November 16, 2024

Federal Briefs

FERC Approves Cove Point LNG Port in Maryland

Dominion Cove Point (Dominion)
Dominion’s Cove Point facility today (Source: Dominion)

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission yesterday gave Dominion Cove Point LNG the green light to build a natural gas liquefaction plant along the Chesapeake Bay.

FERC also approved parts of the project located in Virginia, including a compressor station and metering and regulating sites (CP13-113).

Dominion has said it will have the $3.8 billion Cove Point project in service by June 2017. Although hotly contested by some residents and environmentalists, FERC, with its ruling, has found that the project is in the public’s interest. The agency’s ruling comes after two years of analysis, three public meetings, 140 speakers and more than 650 comments.

Despite requests from U.S. Sens. Ben Cardin and Barbara Mikulski (both D-Md.), FERC Chairmain Cheryl LaFleur declined to schedule additional public meetings on the project or to extend the comment period by 30 days.

FERC has approved three other LNG export projects, all in the Gulf of Mexico: the Sabine Pass Liquefaction Project, the Freeport LNG Project and the Cameron LNG Project. Fourteen LNG export proposals are still pending.

More: FERC

NRC Considers ‘Graded’ Look at Foreign Nuke Ownership

Calvert Cliffs
Calvert Cliffs

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is taking a fresh look at the implications of foreign ownership of U.S. nuclear generating facilities, a review that could allow a French company to build a third reactor at Maryland’s Calvert Cliffs plant. An NRC staff paper released this month recommended the commission replace its Cold War-era prohibition on foreign ownership with a “graded” approach.

The Nuclear Energy Institute praised the staff report, saying that the agency has been relying on an “unnecessarily restrictive interpretation” of the 1954 Atomic Energy Act, which prohibits foreign ownership of a U.S. nuclear station if such ownership could be a threat to the country. “Experienced foreign nuclear energy companies including AREVA, EDF, Toshiba and Mitsubishi have participated in the U.S. market for decades,” NEI Vice President and General Counsel Ellen Ginsberg said. “The U.S. nuclear industry and the U.S. economy benefit from both foreign financial investment and foreign construction and operating experience.”

France’s UniStar asked the NRC to reconsider the rule after the agency’s Atomic Safety and Licensing Board rejected its request to build a third reactor at the Maryland plant. UniStar is seeking a U.S. partner for its Calvert Cliffs project while waiting for the full commission to take action. Although the staff’s recommendation was prompted by the Calvert Cliffs plan, whatever the NRC decides could apply to all U.S. nuclear facilities.

More: Southern Maryland News; Nuclear Energy Institute; Pillsbury client alert

McCarthy: Don’t Believe Talk About States Resisting Rules

Gina McCarthy
Gina McCarthy

Environmental Protection Agency Chief Gina McCarthy said she’s not worried that states like Texas and West Virginia will refuse to implement the agency’s proposed carbon emission rule, despite public opposition from their governors.

“The public discussion may be a little bit different than the roll-up-the-sleeves discussion that we are actually having on a technical basis around these rules,” McCarthy told reporters on Friday at EPA headquarters. “And I’m really anticipating that those discussions will continue and that you will have many states see that the standards that we set were reasonable.

“I think the states know that we are within the Clean Air Act. The best thing they can do is to design their own plans and really create their own path forward that is in line with where they want to go economically and energy wise,” she added.

More: The Hill; McCarthy remarks at Resources for the Future

DOE Working to Build Taller Wind Energy Towers

The Department of Energy is investing $2 million in a study to find ways to build even taller wind turbines in an effort to reach higher winds.

Tower heights currently top out at about 260 feet, a limitation primarily of transportation constraints in moving components such as blades. But newer plans call for towers to reach nearly 400 feet. Such towers would allow blades to be powered by the stronger winds found at higher elevations. That could boost wind energy production by a factor of five at some sites.

More: NASDAQ

FERC Open Meeting Schedule Announced

FERC logo (Source: FERC)The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s 2015 schedule for its open meetings has been announced. The meetings take place at FERC headquarters at 888 First St. NE on the third Thursday of each month. No meeting is held in August.

The open meeting dates:

Jan. 15, Feb. 19, March 19, April 16, May 21, June 18, July 16, Sept. 17, Oct. 15, Nov. 19, Dec. 17.

More: FERC

Solar PV Cost-Effective for One-Third of Schools

At least one-third of the nation’s 125,000 schools could save money by installing solar PV systems, according to a study conducted for the Solar Energy Industries Association. The report found that solar systems would be cost-effective for 40,000 to 72,000 schools and that 450 school districts could each save more than $1 million over 30 years.

Solar installations nationwide have grown from 303 kW to 457,000 kW in the last decade. New Jersey schools ranked second nationally in solar capacity, behind only California. Pennsylvania, Ohio and Maryland ranked sixth, seventh and ninth, respectively.

“In a time of tight budgets and rising costs, solar can be the difference between hiring new teachers — or laying them off,” SEIA CEO Rhone Resch said.

More: Digital Journal

Duke Part of $8B Wind Power, Compressed-Air Storage Project

compressed-air
A novel project: Energy generated from wind turbines (in Wyoming) powers compressors (in Utah) that inject high-pressure air into salt caverns underground. The compressed air is stored for high-demand hours.

