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December 15, 2025

CAISO Board Elects New Leadership

By Jason Fordney

The CAISO Board of Governors last week enacted new governance policies and named Governor David Olsen as chairman. It also reviewed the ISO’s policy roadmap for 2018.

In a teleconferenced meeting Thursday, the board enacted a new process whereby governors will hold yearly elections for chair. The five-member board voted to replace sitting Chair Richard Maullin with Olsen, who was originally appointed to the board in 2012 by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Governor Angelina Galiteva said that with CAISO involved in more regional matters and the Western Energy Imbalance Market (EIM), the board felt members should have the opportunity to participate as chairs and share some of the growing workload. The board went through an analysis to study best practices, she said.

CAISO board of governors
Galiteva (left) and Ferron | © RTO Insider

“This is something we thought over and talked about for quite a while,” Galiteva said. The board elected her to the newly created position of vice chair, nominated by Governor Mark Ferron and seconded by Governor Ashutosh Bhagwat.

“We are entering a period where there could be some rapid change we are part of or instrumental for,” Maullin said, as other board members thanked him for his service in his role. Maullin’s term on the board ended Dec. 31, and he said remaining on the board depends on the California State Senate, which confirmed him as chair in July 2015. He was reappointed by Brown in January 2015.

Cook Briefs Board on 2018 Roadmap

CAISO Director of Market and Infrastructure Policy Greg Cook briefed the board on the 2018 Policy Initiatives Roadmap and Annual Plan, saying the presentation to the board represents the final step in the implementation process.

In January, Cook briefed the EIM Governing Body on the plan, which includes a proposal to extend the ISO’s day-ahead market to the EIM. (See CAISO Plan Extends Day-Ahead Market to EIM.) Each balancing authority area would retain reliability responsibility, and states would retain control over integrated resource planning. Transmission planning and investment remains with each BAA and local regulatory authority.

Cook shared some of the tasks associated with the day-ahead market extension, including the alignment of transmission access charge paradigms to ensure EIM entities recover transmission costs consistent with the existing bilateral network, and consistent billing determinants across the day-ahead market footprint for market efficiency. There will also be distribution of congestion rents collected through the day-ahead market and a day-ahead resource sufficiency evaluation, among other requirements.

CAISO board of governors keith casey
Casey | © RTO Insider

Keith Casey, the ISO’s vice president of market and infrastructure development, told the board that implementing the day-ahead across the EIM will provide additional benefits, but it “certainly will fall short of the full benefits we would get with full participation under a regional construct.” These would include efficiency of a single balancing authority over a larger footprint, as well as transmission planning and resource adequacy benefits.

“We believe it has important benefits … but I do want to stress it will fall short of the full integration benefits,” Casey said.

PG&E Continues Criticism of RMRs

During a public comment period, Eric Eisenman, director of ISO relations and FERC policy for Pacific Gas and Electric, told the board that PG&E has no issue with anything in the roadmap but that addressing the increasing use of reliability-must-run designations (RMRs) and the capacity procurement mechanism (CPM) is the utility’s “highest priority.” He reminded the board of the “robust discussion” it had over RMRs at its November meeting when the designation of the gas-fired Metcalf Energy Center was approved. (See Board Decisions Highlight Market Problems.)

CAISO board of governors David Olsen
The CAISO Board of Governors and others at the November meeting in Folsom, California | © RTO Insider

“PG&E continues to be very concerned about a slew of RMRs for 2019 that would be designated later this year,” Eisenman said. “But at this point, we just don’t know what is going to happen.” He urged CAISO to implement more extensive “Phase 2” changes in its RMR/CPM initiative in time for 2019 designations. The ISO has indicated it only intends to address must-offer requirements for RMR and CPM units in that time frame.

Casey said the ISO is looking at transmission alternatives to prevent situations that might otherwise lead to RMRs, including working with PG&E to address “low-hanging, fast upgrades” in the subarea where the Metcalf plant sits. The improvements would alleviate about 600 MW of local capacity requirements and are included in a transmission plan due to be finalized in March, he said.

“There is much we can do — we have a great deal of flexibility with the transmission plans to do those types of studies,” but it would be challenging to complete the improvements by fall 2019, he said.

“We share PG&E’s urgency about getting after these RMR reforms,” Casey said.

CAISO is in the midst of developing a package of enhancements to the RMR/CPM process, which is proving to be a contentious proposal among market stakeholders. (See CAISO, Stakeholders Debate RMR Revisions.)

