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December 7, 2025

Ohio Leads in Great Lakes

It isn’t only PJM’s Atlantic states that see promise in offshore wind. The Great Lakes also offer strong winds, along with their own unique challenges — winter ice, opposition from tourist towns, and in Pennsylvania, development restrictions put into law by casino opponents.

Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Indiana have potential Great Lakes wind generation of 2 million GWh annually, three times their electric consumption, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). Of the total potential of 487 GW about one-third are in depths of 30 meters or less. (These “technical potential” estimates generally don’t consider economic or market constraints that will reduce actual renewable generation.)

Michigan, with shorelines on three lakes, has the largest share of potential lake wind, although Ohio benefits from its 312-mile shoreline on the shallowest, Lake Erie. Portions of Lake Ontario (New York) also have shallow depths. The other lakes are mostly deep water, which would make wind development more expensive.

False Starts in Michigan, Pennsylvania

Great Lakes and Atlantic Ocean Wind Speeds Map (Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory)
Great Lakes and Atlantic Ocean Wind Speeds Map (Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory)

In 2012, 10 federal agencies and the states of Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, New York and Pennsylvania signed a memorandum of understanding to coordinate and simplify regulatory review of offshore wind projects. While the states own the lake bottoms, federal law requires approval of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the placement of fill or structures, including electric transmission lines, in or under navigable waters.

The Corps will make its decisions in coordination with the other federal agencies after considering impacts on migratory birds and bats, impacts on air traffic and radar capabilities and potential shipping disruptions.

Despite the Lakes’ great potential, would-be developers have been stymied to date by inconsistent state government support and aesthetic concerns from lakeshore towns.

Michigan jumped into the offshore race in 2009 when Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, formed the Michigan Great Lakes Wind Council. The council issued a 2010 report identifying five optimal areas for wind development: one in Lake Superior and two each in Michigan and Huron.

Offshore wind also seemed to be gaining traction with officials in Wisconsin, Ohio and Illinois. Then the 2010 elections, which replaced Democratic governors with Republican ones in Michigan, Wisconsin and Ohio, changed the dynamic. “It was like somebody flipped the switch and the resounding collective interest in wind energy on the Great Lakes disappeared overnight,” Arnold Boezaart, director of the Michigan Alternative and Renewable Energy Center at Grand Valley State University, told Midwest Energy News.

In 2011, the New York Power Authority abandoned a proposed 150 MW Great Lakes wind project, saying it “would not be fiscally prudent” at costs two to four times more than onshore wind. The same year, Ontario ordered a moratorium on offshore wind development to conduct additional studies. Two years and three studies later, the moratorium continues.

Ohio: Cleveland in the Lead

Ohio has the clear lead to be the site of the first freshwater wind in North America — though even there it’s far from certain that it will happen.

The Lake Erie Energy Development Corp. (LEEDCo), a non-profit economic development organization, is planning a six-turbine, 18-MW pilot project in Lake Erie, seven miles offshore Cleveland. It was one of seven offshore projects that won $4 million grants from the Department of Energy in February to complete engineering, site evaluation, and planning.

Developers recently conducted soil sampling to determine how to build the foundations for the $150 million “Icebreaker” project. The developers need to complete their plans and obtain permits by February 2014 to be eligible for an additional $50 million grant from DOE.

LEEDCo, founded in 2009 by the city of Cleveland and four lakeside counties, has set a 2015 target for operation. “We will certainly be the first freshwater project,” said LEEDCo spokesman Eric Ritter.

LEEDCo has a memorandum of understanding to sell 25% of the farm’s output to Cleveland Public Power.

It is hoping to encourage other utilities and retail marketers to purchase the remaining output by getting 10,000 retail consumers to sign a “Power Pledge” indicating their willingness to pay extra for offshore wind. To date, almost 1,000 consumers have signed the pledges, which allow them to specify how much they are willing to see their electric bills increase. The median increase volunteered was $10 per month.

Ritter said the pledge is intended to counter the notion “that people aren’t willing to pay extra for (renewable) electricity.

Michigan: Developer “Run Out of Town”

Scandia, a Norwegian company, ran into a buzz saw in the tourist town of Ludington in 2009 after announcing plans for a 200-turbine wind farm in Lake Michigan. Residents were concerned the wind farm would ruin their lake views and hurt local tourism.  “They were basically run out of town,” Boezaart told Midwest Energy News.

Michigan Gov. Granholm was replaced in 2010 by Republican Rick Snyder, who says that offshore wind is “not a priority.”