Duke Energy is joining a novel $8 billion project using Wyoming wind energy and Utah salt mines to provide power to Los Angeles.

Duke-American Transmission Co. (DATC) is one of four companies proposing the project, which would be the first time underground compressed-air storage would be used on such a scale in the U.S.

“This project would be the 21st century’s Hoover Dam — a landmark of the clean energy revolution,” said Jeff Meyer of Pathfinder Renewable Wind Energy, one of the four companies involved.

Meeting California Renewable Goals

The project is one of about 200 plans California officials will consider to help it reach its renewable-energy goals. Duke and the other companies said they would be submitting the proposal in early 2015.

The project would start with a $4 billion, 2,100-MW wind farm north of Cheyenne, Wyo., to be built by Pathfinder Renewable Wind Energy. Power from the facility would be sent to an energy storage facility near Delta, Utah, on a $2.6 billion, 525-mile transmission line to be built by DATC.

In Utah, four massive caverns — each a quarter-mile high and 290 feet in diameter — would be carved out of underground salt formations.

At times of low demand, electricity from the wind farm would power compressors that would inject high-pressure air into the caverns.

At times of high demand, the high-pressure air, combined with a little natural gas, would power eight generators. The $1.5 billion facility, to be built by Pathfinder, Magnum Energy and Dresser-Rand, would be rated at 1,200 MW.

An existing 490-mile transmission line would deliver the power through Utah, Nevada and California to Los Angeles.

Intermittent Wind

compressed-air
(Source: Dresser-Rand)

The project is intended to address the challenge of matching wind’s variable output with energy usage patterns.

California’s wind farms tend to generate most of their power in the evening, dropping off when energy demand reaches its peak. Wyoming wind, by comparison, tends to increase later in the day.

Dresser-Rand designed and built the first facility using compressed-air energy storage (CAES) in Alabama; the facility is linked to a coal-fired generating station. The 110-MW unit went into operation in 1991, and boasts a 96.7% reliability record in generation mode. There is one other operating CAES facility in Huntorf, Germany.

If the project goes forward, one of the first jobs will be excavating the caverns, using a process called solution mining. Magnum Energy, which has excavated other storage caverns, said it would inject water into the underground salt formations, dissolving the salt and pumping the salt solution to the surface, where it would be dried. Underground caverns have long been used for oil and natural gas storage.

The project, which is not expected to be completed until 2023, would be subject to numerous state and federal regulatory approvals, none of which has been applied for yet.

See Pathfinder’s video on the project.

Exelon Adding 2,000 MW, 50% Increase, in ERCOT

By Ted Caddell

Exelon Generation is adding another 2,000 MW of fossil generation to its fleet in Texas, which will bring the company’s total generation in ERCOT to nearly 6,000 MW.

The company announced Monday it was investing more than $500 million in four gas and two steam turbines to build combined-cycle plants at two of their existing sites.

GE Turbine (Source: BusinessWire)
General Electric H-Class Turbine (Source: BusinessWire)

In addition to using the most fuel-efficient technology, the plants will be air-cooled, rather than water-cooled, a big plus in drought-threatened Texas. The turbines will be General Electric H-class models, which GE says will allow more than $8 million in fuel savings per turbine a year.

French company Alstom is providing the heat recovery steam generators. Earlier this year, GE agreed to buy the power arm of Alstom for $16.8 billion.

It will be the first use of the new GE turbines in the U.S.

“What we see is a clean-energy future that includes this kind of new technology, which uses little water and produces few emissions while generating electricity at a very low cost,” said Ken Cornew, president and CEO of Exelon Generation.

The new combined-cycle plants are to be built at Exelon Generation’s Wolf Hollow site in Grandbury, southwest of Fort Worth, and the Colorado Bend plant in Wharton County, southwest of Houston.

Exelon Generation currently has six generating stations in Texas with a combined output of about 3,700 MW. It has wind farms generating an additional 281 MW, for a total of nearly 4,000 MW.

The two new plants will boost that total to nearly 6,000 MW. Exelon said it would start construction of both plants in 2015 and expects both to be in service by 2017.

Company Briefs

Kathleen Barron
Kathleen Barron

Exelon needs $580 million in additional revenue annually to keep its Illinois nuclear fleet in operation,  Senior Vice President Kathleen Barron told the Illinois Commerce Commission last week.

Exelon has been saying for months that unless pricing for the output of its Illinois nuclear stations improves, it may need to shut them down. Barron said the company figures it needs about $6 more per MWh for continued operation. That would translate to rate increases of about 8% in Chicago and more downstate, where prices are cheaper.

And even that might not do it. “While a $6/MWh payment or even less would be sufficient for some units, $6 may not be enough for others,” the company said in a statement. “Each of our 11 nuclear units in Illinois has a different cost structure and different requirements.”

Barron’s comments are part of a national campaign by Exelon to gain credits for its carbon-free output, and cut or reduce the federal wind production tax credit, to let its plants compete. Company lobbyists and executives have been delivering a consistent message since the spring. (See Exelon in Lobbying Push to Save Ill. Nukes.)