FERC Approves EIM Changes, Western Measures

By Jason Fordney

FERC on Thursday approved a package of modifications to improve market efficiency developed by CAISO for the Western Energy Imbalance Market (EIM). It also issued several other decisions related to Western states and energy markets.

The commission said the EIM measures would improve efficiency by automating manual processes, providing greater transparency into bilateral transactions and enabling increased participation in both the EIM and CAISO.

The approved changes include automated matching of import/export schedule changes between resources inside and outside the EIM, as well as the ability to automate changes to mirror system resources at intertie scheduling points between CAISO and an EIM entity (ER18-461).

“We find that the automated matching and the automatic mirroring functionalities will result in more efficient EIM market outcomes by automating manual processes that are prone to errors and better maintain balance between resources and load following intertie schedule changes,” FERC said.

EIM
The EIM Governing Body approved the package of market changes in November 2017 | © RTO Insider

The EIM Governing Body approved the package of changes in November, after CAISO had scaled down the initiative based on consultations with stakeholders. (See EIM Governing Body Approves ‘Consolidated’ Initiatives.) The changes also facilitate bilateral settlements and improve the market’s modeling accuracy by expanding the functions of non-generator resources.

CAISO had requested approval of the measures by Feb. 15 to allow for the participation of Powerex and Idaho Power in the EIM on April 4.

Deseret Earns MBR Authority

The commission last week also approved Deseret Generation & Transmission Co-operative’s updated market power analysis for the Northwest region, granting the utility market-based rate authority effective Sept. 12, 2016. Utah-based Deseret became a public utility in 1996 after paying off its debt related to rural utility service (ER16-2186).

Deseret owns the 458-MW Bonanza coal-fired plant and a 25% interest in the 430-MW Hunter 2 coal-fired unit, both in the PacifiCorp balancing authority area.

FERC Approves PG&E/Port of Oakland Agreement

The commission also approved an interconnection agreement between Pacific Gas and Electric and the Port of Oakland but suspended the agreement and subjected it to hearing and settlement judge procedures (ER17-2536).

FERC EIM Energy Imbalance Market Gridliance
The Port of Oakland is a major container shipping facility and a municipal electric supplier.

The port acts a municipal electricity supplier that serves customers located at the Oakland International Airport, which it owns and operates, using PG&E’s transmission and distribution facilities.

Last year, the port submitted an application to convert its Cuthbertson substation from retail service to wholesale interconnection service under PG&E’s transmission owner tariff, but PG&E identified an issue with the tariff based on the substation’s power factor, which it said has to be resolved before it can provide wholesale service.

The port contends that PG&E’s sales for resale to it are subject to FERC jurisdiction and that it is concerned about provisions in the interconnection agreement referring to matters under the jurisdiction of the California Public Utilities Commission. The port argues that PG&E is attempting to “improperly impose” CPUC-jurisdictional exit fees on it and protests language describing the change to wholesale service as a notice of departure from PG&E, subjecting the port to departing load fees.

The port also contests that certain aspects of the agreement are unreasonable and unduly discriminatory compared with other PG&E interconnection agreements.

FERC set a public hearing subject to settlement procedures to be held within 15 days.

GridLiance Rehearing Request Rejected

FERC rejected GridLiance West’s rehearing request contending the commission erred when it failed to approve the company’s proposed use of an actual capital structure related to incentive rates for facilities it sought to acquire from Valley Electric Transmission Association (ER17-706). GridLiance West said the proposed capital structure was comparable to similarly situated transmission companies.

In its order denying rehearing, the commission said it made no final determination regarding the proposed capital structure but “found that its preliminary analysis indicated that the proposed TO Tariff had not been shown to be just and reasonable and raised issues of material fact that could not be resolved on the record before the commission.”

Idaho Commission Complaint Headed to Court?

FERC also declined to act on a petition for enforcement filed by Franklin Energy Storage against the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (EL18-50, et al.). The company argued the state commission had improperly classified its energy storage facilities as solar qualifying facilities, preventing them from being eligible for the PUC’s stated electricity rate under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act. The rate is available to non-wind and non-solar QFs of an average capacity of 10 MW or less.

The decision will allow the company to bring an enforcement action against the Idaho commission in the appropriate court, FERC said.

