November 17, 2024

NERC Calls for Flexibility in CISA Cyber Reporting Rules

Any new cyber incident reporting requirements for critical infrastructure must be carefully drafted to avoid overlap with existing regulations, NERC and the regional entities told the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) in comments submitted earlier this month.

The ERO Enterprise was responding to the request for information that CISA issued in September. The RFI was inspired by the Cyber Incident Reporting for Critical Infrastructure Act of 2022 (CIRCIA), part of the omnibus spending bill passed by Congress and signed by President Biden in March.

CIRCIA requires entities in critical infrastructure sectors — including energy — to report relevant cyber incidents to CISA within 72 hours after they occur, as well as when they make a ransom payment to the perpetrators of a ransomware attack. (See Budget Mandates Cyber Reporting for Critical Infrastructure.)

But authority for defining which incidents are subject to reporting and which additional sectors, if any, are covered by the requirements, along with other details, is left to CISA’s director. The RFI said industry input would help to shape the agency’s final rule.

Worries Over Possible CIP Overlap

In their response, NERC and the REs pointed out that two of NERC’s reliability standards — CIP-008-6 (Cybersecurity — incident and reporting and response planning) and CIP-003-8 (Cybersecurity — security management controls) — require reporting of cyber incidents by various electric industry stakeholders. These requirements are “similar to the reporting requirements set out in CIRCIA,” the ERO said, requiring coordination between NERC and CISA “to ensure harmonization” between the two regimes.

CIP-008-6 requires responsible entities to create cyber incident response plans that they will follow to detect and respond to events affecting cyber systems connected to higher-risk transmission and generation assets, along with control centers. These plans must include reporting of certain cyber incidents to both CISA and the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center (E-ISAC). CIP-003-8 deals with lower-risk transmission and generation assets and similarly requires entities to have response plans that may include reporting incidents to the E-ISAC.

NERC and the REs expressed concern about potential inconsistencies between NERC and CISA’s requirements; for example, CISA’s reporting regulations might have a different timeline for reporting than NERC’s standards, and may require different information. To “avoid duplicative and inconsistent reporting requirements … that could hinder incident response,” the ERO asked that CISA work with NERC and the E-ISAC to ensure the final rule does not cause unneeded friction.

In addition, the ERO drew on its experience with the critical infrastructure protection (CIP) standards to give CISA some advice as it drafts its final rule. The organizations counseled CISA that it should take care in defining “covered cyber incident” and “substantial cyber incident,” as these will play a role in determining what incidents must be reported under the new rules. Care is needed, the ERO said, to ensure these reports produce enough actionable information.

“In developing its incident reporting requirements, the ERO Enterprise initially required entities to report only incidents that had operational impact. … Over the years, however, there were very few incidents reported,” the ERO said. “While receiving few reportable incidents is a positive insofar as it means that there were very few cyber incidents that had an impact on electric utility operations, it could also miss reporting on significant cyber activity, leaving industry unaware of emerging threats and vulnerabilities that have yet to have operational impact.”

While defining reportable incidents too narrowly may prevent the agency from gathering useful data, NERC and the REs said that making the definition too broad would likely result in the opposite problem, with CISA “inundated with reports” that require “significant effort to separate the noise from actionable information.”

Finally, the ERO suggested that CISA’s final rule include “a mechanism for sharing the reports submitted” with the E-ISAC and its counterparts in other critical infrastructure sectors. The organizations pointed out that ISACs are “uniquely positioned … to amplify CISA’s analysis throughout their respective sectors” because of their “established communication mechanisms and protocols.”

If privacy is an issue with sharing sensitive information, the ERO said that CISA can develop a process for either obtaining consent to share such information or removing identifiable data before it is shared.

IMM Offers Mixed Review of PJM Quadrennial Review Docket

PJM’s Independent Market Monitor offered limited support for major provisions in the RTO’s quadrennial review filing before FERC, while urging the commission to order revisions to some of the proposal’s methodologies and figures (ER22-2984).

In a Nov. 16 filing, IMM Joe Bowring signaled support for PJM’s plan to switch to the use of a forward-looking energy and ancillary services (EAS) offset, rather than relying on historical figures for the calculation, but said the use of long-term financial transmission rights (FTR) is unnecessarily complicated and inaccurate, and cannot be implemented because of the timing of the auctions.

