’s electric utilities to reach out to customers every three years to give them the opportunity to review the marketing information being provided to third-party electric generation suppliers. The information includes historic usage and customer addresses.

The PUC’s order directs electric distribution companies to allow customers to access the information and to restrict it if they want. The commission’s action calls on all distribution companies to remind customers of their right to access the information.

More: PUC

PUC’s Audit of PECO Shows Possible Millions in Savings

A Public Utility Commission audit of PECO’s management and operations suggested ways the company could save up to $5.7 million a year and up to $3.1 million in one-time savings. The commission’s Bureau of Audits report was made public by a 5-0 vote of the commission.

The report provided 28 recommendations for the company to improve performance and save money, including reducing non-storm response overtime, improving the mapping of its natural gas lines to cut down on gas line hits and improving oversight of contractors. PECO has agreed to implement all of the recommendations by the first quarter of 2017.

More: The Philadelphia Inquirer; PUC

VIRGINIA

Appalachian Power Files for 6 Energy-Efficiency Plans

Appalachian Power has filed with the State Corporation Commission for approval for four residential energy-efficiency programs and two programs for commercial and industrial customers.

The residential programs include home energy assessments, incentives for customers to give up second refrigerators or freezers, new construction energy-efficiency standards and retail rebates for high-efficiency lighting and appliances. The C&I plans provide incentives for high-efficiency lighting and heating and cooling equipment, and rebates for larger energy-efficiency projects.

The programs are designed to help the company reach mandated energy reduction targets.

More: Bluefield Daily Telegraph

WEST VIRGINIA

Possible to Meet EPA Standards with Mix of Methods, Report Says

The state could meet the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed carbon emissions standards with a combination of more renewable generation, power plant modification and energy-efficiency programs, according to a report released last week.

The report identified several areas necessary to meet the targets, including modifying existing power plants; dispatching low-emitting plants first; increasing renewable energy generation; expanding energy-efficiency programs; and building lower-emitting, natural gas-fired plants to take advantage of the state’s shale gas production. The report was prepared by the West Virginia University College of Law’s Center for Energy and Sustainable Development, the Morgantown-based consulting firm Downstream Strategies and the Appalachian Stewardship Foundation.

Given the available options, the report said the state can develop a plan to meet its emission targets while also enhancing social, economic and environmental benefits.

More: The Charleston Gazette

MRC/MC Preview

The contentious $1,000/MWh energy offer cap is likely to be the subject of some of the most vigorous debate at Thursday’s Markets and Reliability and Members committees meetings.

The MRC deadlocked over the issue Sept. 18 with none of three proposals to lift the cap winning a two-thirds majority. (See Members Deadlock on Change to $1,000 Offer Cap.)

An Oct. 10 task force meeting failed to bridge the gap between generators and load interests. As a result, PJM will ask the MRC to sunset the task force. (MRC agenda item # 3.)

Meanwhile, despite the lack of consensus, Bob O’Connell of J.P. Morgan Ventures Energy will attempt to win MC approval to effectively eliminate the cap from the Operating Agreement as of June 1, 2015. (MC agenda item #4.)

O’Connell’s proposal also suggests that cost-based offers below $2,250/MWh – equivalent to a 15,000 Btu/kWh generator burning gas purchased at $150/Btu -– be allowed to set LMPs. Cost-based offers above $2,250 would be reimbursed through uplift and not set the clearing price. Price-based offers would be permitted to equal cost-based offers when the latter is more than $1,000/MWh.

At the April MRC meeting, O’Connell said that if stakeholders refused to approve a problem statement considering changes to the cap, as few as five members could create a user group to push for the change “through an alternative stakeholder process that may disenfranchise certain members.” (See Effort to Lift Offer Cap Advances After Debate.)

Below is a summary of the other issues scheduled to be brought to a vote at the MRC and MC meetings. Each item is listed by agenda number, description and projected time of discussion, followed by a summary of the issue and links to prior coverage in RTO Insider.