FERC Grants Deadline Waiver for New Hampshire Generator

By Michael Kuser

FERC on Thursday granted a waiver request from Public Service Company of New Hampshire (PSNH), allowing ISO-NE to accept its restoration plan for the Lost Nation generating unit, which the company submitted one business day after the deadline under the RTO’s Tariff (ER18-465).

Eversource Energy, PSNH’s parent company, in January completed the sale of its fossil-fuel generation units in New Hampshire to Granite Shore Power.

On Oct. 20, ISO-NE flagged the oil-fired combustion turbine in Groveton, N.H., for having a significant decrease in capacity below its cleared capacity supply obligation (CSO) of 13.97 MW for the RTO’s 2018-2019 capacity commitment period.

FERC ISO-NE waiver request PSNH
Covered bridge over the Upper Ammonoosuc River next to the 18-MW Lost Nation plant in Groveton, NH.

Under the rules governing the RTO’s annual reconfiguration auctions, Lost Nation had 10 business days to either purchase additional capacity to replace the shortfall or submit a restoration plan showing how it would be able to meet its obligation.

PSNH said the decrease in capacity occurred because a summer seasonal claimed capability audit was not performed. An Eversource employee intended to file a restoration plan showing that Lost Nation was dispatched four days in September 2017 and thus should be capable of supplying output to meet its awarded CSO.

The utility said that two events caused the delay in submitting the restoration plan.

First, the mother of the employee charged with submitting the plan died on Oct. 29, 2017, while the plan was out for review. Then, after a strong storm tore through the state on Oct. 30, the employee was called to storm duty and performed three consecutive 13-hour shifts until being released on Nov. 2. He was then given leave to prepare for his mother’s Nov. 4 memorial service.

FERC ISO-NE waiver request PSNH
Lost Nation Turbine | Eversource

The combination of events distracted the employee from submitting the restoration plan by the close of the Friday, Nov. 3 submission window; he submitted the plan the morning of Monday, Nov. 6. The RTO said it could not unilaterally waive the Tariff-imposed deadline.

In its Feb. 15 decision, the commission found that “PSNH acted in good faith by submitting the restoration plan as soon as possible after it discovered the omission.” The commission also noted that PSNH’s waiver request was uncontested.

FERC: NYISO Not Done on Order 1000 Rules

By Michael Kuser

FERC ruled Thursday that NYISO must make additional changes to comply with Order 1000, while acknowledging in a separate docket that it erred in directing the ISO to change the indemnification language in its pro forma development agreement.

The commission said transmission developers must indemnify NYISO except for acts of “gross negligence or intentional misconduct.” In ordering NYISO to remove the word “gross” from the agreement, the commission said it failed to follow its precedent in a 2015 order involving MISO (ER15-2059-002; ER13-102-008).

NYISO FERC FERC Order 1000 compliance
| NYSEG

FERC also granted NYISO a request for clarification, saying it will allow the ISO to propose a new process for evaluating alternative regulated transmission solutions and regulated backstop solutions for interconnection. The ISO’s current process is outlined in Tariff Attachments X and S.

But the commission rejected rehearing requests by the New York Transmission Owners (NYTOs), who balked at the commission’s requirement that TOs responsible for providing “backstop” solutions to a reliability need — normally the incumbent TO — sign the development agreement, as is required of nonincumbent transmission developers.

“If responsible transmission owners developing regulated backstop solutions are not required to execute a development agreement, they will have an advantage over nonincumbent transmission developers both in seeking selection in the regional transmission plan for purposes of cost allocation and remaining selected,” the commission said, noting that the NYISO Transmission Owners Agreement and the agreement between NYISO and the NYTOs on the Comprehensive Planning Process for Reliability Needs are less stringent than those in the development agreement

The NYTOs consist of Central Hudson Gas & Electric; Consolidated Edison; New York Power Authority; New York State Electric and Gas; Niagara Mohawk Power; Long Island Power Authority; Rochester Gas & Electric; and Orange and Rockland Utilities.

Compliance Filings

NYISO FERC FERC Order 1000
| NYSEG

FERC also provided its clarification on alternatives to Attachments X and S in a concurrently issued order in which it accepted in part Order 1000 compliance filings NYISO made in March and September 2016. The commission accepted most of the ISO’s Tariff revisions but rejected language it said was discriminatory or unjust (ER13-102, et al.).