“The more direct, simpler, more transparent, and more accurate approach starts with the forward curves and calculates hourly and nodal forward prices based on historical LMPs, which are a more reliable and more transparent method of calculating locational price differences. PJM should be required to use this approach rather than its proposed approach to the calculation of the forward-looking EAS offset,” the Monitor wrote.

In addition to reducing the overstatement of the net cost of new entry (CONE), and therefore capacity prices, the Monitor said the main benefit of a forward-looking EAS offset would be to better align with how investors look at the market. PJM’s proposal to use FTRs would conflict with that aim, he said.

The Monitor also said the RTO should be required to reconsider the static offset figure should FERC or PJM stakeholders make any significant changes to reactive ancillary service payments, given that revenues from that service factor into the EAS offset. PJM is proposing to set expected revenues using a payment estimate of $2,546 per MW-year.

The Monitor supported PJM’s proposal to calculate net CONE using a combined cycle (CC) power plant as the reference resource instead of a combustion turbine (CT) unit. The filing said that the change better reflects the type of facilities being added to the PJM fleet, noting that no significant number of CTs have been interconnected to the grid since 1999.

With respect to setting the variable resource requirement curve, the Monitor said PJM did not go far enough in its proposal to steepen the slope a quarter of the way towards vertical (effectively purchasing less additional capacity over the expected peak load), suggesting that the curve instead be rotated halfway toward vertical.

If the amount of capacity purchased in the 2023/24 Base Residual Auction was reduced in accordance with the IMM recommendation, a total of $1,790,941,751 in capacity would have been purchased, a decrease of $405,503,039 or 18.5% compared to the actual total of $2,196,444,791, according to IMM estimates. 

“The shape of the VRR Curve directly results in load paying substantially more for capacity than load would pay with a vertical demand curve,” the filing said.

PJM Response

In its response to the Monitor’s filing, PJM told FERC that the market designs drafted in collaboration with the consulting firm Brattle Group would provide the necessary reliability expected in the future. It also noted that the IMM had missed the docket’s comment deadline by nearly a month.

“Brattle cautioned against adopting a curve that is tuned to support exactly a one-in-ten Loss of Load Expectation (“LOLE”) at this time due to the lower net [CONE] and greater fleet turnover than observed in prior quadrennial reviews. In other words, the PJM proposed curve is just and reasonable because it avoids the untenable risk associated with a VRR Curve that barely meets the 0.1 LOLE standard given the current market conditions,” PJM said in its response, filed Nov. 17.

The response also says that many of the IMM concerns regarding the use of FTRs had already been addressed by the commission in its 2019 order on PJM’s Reserve Market Enhancements. (EL19-58)

“In short, the Market Monitor’s concerns with the use of long-term FTR have already been thoroughly litigated and should not be relitigated here,” PJM

Generators Expand on Protests

J-Power USA and the PJM Power Providers Group also filed responses to a PJM retort to their quadrennial review protests before FERC.

Arguing that PJM should use a shorter amortization period within the Commonwealth Edison Locational Deliverability Area (LMP), J-Power said that the RTO has been misunderstanding the Illinois Clean Energy Jobs Act (CEJA) and case law in the state. In its Nov. 18 protest, the company said that under CEJA, the reference resource would be required to cease operations within the amortization period outlined in the filing.

“Like PJM, Brattle improperly conflates the provision of CEJA prohibiting gas-fired resources from increasing their emissions above current levels, which contains an exception for publicly-owned resources, with the separate provision requiring all gas-fired resources to reduce their emissions to zero by January 1, 2045, which has no similar exception.”

Referencing a section of the PJM response detailing how CEJA would allow for a CC unit to remain in operation if needed to provide reliability, J-Power said it is not realistic for large numbers of facilities to be constructed and maintained for that sole purpose. In an affidavit submitted on behalf of J-Power, Paul Sotkiewicz of E-Cubed Policy Associates wrote that there are currently no technologies available to convert a gas-fired unit to run entirely on hydrogen and that current carbon capture and storage capabilities do not meet CEJA requirements.

“A Reference Resource is intended to be a representative example, rather than some kind of exceptional resource. It is downright absurd to imagine that it would be the ‘norm’ for gas-fired resources in Illinois to have to be retained for reliability, or that a rational developer would sink hundreds of millions of dollars of at-risk capital into a resource based on the hope that system conditions will miraculously work out so that the resource is required for system reliability years in the future,” J-Power wrote.