Last month, two Michigan state representatives introduced a bill that would stop any research or production of offshore wind power in the Great Lakes. The sponsors say they are acting to protect ratepayers from being liable for turbines that could be destroyed by winter ice.

Pennsylvania: No Movement since 2010 Disappointment

In 2010, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives unanimously approved a bill to clear the way for wind in Lake Erie but the bill died after failing to get a hearing in the Senate.

The bill would have eliminated a 25-acre limit on leasing of Lake Erie bottomland, a restriction pushed into state law years earlier by opponents of a proposed casino, according to John Nikoloff, a lobbyist who represented a would-be wind developer.

Now, Nikoloff said in a recent interview, “it’s just not one of the (legislature’s) priorities .”

Nikoloff said the legislature’s focus has been on managing the growth of its shale gas drilling industry. New legislation to aid offshore wind won’t move, Nikoloff said, “unless there are companies that are seriously interested” in developing the lake’s resources.

Illinois: Making a Move?

The Illinois legislature in 2011 created the Lake Michigan Offshore Wind Energy Advisory Council, prompted by the city of Evanston’s interest in developing a farm.

The council worked with the state Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to produce a June 2012 report that recommended criteria for reviewing development applications, identifying favorable sites, and setting compensation levels for lakebed leasing.

In mid-May, an Illinois Senate Committee joined the House in approving a bill authorizing DNR to identify the best sites for offshore wind and to grant leases on them. HB 2753 was approved unanimously by the Senate Energy Committee after passing the House 90-21 in April.

The Siren Song of Offshore Wind

by Rich Heidorn Jr.

Third time was the charm for Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley this spring as he finally convinced lawmakers to approve his plan to subsidize the offshore wind industry off the Atlantic Coast.

The law puts Maryland in the race with PJM neighbors New Jersey, Delaware, Virginia and North Carolina in the contest to become home to an industry that officials hope will create thousands of jobs in the manufacture and servicing of offshore turbines.

But passing the legislation may prove to be the easy part. As this PJM Insider Special Report will demonstrate, realizing offshore wind’s environmental and economic development potential will require changes in federal policy and billions more in subsidies than Maryland and the other MidAtlantic states have committed to the effort thus far.

Potential

If the U.S. is to join Europe and China in deploying offshore wind, it will almost certainly happen first in the Atlantic, and the PJM states will be in the middle of it.Offshore-vs.-Onshore-wind-specs

The Mid-Atlantic region has almost 300 GW of potential wind capacity in ocean waters less than 30 meters deep, more than a quarter of the U.S. shallow-water total and more than enough to supply all of the region’s power needs.  PJM states bordering the Great Lakes also have considerable assets, led by Michigan and Ohio.

Offshore wind is attractive because of its potential to provide a large source of carbon-free generation without any fuel price risk.

The primary motivation for state officials, however, is the promise of jobs. Based on the experience in Europe, which has been building commercial-scale offshore wind for more than a decade, the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory predicts every megawatt of offshore wind installed will create more than 20 job-years in manufacturing and installation and 0.8 permanent jobs in operation and maintenance.

The Obama administration estimates that 54 GW of offshore wind will be needed to reach its goal of boosting wind generation to 300 GW by 2035. Reaching the 54 GW goal, NREL says, would create $200 billion in economic activity and 43,000 permanent jobs in operations and maintenance and 1.1 million job-years in manufacturing, construction and engineering.  “Most of the labor for offshore wind will draw from local and regional sources that cannot be easily outsourced overseas,” NREL said in a 2010 study.

No wonder politicians are giddy with the promise. Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell pledged to make his state the “energy capital of the East Coast,” while O’Malley talked of making Maryland “the regional manufacturing hub for wind turbines.” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie pledged to make the state a “national leader” in wind, calling the development of the state’s “renewable energy resources and industry … critical to our state’s manufacturing and technology future.”

Yet, it’s not clear whether the potential will be tapped any time in the next decade.

Cost Obstacles

The biggest reason is cost. Offshore wind’s capital costs are estimated at $6,000 per kW ­- almost three times that for land-based wind – because of the high cost of building at sea. Offshore turbines must be robust enough to withstand salt water and hurricane-force winds in the ocean and ice in the Great Lakes.

Offshore wind also has higher operations and maintenance and financing costs. The Energy Information Administration says the levelized cost of energy from offshore wind is $222/MWh (2008$), more than double the $87 for onshore wind and more than three times the $66 for natural gas advanced combined cycle plants. (EIA’s figures exclude any savings from the production tax or investment tax credits.)