Barron said the result of closing the nuclear stations would be significant for Illinois. “If the units at risk of closing today — representing 43% of the state’s nuclear generation — retire, they cannot be mothballed and later brought back online,” Barron said. “Together, they represent more than 30 million metric tons of avoided carbon emissions, given that they will need to be replaced with fossil generation to provide the around-the-clock electricity needed to serve customers in the state.”

More: Crain’s Chicago Business; FierceEnergy

Dominion Starts $2B Undergrounding Project

Dominion Virginia Power is starting a $2 billion project that will underground 4,000 miles of outage-prone lines by 2026.

The target represents about 11% of the company’s overhead distribution lines, and placing them underground should result in increased reliability, the company said. About a third of the company’s 58,000 miles of distribution lines are now underground.

It said it will spend about $175 million a year moving the lines. The company is expected to file an application for a rate increase to pay for the project with the Virginia State Corporation Commission by the end of October. The rate increase would go toward the project, it said.

More: Richmond Times-Dispatch

South Carolina Official Upset Duke Hasn’t Removed Ash Yet

A South Carolina Public Service commissioner said he thought Duke Energy was already removing stored coal ash from its sites in the state. He was surprised to learn it hasn’t started yet.

“I think it’s somewhat of a surprise to this commission that no ash is being removed because this has been an ongoing situation that we’ve heard about and talked about,” Commissioner G. O’Neal Hamilton said. “We’ve seen reports of trucks moving in North Carolina and I assumed that was happening here and it’s a little disappointing.”

The issue arose after environmentalists said that the company’s W.S. Lee Steam Station has coal ash lagoons that are leaking toxins into the surrounding area. Duke said it will present the commission with plans for the removal by the end of the year. Duke is converting the plant to burn natural gas. A Duke spokesman said plans are being made to remove coal ash from a number of sites in North Carolina as well, but they have not yet been implemented.

More: Greenville Citizen Times

TVA’s Top Attorney Retiring After 35 Years

Ralph Rogers
Ralph Rogers

Ralph Rogers, Tennessee Valley Authority’s top lawyer, is retiring at the end of the year. Rogers started with the federal authority in 1979 and became TVA’s senior litigation attorney and ethics officer. He was the highest paid attorney in TVA history, making $1.9 million last year and $2.5 million the year before. High executive salaries at TVA have drawn fire from former Knoxville Mayor Victor Ashe, who said “most East Tennessee attorneys do not make a quarter of that amount (paid to Rodgers) in one year.”

Under the corporate-like board structure adopted for TVA by Congress in 2006, pay levels for the general counsel and other top officers at TVA have risen significantly over the past decade to more closely align with investor-owned companies rather than the government-level pay grades used by TVA in the past.

More: Chattanooga Times Free Press

PSE&G Breaks Ground on Landfill Solar Project

Public Service Electric and Gas started construction of a 10-MW solar plant on a former garbage dump in New Jersey, the latest and largest system of solar arrays the company is building. The project will sit atop a capped dump in Bordentown.

It’s part of a state-wide effort to use brownfields and under-used industrial sites to build solar plants to deliver energy to the grid. The company is planning to spend $247 million on this and similar projects. It is eying plans to build an even larger solar plant on another former dump in New Jersey.

More: Philly.com

NERC on Polar Vortex Performance: Good, Could be Better

Grid operators demonstrated resiliency during January’s polar vortex but more needs to be done to prepare for future cold spells, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation said in a report released today.

All-time Winter Peaks vs. Polar Vortex Loads by Pct. (Source: NERC)
All-time Winter Peaks vs. Polar Vortex Loads by Pct. (Source: NERC)

NERC’s Polar Vortex Review noted that only one balancing authority shed load despite the fact that many areas in the Midwest, South Central and East Coast experienced temperatures 20 to 30 degrees below normal. (South Carolina Electric and Gas (SCE&G) dropped less than 300 MW, less than 0.1% of the total load for the Eastern and ERCOT Interconnections.)

Howard Gugel, NERC director of performance analysis, said the industry performed well “under extremely challenging circumstances. Industry owners and operators used all the resources at their disposal to keep the grid reliable.”

Grid operators relied on voltage reductions and demand side management to prevent load sheds. NERC said the performance validated its regular training and drills “as the operators and other [… entities were able to effectively and successfully implement emergency procedures.”

Record Cold

Forty-nine cities set new record lows, with Minneapolis shivering through 62 consecutive hours of temperatures below zero from Jan. 5 to Jan. 7. On Jan. 6, the average daily temperature in the U.S. was 17.9 F, the first time the average dropped below 18 F since 1997. The 17-year run of temperatures above 18 was the longest such span on record and occurred during a period in which an increasing portion of the generating fleet had become fueled by natural gas, NERC noted.

The cold pushed many generators beyond the temperature range for which they were designed.

Nevertheless, an analysis of NERC’s Generating Availability Data System (GADS) found that most generators units performed within the equivalent forced outage rate (EFOR) range expected based on the past five years. The exception was natural gas units, which had a higher-than-expected forced outage rate in January in two regions, the Midwest Reliability Organization and Southeast Reliability Corp.

Demand Records

Eight of 10 areas included in the study — all but ISO-NE and the Florida Reliability Coordinating Council (FRCC) — set all-time winter demand records on Jan. 6 or 7. The VACAR South reliability coordinator, which includes SCE&G, busted its record by almost 18%. (NERC’s review did not include the Western Electric Coordinating Council, which was largely unaffected by the polar vortex.)