P3, a group that represents PJM power producers, also took aim at the RTO’s choice to use a CC facility as the reference resource, saying that a CT is more reflective of a “pure capacity unit” as opposed to a more frequently dispatched generator.

“By using a combustion turbine as the reference unit, the VRR curve response to changes in energy market conditions is only impacted by net energy revenues projected to be earned during scarcity hours when the combustion turbine operates,” P3’s Nov. 14 response says.

While PJM has not recently seen construction of CTs, P3 argued that the resource type offers a possible solution to the need for flexibility to complement the installation of renewables.

“P3 absolutely concedes and acknowledges that more CCs have been built in PJM than CTs over the last 10 years in PJM. While a historical fact, it says absolutely nothing about the resources PJM will need in the future. PJM’s future needs are going to require flexible units (likely in the form of natural gas and coal) — particularly if there is significant renewable energy penetration,” the group’s filing says.

P3 also noted recent comments by PJM CEO Manu Asthana that that the RTO could see 40 GW of generation in the RTO retire by 2030. With the region’s load expected to increase in the future, the group argued, FERC would undermine reliability by accepting a capacity market built on the assumption that PJM is oversupplied with capacity.

“To P3, this sounds like PJM is indeed on the cusp of a reliability crisis and the impact of the instant filing will coincide directly with the predicted reliability challenges in PJM,” the group wrote.

SPP MOPC OKs ‘Late’ Tariff Change Related to EMS Upgrade

SPP members on Monday unanimously approved a revision request that will allow staff to complete an energy management system upgrade in a timely fashion and reduce project costs.

The Markets and Operations Policy Committee met briefly and virtually to approve the staff request. It still must be reviewed by the Reliability Compliance Advisory Group and the Operating Reliability Working Group after having already been endorsed by the Transmission and Regional Tariff working groups.

The revision request (RR524) updates Attachment C of SPP’s tariff to reflect revisions to the real-time response factor calculation process. The process is being updated to better align with industry best practices by using a standalone process and the Eastern Interconnection’s NERC interchange distribution calculator.

SPP COO Lanny Nickell said staff discovered late during the EMS upgrade that the tariff’s current requirements do not specify the use of certain software in the calculation. Their new language gives a “very detailed description,” as required by FERC, of SPP’s available flowgate capability calculations.

“We caught it late. Apologies for doing this,” Nickell said. “We would have loved to have covered this in October [during MOPC’s last meeting], but it was something we noticed late.”

SPP plans to file the tariff change with FERC in December, enough time to meet the new EMS cutover deadline of Feb. 21.

NJ Backs $20 Million Spend on Tx Link for Offshore Wind Port

The board of the New Jersey Economic Development Authority (EDA) voted this month to back a $20 million purchase agreement with Atlantic City Electricity (ACE) to ensure the utility avoids potential supply chain delays in the delivery of construction materials needed to develop the 12-mile transmission line tying the New Jersey Wind Port to the grid.

The EDA also started the process of issuing $160 million in tax exempt bonds to pay for construction of the wind port through 2023. The agency’s board voted Nov. 16 to support an “Official Intent Resolution” that sets the bonding process in motion, but the board would have to take another vote for the bond issue to move ahead, according to the memo.

The project has so far obtained $478.2 million in state funds, and the bonded finance would “secure the balance of funding” needed for completion of the first two phases of the projects, according to a Nov. 16 memo from EDA CEO Tim Sullivan to the board.

The two board votes reflect the EDA’s commitment to pushing aggressively ahead with the project, which officials say will be the nation’s first custom-built port serving the wind. It is the cornerstone of the state’s drive to become a manufacturing and logistics hub for the nascent industry, not only in New Jersey but for other East Coast offshore wind projects as well.

The purchase agreement is designed to ensure the smooth advancement of the wind port project, which broke ground in September 2021. The agreement “is necessary to safeguard the purchase of materials with long lead times or are at risk of delays due to global supply chain disruption,” Sullivan said in the memo outlining the expenditure.

The deal will bring the total cost of the connection — a 69-kV transmission line on a greenfield site — to $25.88 million. The board in April approved an expenditure of $5.14 million for the utility to move ahead with a detailed design of the line. The design is 60% complete and on schedule, according to the memo.

Providing Power for Tenants

The wind port, located at Alloways Creek in Salem County, will include a 30-acre marshalling area for component assembly and staging; a dedicated, overland, heavy-haul transportation corridor; and a heavy-lift wharf with a dedicated delivery berth and an installation berth that can accommodate jack-up vessels.