It ordered the ISO to make changes in its proposed transmission interconnection procedures that it found unjust and unreasonable, including language on scheduling and definitions.

It also required the ISO to make changes in its proposed Operating Agreement regarding maintenance schedules, compliance with local reliability rules and investigations of equipment malfunctions.

The commission found “incorrect” the Tariff revision that said nothing in Attachment Y affects a TO’s right to recover the costs of upgrades to its facilities regardless of whether the upgrade has been selected in the regional transmission plan for purposes of cost allocation.

“Pursuant to Order No. 1000, once NYISO selects a transmission project in the regional transmission plan for purposes of cost allocation, the regional cost allocation method set forth in Attachment Y of the [Tariff] applies, unless the project developer ‘decline[s] to pursue regional cost allocation,’” the commission said.

ITC Subsidiary Gets OK to Buy Michigan Tx Assets

FERC last week authorized an ITC Holdings subsidiary to purchase transmission assets from a small southwestern Michigan city.

The ruling authorizes Michigan Electric Transmission Co. to spend $201,206 to buy transmission assets at the Black River Substation from the City of Holland Board of Public Works (EC18-21). The assets include surge arrestors, relay panels, circuit breakers, backup relays and disconnect switches that Michigan Electric plans to use in its transmission operations.

Transmission assets FERC ISO-NE ITC Holdings Holland Michigan
ITC transmission | ITC

The commission said the acquisition was consistent with the public interest and won’t hinder competition in the area. Michigan Electric has also pledged to hold all transmission customers harmless from any transaction costs for five years.

“The proposed transaction does not involve any change in ownership or control of any generating facilities. Accordingly, the proposed transaction will not have any impact on concentration in any relevant market,” FERC said. The commission also said that prior experience suggests that sales involving only the transfer of transmission facilities are unlikely to result in uncompetitive activity.

— Amanda Durish Cook

Ameren Rate Incentive Rejected by FERC

FERC last week declined to grant Ameren additional transmission incentive rates for portions of the company’s 500-mile Grand Rivers project in Illinois and Missouri.

Ameren sought a 100-basis-point incentive adder for the return on equity for the Illinois Rivers and Mark Twain components of the project, which is intended to create a continuous 345-kV path from Iowa to Indiana. The company also requested authorization to assign the incentive to any affiliate that undertakes the development, construction or ownership of those portions of the project.

FERC Grand River Project
Grand River Project | Ameren

The commission said the segments were already too far developed to be considered risky enough for incentive rate treatment (ER18-463).

“We find that, due to the late stage of … development, including the substantial completion of the Illinois Rivers component, Ameren Transmission has failed to demonstrate that the remaining risks and challenges associated with the components warrant the requested ROE incentive,” the commission sad. “A project that is further along in construction and thus closer to completion typically faces fewer remaining risks and challenges, and we find that is true here.”

FERC agreed with the contention by the Organization of MISO States and the Missouri Public Service Commission that Ameren had already spent 77% of its cost estimate on the two lines when it asked for the rate incentive in mid-December, when permitting risks were minimal and already covered by a previously approved abandonment incentive. Ameren had argued that the two lines face “unprecedented” risks that are not covered by its other rate incentives.

The commission has previously granted several incentives for the Grand Rivers Project, including 100% construction-work-in-progress recovery, abandoned-plant recovery, a hypothetical capital structure and the authority to assign incentives to affiliated entities.

— Amanda Durish Cook

FERC Finalizes Frequency Response Requirement

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

New generators seeking interconnections must be equipped to provide primary frequency response, FERC ruled Thursday (Order 842, RM16-6).

The commission said the requirement that generators have governors or other equipment to respond automatically to frequency disturbances must be included in the pro forma generator interconnection agreements (GIAs) for both large (20 MW+) and small generators.

The rules will apply to new generation and existing generators that seek a new interconnection agreement because of “material modifications” to their facilities. The commission declined to order existing generators to retrofit their facilities to provide the service, saying it would be “prohibitively expensive” for some.

The final rule makes only small changes from the commission’s November 2016 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which cited concerns by NERC and others that frequency response has declined with the loss of traditional synchronous generation and the increase in asynchronous renewables. (See FERC: Renewables Must Provide Frequency Response.)

The commission cited a 2010 NERC survey that found only 30% of generators in the Eastern Interconnection provided primary frequency response and that only 10% provided “sustained” response. The commission said the existing pro forma large GIA — which required primary frequency response from only synchronous generating facilities — does not reflect technological advances allowing nonsynchronous generation to provide the service.