Causes

Like PJM, other regions experienced fuel deliverability problems, natural gas pipeline outages and frozen equipment. The report catalogues dozens of cold-weather problems that led to outages, delayed starts or deratings, most of them involving the freezing of water and the gelling of oil and diesel fuel.

Outages by Type vs Temperature (Source NERC)NERC’s report makes a number of recommendations but does not call for changes to existing mandatory reliability standards. Many of the recommendations are already being taken in PJM and other regions.

Among the recommendations:

Generators

  • Review and update power plant weatherization programs, including procedures and staff training.
  • Continue or consider implementing a program for winter preparation site reviews at generation facilities.
  • Review the basis for reporting forced and planned outages to ensure appropriate data for unit outages and de-ratings. The review found that planned and forced generation outages in some regions exceeded worst-case scenarios used in seasonal assessments.
  • Consider where appropriate the temperature design basis for their plants to determine if improvements are needed for the plants to withstand lower winter temperatures without compromising their ability to withstand summer temperatures.
  • Review internal processes to ensure their ability to secure necessary waivers of winter environmental and/or fuel restrictions.

Oil & Natural Gas

  • Review natural gas supply and transportation issues, and work with gas suppliers, markets and regulators to develop appropriate actions.
  • Include in winter assessments reasonable losses of gas-fired generation and considerations of oil burn rates relative to oil replenishment rates to determine fuel needs for continuous operation.
  • Continue to improve operational awareness of the fuel status and pipeline system conditions for all generators.
  • Ensure that on-site fuel and fuel ordered for winter is adequately protected from gelling.

NERC will conduct a webinar Thursday to provide a preview of its 2014-15 winter outlook and to discuss cold weather events including the polar vortex and the 2011 Southwest winter outage.

PJM to Stakeholders: We Hear You

Ott: ‘You’re Not Talking to a Brick Wall’

PJM officials said Wednesday they are amending their proposed capacity overhaul in response to dozens of mostly critical stakeholder comments.

“Already, based on the comments, we are making adaptations to our proposal. It’s extremely helpful to get your feedback,” Executive Vice President for Markets Andy Ott said at the beginning of the three-and-a-half-hour question-and-answer session on the proposal.

“We said all along it was a proposal,” Ott said later in the session. “I can’t say it enough. You’re not talking to a wall here. This isn’t a traditional stakeholder process but it is still a stakeholder process.”

On Monday, PJM released more than 300 pages of comments from more than 50 stakeholders. While the comments reflected the traditional load vs. supply divide, there was near universal unease with how quickly PJM is attempting to introduce a new Capacity Performance product and rewrite compensation and penalty policies. (See Something for Everyone to Dislike in Capacity Performance Proposal.)

Although Wednesday’s discussion was the last scheduled stakeholder meeting before PJM issues its final proposal Oct. 7, officials said they would consider one or two additional meetings.

The Board of Managers will make the ultimate decision on what PJM files with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission following an Enhanced Liaison Committee meeting with members Nov. 4 in Philadelphia. Although the meeting will be limited to PJM members, representatives of state regulatory commissions will also have a chance to address the board before or after the meeting, officials said.

Ott said officials are targeting a FERC filing by Dec. 1 in order to have the changes in place for the May 2015 Base Residual Auction.

Ott said the board will likely make additional changes in the plan before filing with FERC. “I think there’s a very small chance that [the Oct. 7] proposal will be filed” at FERC, Ott said.

Below are some of the issues that generated discussion Wednesday.

Force Majeure

Mike Borgatti of Gabel Associates said PJM’s proposal for “the outright elimination of force majeure is untenable.”

Borgatti said the rules would allow a coal-fired plant to escape penalties if it were unable to operate because a sinkhole swallowed a nearby substation but not if the hole made the road to the plant impassible for coal deliveries. Another stakeholder observed force majeure would not apply for a gas-fired generator that lost its pipeline to the sinkhole.

Independent Market Monitor Joe Bowring, who opposes PJM’s proposal to add an additional class of capacity, said he supports the tightened force majeure rules. “The market doesn’t care why you’re out [of service]. If you’re not producing energy, you’re not producing energy. That’s all the market cares about. It’s impossible [for the Monitor and PJM] to manage a long list of excuses.”

Ed Tatum of Old Dominion Electric Cooperative said Bowring’s analysis was an inaccurate description of the Reliability Pricing Model. “This is a resource adequacy concept. It’s not a market. … Taking an academic view of what is not a market is not going to get us” improved performance.

Officer Certification

Generators are also balking over requirements that officers certify their plants’ ability to meet the Capacity Performance requirements. Borgatti said it could be impossible to certify that a generator holds a firm gas contract three years into the future.

Another member said the requirement introduced both organizational risk and personal risk to the officer. “You’re asking the officer to certify to an unknown risk that won’t be known until after the fact,” he said. He said PJM should eliminate the requirement or add a “safe harbor” provision.

The IMM says performance incentives will be sufficient to ensure reliability and that officer certifications are unnecessary.

Ott said PJM is aware of the risk of unintended consequences from the requirement. “We certainly heard that” from the comments, he said.