These cost concerns have slowed development in PJM.

In Delaware, NRG Bluewater Wind put its proposed 450 MW wind farm on hold in 2011, cancelling a 25-year purchase power agreement with Delmarva Power & Light Co., after failing to find investment partners.

A proposed 25 MW pilot project off the coast of Atlantic City has been unable to persuade regulators or consumer advocates that it will be a net economic benefit. O’Malley may find his plans similarly hampered: the bill the Maryland legislature approved also requires a cost-benefit analysis that may prove difficult to meet.

Jobs: High transportation costs favor local production

What’s at stake?

A large commitment to offshore wind would lead to construction of new manufacturing facilities and jobs along the U.S. shores. Offshore wind turbines are typically larger than their shore-based counterparts and components can be expensive to build in facilities making land-based turbines. The larger size also increases transportation costs, which means new factories are likely to be built along the coastline where the turbines will eventually be deployed.

blade-damaged-in-accident-source-US-Dept.-of-Energy
This wind turbine blade suffered $275,000 in damage in a 2011 traffic accident in Dubuque, Iowa. Offshore wind turbines are larger than their land-based counterparts, complicating transportation logistics and likely leading to shore-based manufacturing. (Source: US Department of Energy)

“Even though the United States has not yet developed an offshore wind project, the logistical requirements of transporting offshore machines would encourage [manufacturers] to build up U.S. manufacturing operations as soon as a long-term pipeline of likely project emerges,” NREL said.

At the American Wind Energy Association conference in Virginia Beach in October, the Boston Globe reported, “German developers talked about how the industry has transformed rusting homeland harbors into bustling ports, while British officials boasted that industry investment in offshore wind will leap from $8 billion in the last decade to $80 billion in the next eight years.”

World-pie-graph-plus-line-bar-graph-combined
Net Annual Additions equals new installations minus retirements. (Source: Global Wind Energy Council, Global Wind Statistics, 2012)

Offshore wind also will require ships to transport, install and maintain turbines. That would be a boon for U.S. shipbuilders, because the federal Jones Act requires that all goods transported between U.S. ports — wind farm foundations are considered ports — be carried in ships that were built domestically.  Most existing vessels designed for offshore turbine installation are European-owned. Initially, U.S.-owned vessels built to service offshore drilling are likely to be in demand by wind developers.

Insufficient Demand to Lure Investment

But currently proposed projects and those that may result from the subsidies offered by states are not large enough to create the demand needed to spark substantial economic development on shore, according to a study released by the Department of Energy in February.

The study, by Navigant Consulting Inc., concludes that it will take demand of 500 to 800 MW per year for a minimum of five years to lure a U.S. manufacturing plant for offshore turbines. Commitments by the MidAtlantic states fall far short of creating that kind of project pipeline:

  • New Jersey’s Energy Master Plan set a goal of 1,100 MW of offshore wind by 2020.
  • Delaware and Maryland have proposed subsidies for 200 MW of offshore wind each.

If the three states’ combined commitment of 1,500 MW were built over five years, it would average only 300 MW per year. That could be enough to support a factory manufacturing a single component such as towers or blades, according to the Navigant study, which was based on interviews with suppliers.

Subsidies Needed to Overcome Price Disadvantage

Thanks to more aggressive climate change goals and large government subsidies, Europe has grown its offshore wind capacity to 5,400 MW over more than a decade while the U.S. — second only to China in land-based wind capacity — has no commercial-scale wind power offshore.  Not coincidentally, virtually all of the manufacturing of offshore turbines is owned by non-U.S. companies.

Current federal incentives — Congress’ one-year renewal of the Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit for wind power — also fall short, says Sen. Tom Carper, a Democrat from Delaware.

Confirmed-Global-Offshire-Wind-Turbine-Deliveries-Though-YE-2011
Confirmed Global Offshire Wind Turbine Deliveries Though YE 2011 (MWs) (Source: BTM, 2011, a part of Navigant)

Carper and Maine Republican Susan Collins reintroduced a bill in February that would make the first 3,000 megawatts of offshore wind energy capacity eligible for the investment tax credit. Tying the credit to a capacity limit rather than having an expiration date will allow the long-term planning that offshore wind requires, Carper says. The bill, which Carper initially introduced in 2011, has been assigned to the Senate Finance Committee but has not had any hearings to date.

Other offshore wind supporters say it will take a fee on carbon pollution to give offshore wind a chance to build the scale economies to compete against fossil fuel-fired generation.