RTO Insider will be in Wilmington covering the discussions and votes. See next Tuesday’s newsletter for a full report.

Markets and Reliability Committee

2. PJM Manuals (9:10-9:30)

Members will be asked to endorse the following manual changes:

  • Revisions to Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations and Manual 28: Operating Agreement Accounting that will set the default Tier 1 synchronized reserves estimates to zero MW for nuclear, wind, solar, batteries and hydro generators. The change means those resources will not receive compensation unless they actually produce during a spinning event.
  • Changes to Manual 1 to comply with a revised reliability standard given preliminary approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last month. COM-002-4 (Operating Personnel Communications Protocols) requires the use of a three-part communications process when issuing operating instructions. (See FERC Backs NERC, NAESB Standards.)
  • Revisions to Manual 14A: Generation and Transmission Interconnection Process that create a pre-application process for new and existing generation resource additions of 20 MW or less in compliance with FERC Order 792. Potential interconnection customers will have to submit a formal written request and a $300 processing fee. PJM is requesting these changes be effective beginning Nov. 1. (See PC Starts Work on Small Generator Interconnection Changes.)
  • Revisions to Manual 19: Load Forecasting and Analysis clarifying process for adjusting load forecasts due to significant load changes. The changes, which do not reflect any change in the procedures, were endorsed by the Planning Committee Sept. 2.
  • Conforming changes to Manual 18: PJM Capacity Market in response to members’ requests for details of the process for requesting and cancelling demand response maintenance outages and a FERC order allowing Annual, Extended and Limited products for DR (ER11-2288). The changes detail what qualifies for the maintenance outage, timeframes for the notification window, length of outage, extensions, cancellations, impacts to compliance calculations and resource testing.

3. Cap Review Senior Task Force (CRSTF) (9:30-9:50)

The committee will be asked to approve sunsetting the task force. (See above.)

4. Energy / Reserve Pricing & Interchange Volatility update (9:50-10:20) 

Members will vote on whether to approve new rules to reduce uplift and ensure energy prices better reflect operator actions. The changes would increase synchronized and primary reserve requirements under emergency conditions when additional intraday resources are scheduled. The committee also will be asked to approve limits on interchange during emergency conditions. The limit would be used when operators have made firm resource commitments and anticipated interchange schedules are sufficient to meet projected load for the hour. The changes were approved last month by the Market Implementation Committee. (See MIC Briefs.)

5. Transmission Owner (TO) Data Feed (10:20-10:30)

Members will be asked to approve Operating Agreement and manual changes to make it easier for transmission owners to access real-time generator data. The changes are intended to improve situational awareness and emergency response. The Operating Agreement would be revised to include a universal non-disclosure agreement, eliminating the need for a separate data confidentiality agreement. Transmission owners will be able to obtain data from generators in their zone without justification. For generators outside its zone, the TO must confirm that the plant is in the current TO energy management system (EMS) model or will be included in an expanded model. The changes were approved by the Operating Committee last month.

6. Cold Weather Resource Improvement (10:30-10:45)

Members will be asked to approve rules for voluntary winter testing of seldom-used generators. The tests would be limited to generators that haven’t run in the prior eight weeks and days when temperatures are below 35 degrees Fahrenheit. (See Winter Testing Could Cost $15.9M.) The Operating Committee approved the changes earlier this month.

7. 2014 IRM STUDY RESULTS (10:45-11:00)

Members will be asked to approve a recommendation to leave PJM’s Installed Reserve Margin at 15.7% for planning year 2018/19, unchanged from 2017/18. The Planning Committee approved the recommendation earlier this month. (See Planning Committee Briefs.)

8. Reactive Supply and Voltage Control Service from Deactivating Resources (11:00-11:15)

The MRC will be asked to approve on first read a proposed problem statement and issue charge seeking to prevent generation fleet owners from collecting payments for reactive power and voltage control service from generators that are no longer running.

