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Deadline draws sharp opinions
on transmission NOPR FERC's
transmission NOPR is the broadest reaching rulemaking the commission has
initiated in years and yesterday over 150 separate comments were filed on
it. The commission's proposal (RT,
Jun-18) would
make regions and groups of them set up transmission planning and cost allocation
methods that take into account public policy requirements
such
as renewable portfolio standards (RPS).
Another major part is a proposal to remove instances of undue
discrimination in transmission from FERC tariffs including "rights of first
refusal" (ROFRs) for utilities to build lines.
Many parties including all six FERC-regulated ISO/RTOs believe their
planning processes and their cost allocation methods
are
already in line with the commission's goals and they do not want to re-litigate
them.
A coalition of Southeastern utilities including Southern Co, Progress
Energy and MEAG Power and others believe their planning processes are working,
even though the vertically integrated systems operate
very
differently than ISO/RTOs.
Both groups cited dollar figures that run into the billions in recent and
planned investments in transmission as proof that the system is
working.
The NOPR called for interregional planning and cost allocation tied to
those efforts but left the specifics of what will happen up to stakeholders in
those regions. If they fail to act,
FERC reserves the right to step in and come up with a bigger plan after a
year.
Many stakeholders along the East Coast do not want to have cost
allocations friendly to wind from the center of the country overpower their
chance to build local resources.
Allocation irks
some
Much of the debate naturally centered on building out transmission for
renewables -- one of the major changes FERC was responding to in its proposal --
but cost allocation also triggered heated debate on traditional
power.
The Ohio Consumers' Counsel and West Virginia Consumer Advocate Division
filed joint comments that said requiring consumers in western PJM to pay for
transmission to its east, that exports cheap power from their region is
"equivalent to pouring salt in the wound."
In New England, plans are
afoot
to build out renewables in the region and bring them in from nearby control
areas including Canadian provinces that fall outside of FERC's jurisdiction --
and those should be allowed
to
continue, said the New England States Committee on
Electricity.
The ad-hoc coalition of Southeastern Utilities added that FERC should not
mandate the piping-in of distant renewables, arguing that the region is not
going to have a demand for that. As
the region works to clean up its power system, it will likely turn to nuclear,
clean coal and biomass, not Midwest wind.
Another group of commenters argued that the time has come
for
a national policy on cost allocation to get just the national grid many on the
East Coast are
loathe
to see. Comments with that view
came from AEP, the American Wind Energy Assn, the Energy Future Coalition,
Iberdrola, LS Power, NextEra Energy, the Solar Energy Industries
Assn
and
Mesa Power Group.
The benefits of transmission
are
very broad, especially at voltages above 345 KV and that is the case regardless
of the type of regulation a transmission owner operates
under,
said those joint commenters.
Getting too precise on who benefits from a line for the purpose of
assigning cost has only hampered transmission development.
FERC did not institute a top-down cost allocation method such as AEP,
AWEA, et al
wanted
and
they fear that without more proscriptive
policies
from the regulator, the status quo will stay
in
place.
Should FERC step
in?
Debates over how the grid of the future will look won't evaporate
overnight and some commenters
argued
they would persist even after the potentially mandated year of interregional
discussions. The question was
whether FERC should have backstop authority -- to step in when negotiations
dragged on too long.
If regions cannot find agreement on FERC's timeline
and
the commission steps in and makes the decisions for them, that will
likely
lead to litigation as those decisions are
appealed,
warned the New York ISO (NYISO).
NYISO worries that the potential litigation will drag on for years and
undermine FERC's purpose. It
believes any interregional cost allocation methods should be
voluntary.
ISO New England does not support FERC's proposal to make decisions for
regions that
cannot
agree and believes instead the commission should set up mediation processes for
such failures.
AEP, AWEA and the others support FERC exercising backstop authority to
get the needed work done.
Exelon suggested PJM and the Midwest ISO (MISO) should only have six
months to work out their differences since they already work together through
their joint operating agreement.
The firm's Commonwealth Edison subsidiary in Chicago sits on the two
RTO's seams and has had trouble recently with the existing
differences.
FERC's intent with the NOPR is to cut the uncertainty on planning and
cost allocation, Chairman Jon Wellinghoff noted
in
public letters to the governors of California and Maine earlier this
month.
That might be the federal regulator's intent but NARUC noted that it
remains unclear whether the NOPR would significantly clarify the planning and
cost allocation.
What about state
rights? The
state regulators association believes
its
members figure more importantly than average stakeholders since
they
still hold the power to actually site transmission -- the third leg in the
transmission stool that the NOPR was largely silent on. Without providing
due
deference to the state's siting powers, NARUC believes the NOPR may infringe on
its members' rights.
Beyond planning and cost allocation, the NOPR brought the issue of
eliminating undue discrimination in who gets to build
transmission.
Primary Power urged FERC to act in a "constructive and aggressive manner"
on the issues, including the elimination of
ROFRs. Primary Power is an important firm to
the NOPR since
its
request to build a project through PJM's planning process kicked off the public
debate on ROFRs at the commission.
That issue ended with FERC saying ROFRs never existed in that RTO. That case and one from LS Power's
Central Transmission were discussed in the NOPR.
Restructuring is
complex
Restructuring of power markets has proven
more
complex, controversial, protracted and uncertain than FERC's other restructuring
effort in natural gas, Primary noted.
The first non-utility line was only approved a decade ago and the process
has not always been smooth since.
Incremental reforms have not always achieved economic efficiency,
procedural consistency and fundamental fairness that would have stimulated more
diverse investment and Primary Power believes FERC should act
aggressively.
LS Power, whose Central Transmission subsidiary also sought to end ROFR
in PJM, argued that leaving such discriminatory policies in place will only lead
to less than
optimal
transmission development.
That firm also
agrees
with
FERC's proposal to give developers five-year rights on proposals in regional
planning processes as long as they
are
resubmitted. ISO/RTOs came out against that (RT, Sept-29), but LS
Power argued it would not cause added
work
for transmission providers and might even cut the
workload.
Those firms, other merchant developers and even some utilities, support
eliminating ROFRs, but the opposition to that runs
very
deep in some places.
ROFRs are a
tradition
Baltimore Gas & Electric, whose corporate siblings
are
very pro-competition in energy, told FERC that it overstepped its jurisdiction
on ROFRs. The rights
are
inherent to utilities and predate the formation of ISO/RTOs, it said. ROFRs stem from the requirement that
utilities be the provider of last resort to their customers, something merchant
developers do not have to do. FERC
is "looking for equity in all the wrong places,"
said
BGE, arguing that equity exists now -- with the ROFRs balanced against an
obligation to serve.
BGE
is
far from alone among utilities in advocating that position. A large swath of MISO transmission
owners and another large group of PJM transmission owners filed similar
comments.
Duke Energy was not in either of those groups and it has no qualms with
losing ROFRs for regional projects as long as FERC also drops tariff obligations
to build those projects.
For
local
projects, franchised utilities should keep those rights, Duke
argued,
as that would
eliminate
much of the jurisdictional dispute. AEP would keep ROFRs in place but in a very limited way, it said, with a time limit as the Southwest Power Pool has now. There utilities have 90 days to respond to a proposal and if they do not, a third party can build the line. © 2010 GHI LLC |