In a February 2013 study commissioned by the Center for American Progress and groups including the Sierra Club, The Brattle Group predicted that the cost of offshore wind could reach “grid parity” with gas combustion turbines by 2024 to 2030. The analysis does not include production or investment tax credits but does assume a carbon price on coal and natural gas-fired generation that increases from $8/mwh in 2014 to almost $62/mwh in 2030 (2012 $). Existing tax subsidies for gas production also are eliminated in this scenario.

The 2030 estimate assumes a 5% “learning rate” for offshore wind — the rate at which costs decline for each doubling of the installed capacity. At a 10% learning rate, grid parity is reached by 2024. Onshore wind cut its capital costs by a learning rate of 15%, the Interior Department reported in a 2006 study.

Building 54 gigawatts of offshore wind will require ratepayer subsidies, or “learning investment,” of $18.5 billion to $52 billion with a carbon fee and $79 billion to $150 billion without one, Brattle estimated.  That translates to an average rate increase of up to 1.7% nationwide, or 3% for the Atlantic and Great Lake states, if costs are concentrated in those coastal regions where the earliest development is likely.

Many are willing to pay a modest premium to build a cleaner source of generation that also acts as a hedge against rising fuel (i.e. natural gas) prices.

A Washington Post poll in February found 58% of Maryland residents supported O’Malley’s offshore wind initiative, which will add up to $1.50 to residential customers’ monthly bills. Thirty-nine percent were opposed. A 2012 poll on a prior version of the legislation — which would have imposed a $2 surcharge — won support from 55% of respondents, with 42% opposed.

Some are willing to pay much more. In a campaign launched in mid-April to persuade utilities and power marketers of customer demand, the developers of a proposed Lake Erie wind farm off Cleveland have gotten almost 1,000 retail customers to sign a “Power Pledge” indicating their willingness to pay extra for offshore wind. The signers said they were willing to see their electric bills increase $10 a month. The developers hope to secure 10,000 signatures by the end of the summer.

Progression-of-wind-turbines-from-land-to-deep-ocean-illustration-National-Renewable-Energy-Laboratory
The Pacific Coast has higher wind speeds than the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico, but exploiting its deep waters will require the development of floating turbines. (Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory)

But in addition to state support for rate increases, offshore wind will need Washington’s support for a carbon fee.  The Brattle study found that subsidies would need to be three to four times higher without a carbon fee than with one.

Congress rejected efforts to impose carbon fees through a cap and trade system in 2009 and there has been little movement in Washington toward such a fee since.

Lacking a carbon tax, the Obama administration’s efforts on behalf of offshore wind have been limited to streamlining the permitting process and providing grants for research and development.

The Department of Energy has committed more than $270 million in funding for research and development of offshore wind since fiscal 2009.

While they need help from Washington, policymakers in the PJM states also will have to increase their commitment to offshore wind considerably to create enough demand to lure the jobs they crave. Until then, their efforts will be little but hot air.

FERC Likely to Increase Pressure on PJM-MISO Joint Market Talks

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission signaled today that it will increase its scrutiny of the PJM-MISO Joint Common Market process amid complaints that PJM is improperly limiting MISO generation from full participation in its capacity market.

FERC commissioners indicated their concern in comments following presentations by representatives of PJM, MISO and state regulators at today’s commission meeting.

RTO representatives and state regulators made their cases before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in a dispute over capacity deliverability across the PJM-MISO “seam.” Facing the camera from left: Joseph Bowring and David Patton, independent market monitors for PJM and MISO, respectively; Commissioner Greg White, Michigan Public Service Commission; Chairman Phil Montgomery, Wisconsin Public Service Commission; Kari Bennett, Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission; Andy Ott, PJM executive vice president for markets, and Clair Moeller, MISO executive vice president for transmission and technology. (Source: FERC)
RTO representatives and state regulators made their cases before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in a dispute over capacity deliverability across the PJM-MISO “seam.” Facing the camera from left: Joseph Bowring and David Patton, independent market monitors for PJM and MISO, respectively; Commissioner Greg White, Michigan Public Service Commission; Chairman Phil Montgomery, Wisconsin Public Service Commission; Kari Bennett, Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission; Andy Ott, PJM executive vice president for markets, and Clair Moeller, MISO executive vice president for transmission and technology. (Source: FERC)

The commission ordered the presentation as part of a docket it created last June to determine whether it needs to get more involved in a long-standing dispute between PJM and MISO over PJM’s rules for determining the volume of capacity that can be imported across the PJM-MISO “seam.”