Capacity Performance Requirements

Others said PJM should relax its requirement that Capacity Performance resources be able to run at full output for 16 hours for three consecutive days during weather emergencies, saying it unnecessarily excludes demand response, energy efficiency and storage.

Wil Burns, an attorney representing public interest groups said PJM should broaden its Capacity Performance definition to include resources such as DR, EE and renewables that have no fuel risk and “that can be and have been there when needed.”

PJM’s Adam Keech said the requirement was intended to cover the daily summer peak or the two daily winter peaks. But he suggested PJM might relax the requirement saying, “I don’t want to say anything is etched in stone.”

“You’re getting a sense from us that the last thing we want to do is to discourage resources that can be there,” Ott said. But he said the RTO felt that it needed operational requirements and not “just rely on the economic pressure of a performance penalty. Striking that balance will be very key.”

Despite the appellate court ruling voiding FERC’s authority over DR, “PJM believes there’s a continuing role for demand response in the wholesale market,” Mike Kormos, executive vice president for markets, assured stakeholders. “It may be there in a different format.”

Kormos said PJM would integrate its plans for DR with the capacity market “once it’s clear how FERC wants us to move forward.”

capacity performance

Base Capacity Assumptions

Several speakers challenged PJM’s assumption that no base capacity will be available during the peak winter week. Tatum noted that the RTO uses a probabilistic approach to account for forced outages in its calculation of loss-of-load-expectation (LOLE) and installed reserve margins (IRM).

“Zero seems pretty on-off – kind of a low number to me,” Tatum said. “I think it would be good to have a consistent approach.”

Kormos said that to count on any base capacity during the winter peak “might be overoptimistic.”

“If you look at the number of gas units that never get gas on peak [winter] days,” when generation has to compete against gas demand for heating, “it’s not as draconian as it sounds,” Kormos said.

PJM has proposed that all but 15% of peak winter load be served by the new product. “I don’t think our thinking has changed a lot on that,” agreed PJM’s Tom Falin.

Market Power

Load representatives asked PJM and the Monitor to address market power concerns, saying the new product could be subject to withholding.

Susan Bruce, representing the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition, said “strong market power protection” would be essential to winning her group’s support.

Ott endorsed the Market Monitor’s suggestion of a must-offer requirement that allows generators to submit “coupled” offers with one price for Base Capacity and a higher price for Capacity Performance.

Bowring said the best way to reduce withholding risk is to use a single annual capacity product without the new product. (Bowring also has called for eliminating Limited and Extended Summer DR). Given the higher requirements and penalties on CP, Bowring said, there will be a “very substantial incentive” for generators to withhold.

But Bowring said his staff could review proposed costs for winterization or firm fuel within coupled offers the same way it currently screens offers under the avoidable cost rate (ACR) and avoidable project investment recovery rate (APIR).

“It’s very doable. I don’t want to understate the complexity of it. It’s going to be much more complicated than it is now.”

Cost Recovery

One generator representative said his company is concerned with being able to recover the additional costs to allow its plants to meet the CP standards. “Just because you put those costs in has no bearing on whether you’ll actually see recovery for more than one year,” he said.

Bowring acknowledged capacity revenues have “not been adequately compensatory.”

Ken Carretta of Public Service Enterprise Group said generators would face additional maintenance costs as well as capital expenditures – a disconnect with the current backward-looking ACR mechanism.

“We have to figure out a way to reflect that,” Bowring agreed.

FERC Backs NERC, NAESB Standards

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last week approved actions on four standards and policies proposed by the North American Electric Reliability Corp. and the North American Energy Standards Board (NAESB).

Notices of Proposed Rulemaking

Demand and Energy Data Reliability Standard

The NOPR (RM14-12) proposed to accept NERC reliability standard MOD-031-1 (Demand and Energy Data), which governs the collection of demand, energy and related data to support reliability studies. NERC said the proposal clarifies data collection requirements and adds transmission planners as entities that must report demand and energy data. Applicable entities are required to report actual peak hour demand from the previous year for comparison with forecasted values. They also must explain how their peak demand forecasts and demand side management forecasts compare to actual demand and demand side management. (See related story, Brattle: Missing EE Costing PJM Load $433M Annually.)

Communications Reliability Standards

The NOPR (RM14-13) proposed approval of two revised NERC standards, COM-001-2 (Communications) and COM-002-4 (Operating Personnel Communications Protocols). Among the requirements is the use of a three-part communications process when issuing operating instructions: recipients must repeat the instruction and receive confirmation from the issuer that the response was correct, or request that the issuer reissue the instruction. The standard establishes “zero-tolerance” enforcement for failure to use three-part communications during an emergency.

The commission ordered NERC to modify COM-001-2 or develop a separate standard that ensures that entities maintain adequate internal communications capabilities. It noted that a task force report on the 2003 blackout found that one of the causes of the outage was that FirstEnergy’s control center computer support and operations staff lacked effective internal communications procedures and “lacked procedures to ensure that its operators were continually aware of the functional state of their critical monitoring tools.”

Final Rule

Standards for Business Practices and Communication Protocols for Public Utilities

The final rule (RM05-5-022) incorporates the latest version of NAESB’s Standards for Business Practices and Communication Protocols for Public Utilities into FERC regulations. The revised standards reflect the commission’s Order 890 series of rulings and other orders. They include standards supporting Network Integration Transmission Service on an Open Access Same-Time Information System (OASIS); Service Across Multiple Transmission Systems (SAMTS); and commission policy regarding rollover rights for redirects. Modifications were also made to ensure consistency across the OASIS-related standards.