The port was conceived to serve New Jersey’s own offshore wind industry. The state Board of Public Utilities (BPU) has so far awarded three wind projects in two solicitations since 2019: the 1,100-MW Ocean Wind 1 and 1,148-MW Ocean Wind 2, both developed by Ørsted, and the 1,510-MW Atlantic Shores, a joint venture between EDF Renewables North America and Shell New Energies US. The BPU is planning to hold a third solicitation early in 2023.

The developers of the three approved offshore projects have agreed to use the port, but the state also wants to attract business from non-New Jersey projects. The EDA said in October 2021 that it had received 16 non-binding offers for companies looking to become tenants at the port, among them Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy (OTCMKTS:GCTAY). (See NJ Wind Port Draws Offshore Heavy Hitters.)

Nacelle manufacturers MHI Vestas and General Electric have committed to creating nacelle plants at the port, and German manufacturer EEW Group is building a monopile factory in the nearby Port of Paulsboro.

The ACE agreement is important to the wind port because it is located in a remote part of South Jersey, adjacent to three nuclear plants operated by PSE&G, and has no tie to the grid, according to the EDA.

“The approval of long lead items ahead of full construction is necessary to safeguard the construction schedule with materials facing long lead times or risks of disruption due to broader supply chain volatility,” according to Sullivan’s memo. “It also recognizes the authority’s negotiated cost obligations to staff’s recommended inaugural subtenant should a power line connection not be in place by the start of the sublease.”

If the link isn’t ready on time, the project could have no power supply to provide tenants and would have to share the cost of providing temporary power solutions, “such as diesel generators,” the memo said.

Sullivan laid out the expenditures anticipated to be made from the $20 million, which include: $16.9 million for steel poles and anchor bolt cages; $204,00 for conductors; $71,000 for circuit breakers and $62,000 for static wire.

ISO-NE Finalizing Changes to Economic Study Process

ISO-NE is finalizing changes to its economic study process as it works through the NEPOOL stakeholder gauntlet.

The changes are intended to improve responses to stakeholder requests for economic studies to fill gaps not covered by the ISO’s reliability studies. Such requests have evolved to more and more complex topics, such as ancillary services, resource adequacy, high-level transmission reliability and capacity markets.

Under the current process, ISO-NE puts together a rough scope for all the studies requested by stakeholders and then prioritizes them based on the region’s needs.  

The new proposal would change that process by setting up an analysis framework and using it to run “consistent reference scenarios.” After that initial run, stakeholders and the ISO could request new sensitivities to test the effect of a specific change to the study’s assumptions.

ISO-NE is also proposing to change the cycle of economic studies to align with the regional system plan (RSP) cycle, moving from every year to every two years.

At the NEPOOL Transmission Committee meeting on Tuesday, ISO-NE presented some minor revisions to its proposed tariff changes, which were approved by the committee.

The grid operator is aiming to get a final vote on the study changes at the January Participants Committee meeting, with a FERC filing to follow shortly after.

DECR Tariff Changes

Also at the TC meeting, ISO-NE presented its latest work on aligning buyer-side mitigation rules to allow distributed energy capacity resources (DECR) to take part in Forward Capacity Auction 18, set for Feb. 5,  2024.

The tariff updates will reflect the minimum offer price rule (MOPR) changes accepted by FERC in May and the ISO’s compliance filing for FERC Order 2222, which has not yet been approved by the federal agency.

The tariff changes would modify buyer-side mitigation rules throughout the post-MOPR process to ensure that DERs can be included in the FCA.

They would also modify proposed DECR qualification rules in Section III.13.4A and address the qualification process cost reimbursement deposit requirement.

The tariff changes also clean up some definitions, dates and cross references related to the 2222 compliance proposal.

The ISO is working to get those changes finalized by March 2023 to be ready for FCA 18.

Former Regulators: Demand Response Key to Midwest Capacity Crisis

Two former FERC chairmen and a state commissioner are pessimistic that MISO will be able to rein in shortages or high capacity prices anytime soon and said demand-side management would assuage the situation.

Former FERC chair and Voltus Chief Regulatory Officer Jon Wellinghoff said during a Nov. 21 webinar, sponsored by his company, that today’s grid fragility in the Midwest can be traced to an increased amount of renewable energy and extreme weather conditions.