PJM: No Artificial Barriers

Andy Ott, PJM executive vice president for markets, told the commission that MISO’s complaints are belied by PJM’s 2016/17 capacity market auction, in which 4,700 MW of MISO capacity bid, all of it clearing. That was more than double the volume that bid in last year’s base auction; about one quarter of the total came from territory new to MISO, including the Entergy transmission system.

“We really haven’t seen barriers” to MISO generation, Ott said. Ott said the commission should not set deadlines for a resolution of the dispute but continue monitoring the JCM stakeholder process through its staff, calling it a “very powerful” force in ensuring the talks progress.

But Commissioner Tony Clark was unconvinced that what he called the commission’s “benign neglect” stance had been effective:  “Staff has monitored [JCM] for the last six or seven years,” he said. “It stalled.”

Other commissioners also signaled impatience with the status quo.

Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur said that since FERC’s ill-fated attempt at imposing a Standard Market Design, the agency has allowed regional transmission operators to develop different market structures and operating procedures. While PJM and MISO have done the most work of any two RTOs on seams issues, she said, “There’s still a long, long list of things to work on.”

Deadline `Discipline’

Commissioner Philip Moeller said the resumption of the JCM process last year was “overdue” and that the talks could benefit from the “discipline of a deadline.”

“To the extent that this becomes a reliability issue, it’s absolutely something we can’t ignore,” he said, referring to MISO’s concerns that its current capacity surplus may become a shortage in several years, requiring it to seek capacity imports from PJM.

Commissioner John R. Norris said MISO may be correct in its complaint that PJM rules are artificially restricting capacity imports below physical transport limits. “My sense is, there is a there there.”

PJM and MISO have been holding monthly JCM meetings since July but MISO says the talks have made little progress in addressing capacity deliverability. In a filing in January, MISO asked the commission to set deadlines for resolution of the issue. PJM responded that the commission should reject MISO’s request and close the docket.

State Regulators’ `Blueprint’

Commissioner Clark said the commission should follow the “blueprint” proposed by state regulators last week. The joint filing by the Organization of PJM States (OPSI) and the Organization of MISO States (OMS) called for fact finding to identify methodologies for: determining transfer capability between MISO and PJM; the feasibility of potential revisions to existing rules and a way to compare the costs and benefits of such changes.

The states said the JCM should consider hiring an independent consultant to help mediate if PJM and MISO are unable to agree.

“It is not helpful for either RTO to insist upon an end-result or outcome without having supportive documentation and analysis,” the groups said. “Without collaborative involvement from both RTOs the output of any fact finding and subsequent analysis would likely be unreliable.”

Links to Presentations

Manual Changes Approved by Planning Committee on June 6, 2013

The Planning Committee Thursday approved changes to Manual 19: Load Forecasting and Analysis. The changes go next to the Markets and Reliability Committee.

Reason for changes: Integration of East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC), addition of annual demand resources; and need to ensure accuracy of load shed programs.

Impact:

  • Adds EKPC to load forecast model;
  • Revises assumption for winter load management;
  • Makes minor typo fixes and clarifications for NERC audits;
  • Changes demand resources available in winter months due to addition of annual DR product; and
  • Codifies guidelines for switch operability studies for load management programs. The guidelines are designed to ensure the accuracy of load shed estimates for participants in Direct Load Control programs. The study must be designed for a minimum 90% confidence level and based on a randomly selected sample from the entire population of participating customers. No customers can be excluded.

PJM contact: John Reynolds

MIC Seeks Better Way to Draw Capacity Supply Curve

The Market Implementation Committee will consider modifying the algorithm used for publishing supply curves resulting from the annual capacity market auction.

MIC Wednesday approved a problem statement by Jason Barker of Exelon to seek improvements to the supply curve currently produced by the Market Monitor, which masks individual price-quantity offers. The practice is a compromise resulting from a 2010 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission order (ER09-1063-003) that sought to balance transparency against disclosure of commercially sensitive data.

Barker said the current curves are not accurate enough for any Locational Deliverability Area to be useful in analysis.

The FERC order resulted from a dispute over PJM’s proposal to publish price-quantity pairs after the 2010 Base Residual Auction. Constellation Energy and the monitor said that, due to the concentration of generation ownership in the SWMAAC LDA, the data could be used to reconstruct market participants’ offers.