The rule also includes changes reflecting updates to e-Tag specifications and gas-electric coordination standards to provide consistency between the two markets.

Compliance Filing

Find, Fix, Track and Report (FFT) program

The commission approved NERC’s annual compliance filing on its Find, Fix, Track and Report (FFT) program, as well as two changes to the program. The order (RC11-6-004) approved NERC’s proposal to continue processing some moderate risk violations as FFTs. The commission also approved NERC’s proposal to extend the mitigation period after an FFT is posted from 90 days to one year, but it rejected a proposal to allow some mitigation activities to go beyond a year. “We do not believe that NERC has provided adequate support for the need for this proposal,” the commission said. “Further, we are concerned that mitigation periods of greater than one year could weaken the incentive for entities to expeditiously mitigate possible violations and delay necessary corrections.”

MRC/MC Briefs

The following issues were approved by stakeholders with little or no opposition Thursday.

Markets and Reliability Committee

Manual Changes

Manual 11: Energy & Ancillary Services Market Operations and Manual 15: Cost Development Guidelines were revised 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.

Manual 14A: Generation and Transmission Interconnection Process was revised with the addition of a new section 1.14 regarding interim deliverability studies.

Manual 14D: Generator Operational Requirements was updated as part of an annual review. It includes changes reflecting North American Electric Reliability Corp. standard MOD-025-2.

FTR/ARR Senior Task Force

Members approved changes in the scope of the Financial Transmission Rights Senior Task Force. The task force was formed to identify ways to improve FTR funding levels. The new scope includes an examination of the role of virtual transactions on revenue adequacy and proposed solutions by the Market Monitor.

One sentence was struck from the revised problem statement as a result of objections by the Market Monitor. The sentence stated that: “With FTR underfunding that has occurred over the last several years, FTRs no longer perform the function of an effective hedge against congestion in the Day-Ahead market.” While PJM officials said it was factually accurate, the Monitor said it wasn’t appropriate for inclusion in the problem statement.

Credit Requirements

The MRC and Member Committee approved the following changes recommended by the Credit Subcommittee:

  • Risk Documentation Requirements – Removes the requirement that officer certifications be notarized, and allows electronic submissions. Eliminates the requirement for annual submissions of risk policy documentation; PJM will accept certification that no substantive changes have been made since the last submission.
  • Peak Market Activity (PMA) Exclusions – Spot market energy, transmission congestion and transmission loss charges resulting from virtual transactions will be excluded from the peak market activity (PMA) credit requirement. Virtual transactions have their own credit screening rules. Screened export transactions also will be excluded from the PMA. The PMA is used to set baseline credit requirements for members based on historical activity.
  • Virtual and Export Transactions Credit Requirement Timeframe – Reduces the credit requirement timeframe for export transactions to two days from four days. The MIC approved a similar change in August for virtual transactions. (See PJM MIC OKs Settlement, Credit Changes.)
  • Demand Bid Volume Limits – Establishes a daily demand bid limit for each load-serving entity by transmission zone. Bids would be limited to the LSE’s calculated zonal peak load reference point for the day plus whichever value is more, 30% of the reference point or 10 MW. PJM said the need for such limits was illustrated by the default of People’s Power & Gas in January.

Transition to 30-Minute Demand Response

The MRC and Members Committee approved a transition mechanism related to changes requiring more operational flexibility from demand response providers. The change would allow curtailment service providers to designate previously cleared megawatts as “non-viable” — unable to meet the new 30-minute-lead-time requirement. CSPs would be relieved of their obligations and have their capacity payments reduced. The transition mechanism was developed to comply with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s May 9 ruling on the DR changes (ER14-822). Members also agreed to sunset the Capacity Senior Task Force.

Transparency of TO Calculations

Members voted to close an issue relating to the transparency of the calculations transmission owners use for allocating energy, capacity and transmission costs. PJM has created a webpage listing the methodologies transmission owners use for calculating total hourly energy obligations (THEO), peak load contributions (PLC) and network service peak loads (NSPL). The issue arose because some TOs have not filed tariffs disclosing the methodology they use. Some members complained that the lack of transparency made it difficult to ensure they were being properly charged. (See TOs Will Disclose Calculation Methodologies.)

Members Committee

Supplemental Transmission Project Definition

Members approved revisions to the Operating Agreement clarifying the definition of supplemental transmission projects as one that is not a state public policy project and is not required for system reliability, operational performance or economic criteria. The change removes a reference to supplemental projects as “Regional RTEP” (Regional Transmission Expansion Plan) projects. It also clarifies that any reliability upgrades required as a result of the supplemental project are considered part of that project and are the responsibility of the entity sponsoring it.

Data Submittal Deadlines

Members endorsed Tariff revisions extending the deadlines for electric distribution companies (EDCs) to submit Power Meter and InSchedule data. The changes would allow load reconciliation data to be included in the calculation of balancing operation reserve deviation charges.