“We’ve got a situation now in which our grid is being increasingly tested by extreme weather events that are being driven by climate change, but the steps that we need to take to combat climate change and mitigate our emissions include increased dependency on weather-dependent resources,” former FERC chairman Neil Chatterjee said. “This is a challenging conundrum, and it’s one that policymakers and grid operators have really been wrestling with.”

Voltus CEO Gregg Dixon said an ongoing transition to renewable resources and increased electrification demand alongside severe weather are “putting an even greater strain on an already antiquated grid.”

“We are a month away from winter, and the headline is: ‘It does not look good’ … And summer of 2023 does not look a whole lot better,” Dixon said, referencing NERC’s recent reliability assessment.

The agency has warned that MISO risks winter blackouts after its most recent capacity auction uncovered a 1.2-GW deficit heading into the June 1, 2023, planning year. The Independent Market Monitor has said the footprint’s real risk lies in summer 2023.

Chatterjee said with “the absence of federal legislative guidance” on decarbonization, states must devise their own strategies to cut carbon while ensuring resource adequacy.

Ted-Thomas-2021-11-17-(RTO-Insider-LLC)-FI.jpgFormer Arkansas PSC Chairman Ted Thomas | © RTO Insider LLC

Former Arkansas Public Service Commission chairman Ted Thomas said MISO’s role as reliability coordinator and states’ obligation to ensure resource adequacy can never be “cleanly” separated.

“So, there’s always this tension that plays out with all of these policy issues,” he said.

Thomas said until now, state regulators have always resisted the downward-sloping demand curve in the MISO capacity auctions, viewing it as a “slippery slope” to a mandatory, PJM-style auction.

He said that when the price “shot up” during the 2021-22 planning year auction, regulators’ response was, “MISO, what are you going to do about it?” Thomas said a few years ago, changing the demand curve’s slope would have been viewed by regulators as an overstep.

He said a sloped demand curve will produce gradually increasing capacity prices, instead of extremely low prices one year that skyrocket the next.

“To me, the issues we’re seeing in MISO are simple: There’s just not enough generation,” Chatterjee said. “States have made it clear that they are primarily responsible for resource adequacy … Yet for years, merchant generators have been sounding the alarm that they couldn’t continue to lose money year-over year and that market revenues were not sufficient.”

Chatterjee said some states and load-serving entities believed they could continue to buy capacity from the MISO auction at rock-bottom prices.

“Why pay to build or contract for generation when it’s available for a fraction of the cost in the MISO auction?” he said. “And the end result of that is that badly needed generation has retired, and now the entire region is going to be at an elevated risk of load loss for the foreseeable future.”

Dixon said Voltus expects that MISO Midwest capacity prices will continue to “cap out” at the cost of new generation entry, making Midwestern capacity “perhaps the most expensive in the world.”

“Which is really ironic because it used to essentially be for free,” Dixon said.

Thomas said MISO is better preparing for “oddball weather any time of the year” by shifting focus from a summer peak and switching to capacity accreditation based on unit availability.

He also said MISO South members’ continuing resistance to adding more transfer capability between MISO Midwest and the South regions “balkanizes the RTO footprint” to the detriment of resource adequacy.

Thomas prescribed large customer aggregation to leverage demand response to address reliability crises. He said residential and commercial customers need a combination of renewable energy, demand response and energy efficiency measures “to escape the hit of these commodity prices.” Third-party aggregators can apply competitive pressure to utilities to “up their game,” he said.

“I think utilities are going to have to recognize that they’re going to have to compete and evolve their business models or continue to face pressure. Pressure from regulators, pressure from consumers,” Chatterjee said.

Wellinghoff said customers in states that have opted out of demand response and are unable to participate in a wholesale market’s aggregation should register their displeasure with FERC. He said the commission should revoke the ability for states to opt-out, especially considering the flexible load that tomorrow’s electric vehicle fleets can supply.

Chatterjee agreed that FERC should remove the demand response opt out, saying that tight supply conditions are not going to resolve themselves.

“We tend to only react after bad things happen. And to me right now, we’re seeing FERC drag its heels on the DR opt out; we’re seeing resistance at the state level,” Chatterjee said. “To me, it’s going to take something negative to trigger change, to trigger movement.”

He added that there’s “real risk in MISO right now of not having enough capacity on one or two very, very hot days.”

“To me, it seems like a few factories turning off could make a real difference. Sadly, it will probably take an event like that to, in my view, lead to policy changes that are necessary,” Chatterjee said.  