The commission set operating requirements of a maximum droop setting of 5% and a deadband setting of ±0.036 Hz.

“We find that the establishment of minimum uniform operating requirements for all newly interconnecting generating facilities is preferable to the fragmented and inconsistent primary frequency response settings currently in place throughout the Eastern and Western Interconnections,” FERC said. ERCOT already has minimum frequency response requirements, FERC noted.

FERC agreed with recommendations by the Edison Electric Institute and the Western Interconnection Regional Advisory Body that it modify the rule to explicitly prohibit interconnection customers from blocking their governors’ ability to respond to frequency deviations.

“One of the commission’s concerns with the current lack of clear, uniform primary frequency response requirements is NERC’s finding indicating that a number of generator owners/operators have implemented operating settings that have effectively removed the availability of their generating facilities from providing timely and sustained primary frequency response (e.g., wide deadband settings, uncoordinated plant-level controls). The reforms adopted in this final rule, to be applied uniformly to new generating facilities, are intended to eliminate these practices.”

The commission disagreed with the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association’s (NRECA) contention that the rule is premature, saying “adopting these requirements now is more prudent than waiting until the lack of primary frequency response undermines grid reliability, a point acknowledged by NERC’s Essential Reliability Services Task Force.”

Headroom, Compensation

The commission rejected EEI’s proposal that generators be required to maintain headroom — allowing them to increase output in response to low frequency — and receive compensation for doing so. “If future conditions necessitate a headroom requirement, we will then consider any appropriate compensation,” it said.

FERC also said it would consider on a case-by-case basis requests from transmission providers seeking to impose a headroom requirement “in a particular factual circumstance” that includes a compensation mechanism.

The commission said compensation is not necessary because “the cost of installing, maintaining and operating a governor or equivalent controls is minimal.” FERC estimated the cost of adding governors to new wind and solar generators would average $3,300/MW, about 0.2% of total capital costs for wind and solar.

FERC Primary Frequency Response
Wind farm outside Palm Springs, Calif. New wind farms must be able to provide primary frequency response under a FERC rule approved Thursday. | © RTO Insider

FERC also rejected requests that it order compensation for traditional generators that provide inertial response. “No commenter asserts that inertial response trends on the Eastern and Western Interconnections are approaching levels that could threaten reliability. In addition, because inertial response is provided automatically by the rotating mass of synchronous machines as system frequency deviates and is not controllable, synchronous generating facilities do not incur additional incremental costs to provide inertial response,” the commission said.

Exceptions and Accommodations

The commission exempted or offered accommodations to some classes of resources:

  • Combined heat and power (CHP) generators that are sized to serve onsite load and have no ability to export power to the grid will be exempt from the operating requirements but must install a governor “in the event that there is an increased need in the future for primary frequency response capability.”
  • Energy storage will only be required to provide frequency response within specified operating ranges representing minimum and maximum states of charge. The commission said the accommodation would prevent the premature degradation of storage resources.
  • Distributed energy resources will be required to provide frequency response only when they are allowed to ride through disturbances, the commission said in response to Xcel Energy’s concern that dynamic frequency response at the distribution level can interfere with anti-islanding protections. The rule does “not supersede a generating facility’s ride-through settings or require an interconnection customer to override anti-islanding protection or any protective relaying that has been set to disconnect the generating facility during certain abnormal system conditions,” the commission said.
  • Nuclear generators are exempt from the rule because their licenses with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission often restrict providing frequency response.

No Exemption for Wind, Small Generators

Wind generation must comply with the requirement, the commission said, rejecting an exemption request by Sunflower Electric Power and Mid-Kansas Electric.

“Unlike certain CHP or nuclear generating facilities, the record does not indicate that there is an economic, technical or regulatory basis for a generic exemption for newly interconnecting wind generating facilities,” FERC said. “In particular, we are persuaded by [the American Wind Energy Association’s] assertion that the proposed primary frequency response capability requirements can be met at low cost for new wind projects, and that newly interconnecting wind facilities should not have difficulty complying.”