Members also endorsed Reliability Assurance Agreement revisions to allow EDCs to submit corrections to peak load contribution and network service peak load assignments until noon on the next business day. The changes, which will also be reflected in Manuals 18 and 27, are intended to aid Pennsylvania EDCs squeezed by new Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission deadlines. (See PJM MIC OKs Settlement, Credit Changes.)

Company Briefs

Delaware Station (Source: Exelon)A massive retired coal-fired generating station on the Delaware River is up for sale and is generating enthusiasm among architecture scholars and developers. Delaware Station, built in 1920, was designed by Philadelphia architect John T. Windrim, who also designed the famous Franklin Institute. The 223,000-square-foot building comes with 10 acres of land and another 6 acres underwater.

The site is near the booming Northern Liberties and Fishtown neighborhoods. Owner Exelon Generation has hired real estate brokerage Binswanger to supervise the sale. Sealed bids are due by Nov. 3.

The plant was the northernmost of three waterfront Philadelphia Electric Co. power stations, each a variation on a classical temple. All three are retired. One has been repurposed as an office.

More: The Philadelphia Inquirer

PPL’s Plan for 725-Mile Tx Line Draws Critics

PPL’s plan to build a 725-mile transmission line across four states to take advantage of power generated from cheap Marcellus Shale gas is attracting opposition.

Environmentalists and property owners say PPL’s plan to build a $4 billion to $6 billion, 500-kV line across Pennsylvania to bring power to New Jersey, New York and Maryland will induce more drilling, fracking and power-plant construction in the shale region.

“There are a whole wealth of harms that come from drilling for shale gas,” said Maya K. van Rossum, head of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network. “And the more we invest in fossil fuels, the less money we have to invest in renewable sources.”

PJM is reviewing the plan.

More: NorthJersey.com

NRG Breaks Ground on Texas Carbon-Capture Plant

Petra Nova Carbon Capture Project (Source: NRG)Construction on what is billed as the world’s largest post-combustion carbon-capture plant is underway near Houston. While other carbon-capture projects are still in the design phase, or hung up with permitting or financing issues, NRG Energy is going ahead with the Petra Nova Carbon Capture Project. It is being built at the existing W.A. Parish power plant in Fort Bend County.

The plant is designed to capture 90% of the carbon dioxide from flue gas, compress it and transport it by pipeline 80 miles to an oil field, where it will be pumped underground to stimulate oil production. The compressed carbon dioxide is expected to increase the oil field’s yield from 500 barrels a day to 15,000 barrels.

The $1 billion project is being funded by a grant of up to $167 million from the Department of Energy’s Clean Coal Power Initiative, along with $250 million in loans from Japanese banks and $600 million in equity.

More: Houston Business Journal

Cove Point Detractors Warn Investors Away

An environmental group opposed to Dominion Resources new liquefied natural gas export project in Maryland is taking a new tack: trying to convince potential investors that it’s a bad risk.

The Chesapeake Climate Action Network hired a financial research firm to analyze the project, which is planned for an existing facility on the Chesapeake Bay’s western shore. The firm’s report warns that the project’s success is dependent upon further state and federal approvals. Dominion Midstream Partners is awaiting approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission to raise $400 million to finance the project.

“Investors buying the common units of Dominion Midstream Partners should realize that this company’s cash-flow is purely dependent on the Cove Point Liquefaction Project, for which further delays are expected,” said Jan Willem van Gelder, director of Profundo, the research firm. “In combination with the limited voting power of the unit holders and the dominant position of parent company Dominion Resources, investors are likely to face very uncertain returns.” The report goes on to warn of expected legal challenges facing Cove Point, based on environmental and conflict of interest charges.

More: Fierce Energy

PSEG Gets into Pipeline Business

(Source: PennEast Pipeline)Public Service Enterprise Group is partnering with four other companies to build and operate a 105-mile, $1 billion natural gas pipeline.

The New Jersey company will partner with affiliates of UGI, South Jersey Gas, New Jersey Natural Gas and Elizabethtown Gas. PSEG will have a 12% stake in the project, with the other parties each holding 22%. UGI Energy Services would build and operate the project. PSEG said the project would benefit its New Jersey customers, bringing low-cost Marcellus Shale gas to them.

Construction is planned for 2017. The pipeline would run from Luzerne County, Pa., to Trenton, N.J.

More: The Philadelphia Inquirer

Duke Buys 278 MW of Solar for $500M

Duke Energy announced last week it is buying 278 MW of solar energy from eight utility-scale projects in North Carolina to help meet state renewable-energy mandates. Duke is purchasing three solar farms rated at 128 MW and power-purchase agreements with five projects rated at 150 MW.

“Solar prices are coming down. We can make it work at an attractive price,” said Rob Caldwell, vice president at Duke Distributed Energy Resources. He said the current purchase-power agreements the company is entering into are “about a third” of the $0.11/kWh Duke now pays for rooftop solar.

Duke must derive 12.5% of its power from alternative energy sources by 2021. The acquisitions will make Duke compliant with interim targets in 2015 and 2018, Caldwell said.

More: Greentech Media

Judge Blocks FirstEnergy Protests at Execs’ Homes

An Ohio judge barred FirstEnergy workers from picketing the homes of three company executives after neighbors of FirstEnergy CEO Tony Alexander complained about protesters using bullhorns and air horns in their suburban neighborhood.