Thomas said the Midwest could use universal access to advanced metering infrastructure and aggregation alongside a faster roll out of MISO’s proposed 2030 compliance with Order 2222, which allows aggregators of distributed resources into the wholesale energy markets. (See MISO Stakeholders Protest RTO’s Order 2222 Implementation Timeline.)

After that, Thomas said, the grid operator could probably “have a cold one and lean back and watch entrepreneurs and business looking out for their own interests” help decarbonize the grid, reduce costs and bolster system reliability.

“If you’re going to have scale-variable resources, you’ve got to have scale-variable load,” he said. “That’s the cheapest option, and we need to make that happen.”

FERC Approves New England Generation Deal Over Competition Objections

Federal regulators last week signed off on a Japanese company’s plan to buy three gas-fired generators in New England, despite opposition from consumer advocates who had argued that the deal would lead to undue consolidation in the region.

The investment firm Stonepeak asked FERC this summer for approval to sell two units at Canal Generating Station in Sandwich, Mass., totaling 1,457 MW, and another 160-MW unit in Bucksport, Maine, to JERA, a joint venture between two Japanese utilities, Tokyo Electric Power’s TEPCO Fuel & Power and Chubu Electric Power (EC22-71).

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey and the advocacy group Public Citizen had both challenged the acquisition saying that it would give JERA — which already owns 50% of two other gas units totaling more than 400 MW in Massachusetts — too large a share of the generation market. (See Mass. AG, Public Citizen Raise Alarm Over Proposed Generation Deal).

But FERC sided with the buyer and seller, accepting their argument that the transaction would not have an adverse effect on vertical or horizontal competition.

Although JERA will own more than 18% of the capacity cleared in the Southeastern New England zone, FERC wrote that “Applicants’ analysis shows that, when considering ISO-NE as a whole, the proposed transaction does not increase market concentration such that there will be an adverse effect on competition.”

FERC also shot down protests arguing that the deal could have adverse effects on rates and on regulations. And it refused a request from Public Citizen to make public the confidential purchase price of the deal, finding no reason to break with the standard of allowing the submitter to keep prices confidential.

NY Slaps Moratorium on Certain Crypto Mining Permits

New York has imposed the nation’s first moratorium on permitting for certain new cryptocurrency mining operations.

The move drew criticism from business advocates and the digital currency industry but was applauded by environmental advocates concerned about the greenhouse gas emissions generated to feed the huge electrical demand of crypto mining.

Gov. Kathy Hochul signed the two-year moratorium into law Nov. 22, and it took effect immediately. It blocks approval or renewal of air emissions permits for carbon-fueled power plants that provide behind-the-meter electricity to operations that use proof-of-work authentication methods to validate blockchain transactions.

Existing operations and applications filed before Nov. 23, 2022, are not subject to the moratorium. Nor are those that rely on zero-emissions sources of electricity, such as New York’s abundant hydropower.

New York is widely regarded as one of the most expensive and highly regulated states in the nation. Its upstate region, where crypto mining operations have been established or proposed, has seen a decades-long loss of industry and population.

Hochul acknowledged this in her memorandum of approval.

“As the first Governor from Upstate New York in nearly a century, I recognize the importance of creating economic opportunity in communities that have been left behind,” she wrote.

She said the effort to support economic development and job creation upstate would continue but gave priority in this case to protecting communities from greenhouse gases and addressing the global climate crisis.

Crypto mining uses huge amounts of electricity.

Greenidge Generation Holdings (NASDAQ:GREE) in its 2021 10-K filing said its Dresden, N.Y., and Spartanburg, S.C., datacenters are rated at a combined 51 MW.

The Dresden facility has become a poster child or a flashpoint of sorts for the debate over the environmental impact of crypto mining. Its re-permitting process attracted nearly 4,000 public comments.

The circa-1937 plant sits on the west shore of the largest of the Finger Lakes, squarely in the middle of one of upstate New York’s most scenic and tourist-friendly regions.

It was coal-fired for most of its existence, but Greenidge converted it to natural gas and bought it back online at 106 MW in 2017, with a claimed 70% reduction in emissions. Greenidge says it is committed to carbon-neutral crypto mining by using low-carbon energy sources and offsetting its carbon footprint.

That’s not enough for climate activists, whose opposition is due not just to the emissions from burning natural gas but the environmental impact of extracting it with hydrofracking. New York has banned fracking, but it is in widespread use in Pennsylvania, 50 miles south of Dresden. The Marcellus Shale formation underlies the entire region.