Small generators also will not be exempt. The commission said the rule will not result in “unduly burdensome” costs or create a barrier to entry, noting that PJM has not seen a decrease in small generator interconnections since it required nonsynchronous generation to install enhanced inverters with frequency response capability. “We are persuaded by commenter assertions that that small generating facilities are making up a growing percentage of the generation resource mix, and that as the market penetration of small generating facilities increases, there will be a growing need for primary frequency response from these generating facilities,” FERC said.

The commission rejected NRECA’s request that individual balancing authorities be permitted to seek waivers from the rule but agreed that “unique circumstances or needs of some individual regions or areas may warrant different operating requirements.” FERC said it would consider variations based on Regional Entity reliability requirements; variations that are “consistent with or superior to” the final rule; and “independent entity variations” filed by RTOs and ISOs.

The revised GIAs are due 70 days after publication of the rule in the Federal Register.

ISO-NE Study Finds Wind ‘Spillage,’ Price Separation

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

ISO-NE could see substantial “spillage” of renewable energy and large price separations because of transmission constraints under scenarios considered in the RTO’s 2017 Economic Study, officials told the Planning Advisory Committee on Wednesday.

The study was requested by the Conservation Law Foundation to evaluate scenarios for meeting Massachusetts and Connecticut climate laws and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative’s emission caps.

The study was based on the “Renewables Plus” scenario from the 2016 Economic Study, which modeled the year 2030 — the only scenario in the 2016 study to meet the RGGI cap. (See Study: New Resources Could ‘Crowd Out’ Old in ISO-NE.)

ISO-NE RPS Wind Power Regional Transmission Overlay Study
| ISO-NE

Under Renewables Plus, the generation fleet met existing renewable portfolio standards, and new renewable or clean energy resources were added above existing RPS requirements.

The new study looked at three additional scenarios:

  1. “EE + Offshore”: Added more energy efficiency and offshore wind while reducing imports from Canada by 1,000 MW.
  2. “Onshore Less EE/PV”: A variation on the business-as-usual base case from the 2016 report, with onshore wind boosted to 7,000 MW (nameplate capacity) from 4,800 MW in the reference case.
  3. “Wind Less Nuc”: Assumes the Millstone nuclear plant retires by 2030, five years ahead of its license expiration, with the gap filled by renewable/clean energy resources.

The study found all three scenarios met projected demand, even with transmission constraints based on the “as-planned” system’s internal and external transfer limits.

If transmission constraints are not relieved, the RTO would see “spillage” of wind power north of the Surowiec-South interface, leading to lower prices in Northern Maine than southern New England. For example, under the constrained scenarios, 7 to 18% of renewables would be spilled, with 22 to 89% of the spillage north of Surowiec-South.

In the constrained Wind Less Nuc scenario, average LMPs would range from $13.78/MWh in the Bangor Hydro Electric subarea in northeastern Maine, to $38.71/MWh in the NH subarea (which includes most of New Hampshire, eastern Vermont and southwestern Maine) and $37.18/MWh in Boston.

 

ISO-NE RPS RTO's 2017 Economic Study Wind
Only one scenario, EE + Offshore, is as good as the Renewables Plus scenario in meeting the RGGI 2030 emission targets. | ISO-NE

Electric production by natural gas plants fluctuates with assumptions regarding plant retirements and price-taking offers ($0/MWh) by renewable resources. EE + Offshore has the least gas-fired energy, while Wind Less Nuc has the most gas production, especially when the transmission system is constrained.

EE + Offshore had the lowest total production costs, coming in 28% below the Renewables Plus reference case assuming transmission constraints. Onshore Less EE/PV had the highest costs, 77% above the constrained reference case.

Only one scenario, EE + Offshore, is as good as the Renewables Plus scenario in meeting the RGGI 2030 emission targets.

ISO-NE RPS RTO's 2017 Economic Study Wind
Ismay | © RTO Insider

CLF staff attorney David Ismay said the two emission-reduction targets, which were also used in the 2016 study, were intended to “bracket” the goals RGGI might embrace in its latest program review. RGGI’s emissions cap declines by 2.5% annually through 2020. The group announced in August that it would seek an additional 30% reduction in emissions from 2020 levels.

“We expressly worked … to design all three scenarios to meet [RGGI] emissions targets,” Ismay said.

“We’re starting to get a better picture of what the grid needs to look like in order to meet our climate laws and emission regulations that are already on the books,” he explained in an interview later. “We really need a grid that’s different from what we have now. I think that will give legislators, regulators and the ISO information on the kind of mix we need to comply with these laws. … It’s really helpful to see the impact of adding 1,000 MW of EE or 1,000 MW of wind.”