Barker presented examples of two different algorithms that he said would improve the current methodology: a six variable polynomial and a four-period moving average. The current method, based on a single variable equation, produces a smoothed curve that passes through the intersection of the actual supply and demand curves.

Barker said an improved curve would provide “a better indication of slope inflections” that would help market participants analyze supply and regulators ensure auction results are just and reasonable.

Steve Lieberman, representing Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, supported the change. “It’s obvious almost any formula would be more accurate” than the current one, he said.

A stakeholder representing a retail marketer pushed for a one-month delay before a vote on the problem statement, saying he wanted to hear whether the monitor would oppose the change.

Marji Phillips, of Hess, grew impatient with the request for a delay on the vote. “This isn’t a complicated issue,” she said. “I can’t tell you how counterproductive and stupid [the discussion] looks.”

Jeffrey Mayes, general counsel of Monitoring Analytics, told the committee the monitor wouldn’t oppose changes to the formula as long they could not be “reverse engineered” to reveal actual offers. Yesterday, however, he told PJM Insider that Market Monitor Joseph Bowring is “convinced that [Exelon’s suggested  alternatives] do reveal the offer data that we’re concerned about.”

The statement was approved by acclimation, with 16 abstentions. MIC will consider the Issue Charge at its next meeting. Barker said the work should be completed by December to enable analysis of the 2016/17 supply curves under the revised algorithm before the 2017/18 auction. Any change will require FERC approval.

PJM: We’ll Sue

Settlement Near?

By Rich Heidorn Jr.

We started publishing PJM Insider a few months ago to provide comprehensive and objective news coverage and analysis of the PJM Interconnection. In this article, we won’t pretend to be objective, because this involves us – and you.

Those of you who have attended or listened in to PJM meetings in the last few months have gotten used to me introducing myself with the statement: “PJM Insider is neither associated with, nor endorsed by, PJM Interconnection, LLC.”

A number of you whom I’ve gotten to know personally have shaken your head in disbelief when I told you that — despite the ubiquitous disclaimers on our website and newsletter — PJM has been threatening since February to sue us over our name.

On Thursday, PJM sent a draft of that long-threatened suit to our lawyer. Central to PJM’s claim is that we are confusing you into thinking we’re connected with PJM. PJM also accuses us of “unfair competition.”PJM-draft-lawsuit-header-only

Since receiving the suit, our lawyer has spent hours on the phone with PJM’s counsel in an attempt to settle this matter without litigation.

As we will explain later, we feel very strongly that the use of “PJM” in our title is protected by both the fair use doctrine and the news reporting/news commentary privilege. We are confident that we would win in court.

But as a small, very new publication, we have to pick our fights. We have agreed to pursue settlement discussions to avoid the distraction and cost of litigation and keep our focus on providing PJM’s stakeholders with the best quality journalism and analysis.

This is a service PJM deserves – and more importantly – needs. Hundreds of you tell us every week that you agree, by opening our emails and visiting our website.

The final details of this settlement should be worked out over the next couple days. The outlines are the deal are that we will agree to transition to a new title and new URL using our corporate name, RTO Insider.

So, sometime soon, you may see “RTO Insider/PJM.” Same intensive coverage, less contentious name.

We’ll provide more details in a couple of days. The less said now — in the middle of negotiations — the better.

In the meantime, know that we remain: “Your Eyes and Ears at the PJM Interconnection.”

Alternative Wind Capacity Calculations Yield Murky Results

Proposals to eliminate the impact of curtailments on wind generators’ capacity calculations create many losers as well as winners, according to data presented to the Planning Committee Thursday.

Two proposals are being considered under a problem statement approved in April to protect intermittent generators from being assigned artificially depressed capacity values as a result of curtailments directed by PJM.

Wind-generator-curtailments-2012

 

Under current policy, when wind generators are curtailed by PJM for any portion of a peak summer hour, the hour is excluded from the generator’s capacity credit calculation.

PJM staff conducted an analysis of the two alternative calculations using data for summer 2012, when 33 of 50 wind generators had at least one curtailment.

Alternative 1

Impact-of-Alt.-1-on-Curtailed-UnitsAlternative 1 removed from the calculations only the five-minute periods in which a curtailment occurred rather than the full hour, as in current practice.

It increased capacity factors for 21 of the 33 units that experienced curtailments (64%).  Changes ranged from an increase of 2.6 percentage points to reductions of almost 2 points with a median increase of 0.2 points.

The biggest increases in capacity factors went to units curtailed most frequently — a 2 percentage point boost for most units with more than 150 curtailed five-minute periods.