Opponents cheered in June when the New York state Department of Environmental Conservation denied Greenidge’s application to renew its Title V permit for the Dresden plant on the grounds that it did not meet the requirements of the state’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.

Greenidge decried the “arbitrary and capricious” decision and said DEC never once engaged it in discussion in the three months after it proposed an additional 40% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions at the Dresden plant.

The facility continues in operation while Greenidge appeals the denial.

But opponents are hoping that is only temporary.

Seneca Lake Guardian, one of the groups advocating for the moratorium on new crypto mining, called on Hochul to take the next step and shut down Dresden and similar facilities.

The group’s vice president, Yvonne Taylor, said in a prepared statement: “Thank you, Gov. Hochul, for stepping up to protect New Yorkers from corporate bullies who want to exploit communities like mine in the Finger Lakes … Gov. Hochul did the right thing by putting real New Yorkers over the failing outside speculators who choose not to mine crypto in more efficient ways that don’t destroy the climate, environment, and local economies.”

The environmental group Earthjustice said it hoped New York’s moratorium would be a precedent for the rest of the nation, as “crypto mining is a major threat to climate security and needs to be closely regulated.”

Others have supported the Dresden operation as a high-tech infusion of good new jobs and new property tax revenue in a region that is often lacking in both.

“The Business Council does not believe the legislature should seek to categorically limit the growth and expansion of any business or sector in New York,” said Heather Briccetti Mulligan, CEO of the Business Council of New York State. “We plan to further engage and help educate them regarding this industry and the benefits it provides to the local, regional, and state economy.”

And the digital community was aggrieved.

“We are severely disappointed in Gov. Hochul’s decision to approve a moratorium on digital asset mining operations that use proof-of-work (PoW) authentication methods to validate blockchain transactions,” the Chamber of Digital Commerce said. “To date, no other industry in the state has been sidelined like this for its energy usage. This is a dangerous precedent to set in determining who may or may not use power. The PoW mining industry has been spurring economic growth, job creation, and inclusion for historically underrepresented populations in New York, while also creating financial incentives for the buildout of renewable energy infrastructure.”

TVA to Repurpose Coal Ash Dump with Solar Generation

The Tennessee Valley Authority will embark on a $216 million pilot project to install solar panels on top of a sealed coal ash dump following the Board of Directors’ funding approval earlier this month.

TVA plans to close in place a 300-acre coal ash dump at its 1.2-GW Shawnee Fossil Plant in Paducah, Ky., with a patented system that includes a geosynthetic liner and closure turf. The federal agency said it will attach a 100-MW solar array to the site without disturbing its integrity.

The Shawnee project is “a first-of-its-kind project in the nation that could potentially be duplicated at other suitable locations,” TVA said. It said the project will support its decarbonization goal and will preserve greenfield sites for other economic developments.

TVA still must submit the project for review under the National Environmental Policy Act and other regulatory and environmental approvals.

TVA doesn’t yet know when the solar project will achieve commercial operation.  

“At this time, it is premature to know a specific timeframe, but the process is underway,” TVA spokesperson Ashton Davies said in an emailed statement to RTO Insider. She said TVA intends to begin the solar installation as it wraps up the site’s closure.

During the November board meeting, TVA COO Don Moul called the pilot a “revolutionary new approach to install utility-scale solar on closed landfills.”

“Directly attaching the mounting mechanisms to the turf layer without penetrating the liner maintains the integrity of the closed coal combustion residual impoundment,” Moul said. “This makes available to us the potential to use similar sites across the TVA footprint.”

Moul said the project alleviates “land constraints” while advancing TVA’s goal of building 10 GW in solar generation by 2035.

The agency’s goal is to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, which some conservation groups have called too gradual. The agency’s decarbonization target drew scrutiny from the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Energy and Commerce. (See TVA Defends Rates, CO2 Reduction Plans in House Inquiry.)

Next year, TVA will contract with a third party to conduct a decarbonization study to analyze how it can further slash emissions.

“Moving quickly on this solar cap installation at the Shawnee site allows us to move further and faster as we build out towards our renewable generation goals,” Moul said.

Moul said Shawnee was “by and far” best situated for an initial project. He said TVA’s footprint has the potential to house up to 1,000 MW in solar generation atop sealed coal ash dumps.