Common Pleas Judge Jane M. Davis issued the restraining order against the Utility Workers of America, which is in contract negotiations with FirstEnergy. A tentative pact was reached in July, but workers at 14 units turned it down.

FirstEnergy requested that the protests be limited to no more than five people and that the protesters be prohibited from screaming, yelling or making noise “in a manner intended to disturb.” But the judge prohibited any protesters at all.

FirstEnergy spokesman Todd Schneider said the company’s actions were in response to the large, “inappropriate” demonstration in a residential area.

“Protesting in front of our corporate headquarters is one thing,” he said. “Protesting in a residential neighborhood is a different thing.”

More: Akron Beacon Journal

FE, AEP Plants Makes Top 10 Dirtiest List

AEP's Gen. James M. Gavin plantFirstEnergy’s Bruce Mansfield Plant in Shippingport, Pa., and American Electric Power’s General James M. Gavin plant in Cheshire, Ohio, are among the nation’s 10 dirtiest power plants, according to a report by Environment America Research & Policy Center.

The “America’s Dirtiest Power Plants” report ranked the Mansfield plant third and the Gavin plant sixth.

“In 2012, U.S. power plants produced more carbon pollution than the entire economies of Russia, India, Japan or any other nation besides China,” the report said. “In fact, the 50 dirtiest U.S. power plants alone — representing less than 1% of U.S. power plants — produced as much pollution in 2012 as the nation of South Korea (the world’s seventh leading emitter of greenhouse gases).”

Georgia Power’s Scherer plant in Juliette, Ga., was No. 1. Indiana Michigan Power’s Rockport Plant in Rockport, Ind., came in No. 4. The Tennessee Valley Authority’s Paradise plant in Drakesboro, Ky., was No. 10.

More: America’s Dirtiest Power Plants

MRC Hears Proposed Reserve Requirements Rule Changes

reserve requirementsThe Markets and Reliability Committee heard first read Thursday on proposed rule changes intended to reduce uplift and capture operator actions in LMPs.

The proposal would make changes to day-ahead resource commitment and scheduling reserve requirements, as well as synchronized and primary reserve requirements. It will be brought to a vote at the next MRC meeting Oct. 30.

One change would allow PJM operators to commit long lead resources scheduled for the next operating day — those with a 36-hour notification and start time — in the DA market. Operators would have this option only during emergencies and Hot or Cold Weather Alerts. The change is intended to reduce the mismatch between DA and real-time markets and capture more of the resources meeting system needs in DA LMPs.

‘Heartburn’

A second element would increase the day-ahead scheduling reserve (DASR) requirement on these peak days when forecasted RT load exceeds submitted fixed demand.

The change is intended to ensure that PJM schedules enough capacity to meet RT load while also scheduling enough reserves to meet the average load forecast error (LFE) and forced outage rate (FOR), as well as its normal 10-minute reserve requirements. The current 6.27% DASR requirement covers only the LFE and FOR. How costs of the additional reserves would be allocated is still under discussion.

“This is a piece that really gives us heartburn,” said Susan Bruce, representing the PJM Industrial Customer Coalition. Bruce said the proposed change would work against customers that seek to keep their actual loads in line with their demand bids to avoid deviation charges.

PJM is also proposing changing the calculation of eligible reserves to more accurately reflect the dispatch capability of resources if they are needed in real time. Operators would clear reserves up to resources’ economic max rather than emergency max. They would also adjust assumptions for offline units to recognize startup and notification times. Unlike the previous changes, which are limited to emergencies and weather-related peaks, these changes would apply at all times.

Synchronized, Primary Reserve Requirements

The RTO is proposing a flexible solution for increasing synchronized and primary reserves during emergency conditions. Instead of adding 1,300 MW, as under the temporary solution approved by stakeholders May 29, PJM would increase the reserves by the additional scheduled capacity. (See PJM Reserve Proposal Gets OK for Trial Run.)  Shortage pricing would be implemented through a second, lower step on the synchronized and primary reserve demand curves.

Interchange Cap

In addition to the reserve changes, members also will be asked to consider a cap on hourly interchange transactions to prevent unexpected imports from displacing scheduled resources and generating uplift.

The cap would apply during emergency conditions when operators have made firm resource commitments and anticipated interchange schedules are sufficient to meet projected load.

It would block additional spot imports and hourly non-firm point-to-point transactions once net interchange reaches the cap. Schedules with firm or network designated transmission service would not be blocked. The cap value — based on operator expectations plus a margin of 700 MW — would be implemented one to two hours before the operating hour.

Price Impact Uncertain

Lisa Morelli, who moderated the special sessions of the Market Implementation Committee that led to the proposals, said PJM has been unable to conduct a simulation to predict precisely the impact of the changes.

She said PJM had rerun some day-ahead cases under the proposed rules and found that the changes resulted in increased DASR reserve prices and small increases in day-ahead LMPs during peak hours. “Obviously it would also decrease uplift,” said Andy Ott, executive vice president for markets.

Timeline

If approved, the changes would take effect as early as this winter. Changes requiring Tariff modifications would be effective next spring.

Carl Johnson, representing the PJM Public Power Coalition, praised PJM’s crafting of proposed solutions. “PJM has really listened to our concerns,” he said.