Alternative 2

Alternative 2 reduced capacity factors for 21 of 33 curtailed generators. It estimates what the generator’s output would have been during curtailment by interpolating data between the five-minute periods before and after the interruption.Impact-of-Alt.-2-on-Curtailed-Units

Alternative 2 showed a more normal distribution of impacts, with little correlation to the number of curtailment periods. It reduced capacity factors by a median of 0.2 percentage points, with some units losing almost 2 points while others increased by 2 points.

No Robust Solution

Steve Herling, PJM vice president of planning, said PJM limited the analysis to 2012 because data from prior years was not as reliable or complete.

“With only one year of data it’s going to be very difficult to come up with a solution that’s really robust,” Herling said. “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to do something.”

The committee will be asked at its next meeting to decide whether to choose one of the alternatives or to leave the methodology unchanged.

PJM’s current procedure uses hourly integrated metered data. The two alternatives would use five-minute data from PJM’s state estimator. Because the hourly integrated data is more accurate, PJM plans to continue to use that data for the units with no curtailments, said PJM’s Tom Falin.

See “MRC Action: Calculating Capacity Values for Intermittent Resources.”

Gas Dispatch Reduces Congestion: Market Efficiency Study

An increase in the dispatch of gas-fired units in east PJM reduced west to east congestion in PJM’s 2013 market efficiency analysis, officials told the Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee Thursday.

“Fuel prices were the main driver” in the analysis, said PJM’s Tim Horger. Otherwise, Horger said, “results were very similar to” the 2012 analysis.

The analysis looked at study years 2014 and 2018 to determine whether projects in the Regional Transmission Expansion Plan should be accelerated or modified, and 2017, 2020 and 2023 to consider the addition of new projects to the RTEP.

2013-Market-Efficiency-congestion-costsThe study assumed:

  • Coal prices increase from $2.60/MMBtu in 2013 to $3.75 in 2023, a 4.4% annual increase.
  • Natural gas prices increase from $3.68 to $6.50/MMBtu, a 3.1% annual increase.
  • Peak demand increases 1.4% per year, from 154,712 MW in 2013 to 176,548 in 2023.

PJM will post case files for all study years. Accessing the files requires authorization to access Critical Energy Infrastructure Information (CEII) and a license from Ventyx for powerbase data.

A PJM Model for Natural Gas?

NEWARK, NJ — Would the PJM model work for the natural gas industry? Charles River Associates’ Robert Stoddard thinks it’s worth a try.

Stoddard told the Energy Bar Association’s Northeast Chapter Wednesday that a Regional Pipeline Organization, or RPO, could help address the pipeline capacity shortage that has complicated the growing interdependence between the natural gas and electric industries.

He said the current $1.65/MMBtu basis spread between Henry Hub and the Algonquin citygates is evidence of the need for an additional interstate pipeline serving the Northeast. But pipeline operators cannot build without firm supply contracts – which few gas-fired generators have been willing to sign.

“Right now we have no one who is responsible for thinking about a plan” for pipeline expansion, he said. “We are piggybacking on pipelines that were built for [local distribution companies] … How do we expect that to work?”

While the other speakers on the panel agreed on the need for more pipeline capacity, none embraced Stoddard’s RPO proposal.

Richard Kruse, who heads regulatory affairs for interstate pipeline operator Spectra Energy Transmission, said his company has been serving the industry for 50 years. “And we did it,” he said, emphasizing the point, “without an RPO.”

RPO Not Suitable

Kruse said the RPO concept is not suited to the nature of the natural gas industry and would eliminate competition among pipelines for expansion opportunities.

“We’re not regional pipelines, we’re linear pipelines. You’re talking about breaking up companies and remolding them,” he said. Spectra owns three pipelines that are more than 1,000 miles long, including Texas Eastern Transmission, which spans 9,200 miles from the Gulf Coast to Northeast.

John P. Rudiak, senior director of energy supply for local distribution companies Connecticut Natural Gas Corp. and Southern Connecticut Gas Co., also was cool to the idea.

“An RPO might have been credible a year ago. That’s not the case now,” Rudiak said, explaining that the gas industry has been increasingly talking to ISO New England, which has more than 500 wholesale market participants and more than two dozen stakeholder committees and working groups. “[The gas industry is] not very impressed with the workings of the ISO. It is a process that’s very cumbersome to say the least.”

Market Disconnects

Stoddard said the varying tariff rates in the pipeline industry distorts least-cost dispatch in electricity. “Instead of dispatching the unit with the lowest carbon footprint we’re dispatching those that happen to have the cheapest gas,” he said.