9. Manual 29 Revisions – Billing Adjustments (11:15-11:30)

The committee will be asked to approve a proposed problem statement and issue charge on first read regarding revisions to Manual 29: Billing, regarding treatment of underpayments of miscellaneous items or special adjustments. The changes are intended to prevent cost shifting when miscellaneous items or special adjustments are underpaid.

10. Regional Planning Process Senior Task Force (RPPTF) – Window Proposal Fee (11:30-11:45)

Members will consider a proposal by the RPPTF to charge a nonrefundable $30,000 fee for “greenfield” transmission proposals submitted during project proposal windows as a result of FERC Order 1000.

Members Committee

2. CONSENT AGENDA (1:20-1:25)

  • The MC will be asked to endorse revisions to Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations and Manual 15: Cost Development Guidelines to correct a typographical error. The words “mileage ratio” will be replaced with “mileage” in Section 3.2.7 of Manual 11 and Section 2.8 of Manual 15, where the calculation of adjusted regulation performance cost is described. There is no change in PJM’s calculations, which have been correctly using mileage as it is defined by PJM.
  • Members will consider revising its conflict of interest policy to reflect the increasing number of consumer product companies, manufacturers and technology companies becoming involved in the electric industry. (See PJM Revising Policy on Prohibited Investments.)

3. Nominating Committee (1:25-1:30)

The MC will elect members of the 2015 Nominating Committee.

4. Energy Market Offer Price Cap (1:30-2:00)

Bob O’Connell of J.P. Morgan Ventures Energy will attempt to win approval for Tariff and Operating Agreement revisions eliminating the $1,000/MWh energy market offer price cap effective June 1, 2015. (See above.)

FERC Removes 10% Adder from Generators’ Make-Whole Payments

By Michael Brooks

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission said Tuesday that PJM should not have included a 10% adder in its calculation of make-whole payments to generators whose costs exceeded the $1,000/MWh offer cap last winter.

FERC granted a rehearing request to PJM’s Independent Market Monitor, agreeing that including the adder —  typically included in cost-based offers to account for the uncertainty of calculating operating costs for combustion turbines under changing ambient conditions — was a mistake.

FERC said that the generators subject to their Jan. 24 waiver of the offer cap would still “receive make-whole payments by documenting the cost and volumes of natural gas needed to generate electricity.”

But the commission said that because the generators’ actual costs are now known, including an adder meant to cover uncertainty was inappropriate.

“This type of ex post determination does not contain any inherent uncertainty that would warrant an adder whose purpose in ex ante offers is solely to enable resources to recover uncertain or difficult-to-quantify costs,” FERC said.

The Monitor had argued in a March report that the adder portion was “not an actual cost and the generation owners did not pay it.” (See Stakeholders Preview Offer-Cap Debate.)

Denied

In its rehearing request, the Monitor also argued that non-capacity natural gas-fired generation resources should receive relief so as not to deter them from participating with PJM. FERC, however, disagreed.

“PJM’s filing requested a temporary waiver only for generation capacity resources and, therefore, we will not extend the waiver to other generators,” FERC said. “Further, no party in this proceeding has presented evidence that natural gas-fired generators other than generation capacity resources had documented costs above the market-clearing price.”

FERC also denied requests for rehearing from the Maryland Public Service Commission and the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition.

The coalition said customers shouldn’t be forced to pay higher prices due to generators’ decisions not to hedge against price spikes in the natural gas market. The coalition also said the waiver should have been limited in scope to specific PJM zones rather than the entire footprint.

FERC countered that the events of late January amounted to an emergency that harmed confidence in the wholesale markets and threatened reliability. “Delaying the issuance of the order could have threatened reliability by discouraging generators from making their units available,” FERC said, adding that its broad waiver was consistent with past orders during emergencies.

FERC’s denial of the PSC’s request was mostly procedural: the PSC had requested a detailed report from the Monitor explaining the basis for determining make-whole payments. The PSC filed its request on Feb. 21; one month later, the Monitor filed its report.