“We’re very excited that this is a first step in some of the intentional actions we’ll be taking towards decarbonization,” he said.

Moul said while he wouldn’t “presuppose” the environmental review process, he said TVA estimates having the system online within two years.

He also said TVA will look into whether the Inflation Reduction Act will cover the project’s funds.

California CCAs Add 1.4 GW to Clean Energy Portfolios in 2021

California’s community choice aggregators expanded their long-term procurement of clean energy by 1,431 MW over the past year, a 14% increase that includes 119 MW of long-duration storage.

The new power purchase agreements bring the overall long-term procurement by the state’s CCAs to 11,258 MW, up from 9,827 MW in November 2021. The figures are included in an annual report released this month by the California Community Choice Association (CalCCA), an organization representing the state’s community choice electricity providers.

The 243 long-term contracts are for “new-build” resources, including solar, wind, geothermal, demand response, biogas and energy storage. The clean energy projects are spread across California, and some are in Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada.

“CCAs are procuring the diversity of resources that are needed for the state to achieve a 100% clean electricity system, with a focus on affordability, reliability and resilience,” CalCCA Executive Director Beth Vaughan said in a statement.

Vaughn said previously that the state’s CCAs “continue to drive a clean energy project-building boom throughout California and the West.”

The purchase agreements, ranging in length from 10 to 25 years, are for power from newly built clean energy resources. More than 4,000 MW are in operation now and almost all the rest is expected to be online by 2026.

Solar paired with storage is the largest category of long-term clean energy procurement, contributing 4,232 MW to the total. Storage that accompanies solar is the second-largest category, providing 2,451 MW.

CCAs increasingly are turning to solar-plus-storage rather than standalone solar in solar energy contracts, according to CalCCA. The 2,016 MW of standalone solar energy procurement in this year’s report is a 71 MW decrease from last year’s figure.

Even with the reduction, standalone solar is the third largest clean energy procurement category for the CCAs, followed by wind, with 1,376 MW.

Long-duration Storage

The 119 MW of long-duration storage reported this year came from two contracts approved in early 2022 by California Community Power, a joint powers agency representing nine CCAs. One contract is with REV Renewables for 69 MW at the company’s Tumbleweed project in Kern County. The other is for 50 MW at Onward Energy’s Goal Line project in Escondido. The lithium-ion battery projects will have an eight-hour discharge duration.

Another addition to this year’s list was demand response, which accounted for 23 MW of the power purchases.

In addition, geothermal power procurement increased this year to 287 MW, up from 14 MW as of November 2021. In one of the agreements, announced in May, Fervo Energy will supply 40 MW of geothermal power to East Bay Community Energy from a project in Churchill County, Nevada.

In April, Ormat Technologies announced an agreement with Peninsula Clean Energy to buy 26 MW of energy from the company’s Heber 2 geothermal facility in Imperial Valley, California.

RPS Requirements

Community choice aggregators are nonprofit providers of energy within the territory of investor-owned utilities. Customers who choose to buy power from a CCA still receive transmission and distribution service from the IOU.

This year, CCAs served about a third of the load in the territories of the state’s three primary IOUs, CalCCA said. That figure is expected to increase to 36% in 2023.

And according to the California Public Utilities Commission, CCAs are playing “an increasingly significant role” in meeting state and local greenhouse gas reduction goals.

CalCCA said that the long-term contracts for clean energy are helping the CCAs meet requirements of the state’s renewables portfolio standard (RPS).

In 2021, CCAs achieved an RPS percentage of 50%, when considered in aggregate, the CPUC said in an annual RPS report released this month. That’s well above the 44% RPS requirement for the 2021-2024 compliance period.

“The CCAs’ generation has increased to keep pace with RPS requirements through 2023, even exceeding the 2023 forecasted target,” CPUC said in the report.

But current forecasts show online generation starting to drop in 2024 for 16 of the 25 CCAs, the report said. Considered in aggregate, the RPS percentage is projected to drop to 41% in 2024. CPUC said that’s due to expiring contracts and the launch of new CCAs that have little to no RPS procurement.

The RPS target grows to 60% in 2030, and most CCAs will need more renewable resources, CPUC said.

Another RPS requirement is that 65% of procurement should come from long-term contracts, considered to be 10 years or longer.

All the CCAs are expected to meet the long-term procurement requirement for the 2017-2020 compliance period, CPUC said. And most have met, or are close to meeting, the long-term procurement requirement for 2021-2024.