Stoddard said gas-fired generators are reluctant to commit to firm contracts because it is very difficult for individual generators to forecast how often they will be dispatched, and thus how much gas they will burn. Because so many gas-fired generators have similar specifications and cost profiles, he said, “which one gets committed is sort of like drawing a lotto card.”

Communication Gaps Not the Issue

What the speakers did agree on was that the challenge is one of infrastructure and not one of a lack of communication between the gas and electric industries.

Kruse said the two industries have been increasing communication in the Northeast since the 2004 Boston “Cold Snap,” when the coldest January in 116 years pushed the electric and natural gas systems to record demand. “Never have so many talked about so much and accomplished so little,” he said, adapting a quote from Winston Churchill.

Kruse said data requests sent to ISOs by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission last week “could have [been] written … a year ago, two years ago, in 2004.”

Matthew J. Picardi, vice president of regulatory affairs for Shell Energy N.A.’s East region, said there’s no need to move to a common gas-electric trading day, as some have urged, though he said there could be benefits to moving up the gas day — which starts at 9 a.m. Central time — by an hour. The real issue, he said, is “power markets must support costs for more gas infrastructure.”

Too Much Information?

Kruse expressed concern that the gas industry could be providing too much information to grid operators.

“The ISO is a market player that actually decides who uses gas,” he said. “How much communication with ISOs [is permissible] before it becomes an undue preference to the electric industry versus our other customers?”

To Build or Not?

While all of the speakers on the panel called for more pipeline construction, FERC Commissioner John R. Norris, in separate remarks to the EBA, called for a long-term view.

He cited a projection that cutting CO2 emissions 80% by 2050 — a target the U.S. agreed to at the 2009 G8 summit — will require eliminating gas as a baseload fuel. Gas-fired generation would be limited to load following in support of variable generation.

Such a shift would conflict with the economics of the pipeline industry, which expects to recover its investment in new pipeline capacity over 30 years or more. “Is [a new pipeline] smart long-term energy planning?” he asked.

PJM: We’ll Be Cautious on Transmission Project Disclosures

PJM “will err on the side of caution” in disclosing details from transmission developers’ project proposals, RTO officials told the Planning Committee Thursday.

On April 29, PJM announced opened its first “proposal window” under the Fed­eral Energy Reg­u­la­tory Commission’s Order 1000, which opens transmission projects to non-utility trans­mis­sion devel­op­ers. PJM will accept pro­pos­als through June 28 to cor­rect sta­bil­ity issues on Arti­fi­cial Island in Han­cocks Bridge, N.J., the site of the Salem and Hope Creek nuclear plants.

Steve Herling, PJM vice president of planning, said the RTO will release “no brainer information” on proposals submitted in response to the Artificial Island needs and future proposal windows.

Such information would include “a line from A to B, impedance modeling, so people can analyze [the proposals],” Herling said. “We won’t put out right of way information. You’d get the public all stirred up that `we’re looking at your property.’”

Prequalification

Order 1000 elim­i­nated incum­bent util­i­ties’ Right of First Refusal on con­struc­tion and oper­a­tion of new trans­mis­sion lines, open­ing the busi­ness to com­pe­ti­tion from inde­pen­dent trans­mis­sion devel­op­ers. Incumbents will retain the right to construct “upgrades” to their existing facilities.

PJM has created a two-step process for complying with Order 1000. First, potential transmission developers must be prequalified based on their ability to construct and maintain a generic transmission project.

Those prequalified will be eligible to submit solution packages in response to proposal windows like that for Artificial Island.

PJM officials said Thursday that seven developers have submitted prequalification packages with more applications expected shortly.

Herling said the application packages will be posted publicly after PJM determines which ones are prequalified. “There has to be some due process to challenge the decisions we’ve made,” he said.

Constructability Template

PJM has created a template to evaluate responses to its proposal windows. The RTO plans to hire independent consultants to validate developers’ cost estimates and identify potential regulatory risks, such as the likelihood of obtaining siting for rights of way.

“If you have half the right of way in hand, that certainly will have an impact on cost and regulatory risk and would probably affect construction time,” Herling said. “To give you credit, we would have to disclose some information. We don’t have to talk about individual pieces of property you have.

“If it becomes obvious that we’re relying heavily on one piece of information we’re going to have to make it public — and you might still not get chosen,” he continued. “… We’ll have to make sure it’s transparent and above board to defend ourselves against challenges.”