Stakeholders have until April 2 to submit requests for additional economic studies. Requests should be emailed to PACMatters@ISO-NE.com.

MISO Evaluating Economic Modeling for Tx Projects

By Amanda Durish Cook

MISO is embarking on a review of its entire economic planning process in an effort to more accurately capture the benefits of cost-shared transmission projects.

“This is not about MISO saying the existing process is broken or flawed,” Matt Ellis, of the RTO’s Economic Planning Users Group, told stakeholders at a Feb. 13 Planning Subcommittee meeting.

Ellis said MISO is looking forward to FERC-level discussion on best practices for planning and that it will continue to talk about economic models throughout 2018.

MISO especially wants to take a fresh look at:

  • The economic impacts of transmission outages;
  • Voltage and local reliability resource commitments, especially in MISO South load pockets where performance has lagged;
  • MISO’s emergency energy supply and how it’s being valued in economic models when it defers transmission and generation investment or prevents scarcity pricing and loss-of-load events;
  • Accounting for likely import and export flows in adjusted production costs; and
  • Forecasted renewable resource ownership and which members will actually purchase the energy and benefit when considering renewable portfolio standards.

Further, the RTO plans to hold stakeholder discussions through June on other possible measurable benefits that could be valued in the modeling of market efficiency projects. It could consider such benefits as the deferral of reliability projects; savings that could arise from opening up it contract flow path with SPP that bridges MISO South and Midwest; reduced transmission energy losses; reduced ancillary services costs; and deferral of capacity expansion stemming from increased capacity import/export limits.

MISO economic modeling market efficiency projects
| MISO

Ellis asked for member companies’ engineers to come forward with other ideas about overlooked benefits of market efficiency projects that could be assigned a monetary value.

Minnesota Public Utilities Commission staff member Hwikwon Ham cautioned that renewable standards are set by state legislatures and can be changed. Ellis responded that MISO is looking for that kind of information and other input.

He also said timely changes to MISO’s modeling could affect how it judges potential projects in its annual Market Congestion Planning Study for the 2018 Transmission Expansion Plan.

“We are fully aware that having a process review in parallel with having the process is not an ideal situation. It introduces a lot of ‘what-ifs,’” Ellis said. He promised that MISO would test any projects affected by an economic model change using both the old and new models and that it could delay implementing the new aspects of economic modeling.

MISO announced its plan the same week it proposed to lower the voltage threshold for market efficiency projects to 230 kV, and two weeks after FERC ordered a technical conference on how PJM, MISO and SPP coordinate generator interconnection studies after developer EDF Renewable Energy complained that the RTOs’ modeling standards violate the FERC requirement for transparent open access interconnection service. (See FERC Orders Review of PJM, MISO, SPP Generator Studies.)

Con Edison Q4 Earnings Up 144%

Consolidated Edison’s fourth-quarter net income increased 144% to $505 million ($1.63/share) from $207 million ($0.68/share) in 2016, the company said last week.

Total revenue for the quarter increased 9.38% to $2.961 billion.

The company reported 2017 net income of $1.525 billion ($4.97/share), compared with $1.245 million ($4.15/ share) in 2016. Total revenue was down slightly in 2017 but remained above $12 billion.

PJM PSEG Con Edison earnings Q4
Con Edison Composition of Regulatory Rate Base as of Dec. 31, 2017 | ConEd

Con Ed said its adjusted earnings for 2017 excluded the remeasurement of deferred tax assets and liabilities upon enactment of the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the effects of the gain on the sale of a solar electric production project, and the net mark-to-market of Con Edison’s clean energy businesses.

The company’s earnings presentation showed the new law reduced the net deferred tax liabilities for its Con Ed of New York, Orange and Rockland Utilities and Rockland Electric subsidiaries by more than $5 billion collectively.

Con Ed plans to meet its 2018 capital requirements through internally generated funds and the issuance of securities. The company’s plans include issuing between $1.3 billion and $1.8 billion of long-term debt at its utilities and additional debt secured by its renewable electric production projects.

The company also plans to issue up to $450 million of common equity in addition to equity under its dividend reinvestment, employee stock purchase and long-term incentive plans. The plans do not reflect the provision to utility customers of any tax law benefits that may be required by the New York Public Service Commission or the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities.

— Michael Kuser