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CALIFORNIA ’ S PROGRESS IN RENEWABLE ENERGY November 2012. Michael Picker Senior Advisor to the Governor for Renewable Energy Facilities. 2012 Update Topics. Permits issued for Utility Scale in 2010/2011 Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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CALIFORNIA’S PROGRESS IN RENEWABLE ENERGY
November 2012
Michael PickerSenior Advisor to the Governor for Renewable Energy Facilities
2012 Update Topics
Permits issued for Utility Scale in 2010/2011
Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan
Focus on Transmission/Revised MOU with Interior
Distributed Generation Roadmap What’s Next
Governor Brown Renewable Energy Goals
- Building 12,000 MW of Localized Electricity Generation
- Building 8,000 MW of Large Scale Renewables
- Planning and Permitting New Necessary Transmission Within 3 Years
- Dealing with Peak Energy Needs and Develop Energy Storage
- Timeline to Make New Homes and Commercial Buildings Zero Net Energy
- Making Existing Buildings More Efficient
- Adopting Stronger Appliance Efficiency Standards
- Increase Combined Heat and Power (COGEN) Production by 6,500 MW
Energy Action Plan: Loading Order
Energy efficiency Demand
response Distributed
generation Renewable
generation Cleanest
available fossil resources
Source: http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUC/energy/electric/energy+action+plan/
Projects Permitted in 2010-2011
County Bio Geothermal PV Solar Thermal PV/Solar Thermal
Wind Total
Alameda 3 3 Contra Costa 78 78 Fresno 201 201 Imperial 208 1,509 1,717 Kern 44 2,772 250 4,102 7,168 Kings 145 145 Los Angeles 507 507 Merced 150 150 Monterey 2 2 Riverside 725 1,734 5 2,464 Sacramento 2 2 Santa Barbara 56 56 San Benito 401 401 San Bernardino 248 770 633 1,651 San Diego 45 45 San Luis Obispo 800 800 Shasta 102 102 Solano 391 391 Stanislaus 51 51 Tulare 110 110 Yolo 1 1 Total 44 208 7,672 2,754 633 4,734 16,045 MW
New Technologies and Old Technologies
RPS Generation Under Contract
0
10000000
20000000
30000000
40000000
50000000
60000000
70000000
80000000
90000000
100000000
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
En
erg
y (M
Wh
) /
ye
ar
RPS Generation under Contract and Negotiation
Online Generation Expiring Generation Contracted Generation
Pending Approval Under Negotiation Annual RPS Target
Source: California Public Utilities Commission, 2nd Quarter 2010
2020 33% RPS Target
2010 20% RPS Target
Queue currently holds more than double the generation capacity needed to achieve a 33% RPS
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
45,000
50,000
1/1/11
7/1/11
1/1/12
7/1/12
1/1/13
7/1/13
1/1/14
7/1/14
1/1/15
7/1/15
1/1/16
7/1/16
1/1/17C
um
ula
tiv
e M
W C
om
ing
On
line
Scheduled Online Date
Renewable Generation Capacity Online andin ISO Queue based on Scheduled Online Dates
Queue as of 3/21/2011
Renewable generation capacity needed to achieve a 33% RPS
7,600 MW renewable currently capacity online
Expected actual rate of renewable capacity to come
online
DRECP Steering Committee
• California Energy Commission• Department of Fish and Game• California Resources Agency • Bureau of Land Management• US Fish and Wildlife Service
DRECP Steering Committee
• California Energy Commission• Department of Fish and Game• California Resources Agency • Bureau of Land Management• US Fish and Wildlife Service
Renewable Action Team (REAT)
• California Energy Commission • U.S. Bureau of Land Management
• California Department of Fish and Game• U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Renewable Action Team (REAT)
• California Energy Commission • U.S. Bureau of Land Management
• California Department of Fish and Game• U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
STAKEHOLDER INPUT
SCIENCE PANEL
Renewable Energy Policy Group (REPG)
• Office of the Governor• Office of the Secretary of Interior
Renewable Energy Policy Group (REPG)
• Office of the Governor• Office of the Secretary of Interior
REPG, REAT & DRECP
DRECP Preliminary Conservation Strategy
Mojave & Colorado
Desert Eco-regions Counties include:
• Imperial• Inyo • Kern• Los Angeles• Riverside• San Bernardino• San Diego
~ 22,587,000 acres
CA transmission upgrades can deliver renewable requirements (CA ISO March, 2011)
CTPG Renewables Transmission Projects (February, 2011)
12
Distributed Generation Roadmap
What renewable energy power projects are counted toward the Governor’s goal?
How much generation is already operating, pending or authorized?
How should the remainder of the Governor’s 12,000 MW goal be achieved?
How do we make expansion local renewable energy more efficient, effective and equitable?
Fuels and technologies accepted as renewable for purposes of Renewable Portfolio Standard
Sized up to 20 MW Located within low-voltage distribution
grid or supply power directly to consumer
Definition of Distributed Generation
Operational, Pending or Authorized
Total Online, Pending, and
Capacity Authorized:
4,998.522MW
Total Online, Pending, and
Capacity Authorized: 3,000MW
7,998.52MW
12,000MW Goal
7,998.52MW
Current total
4,001.48MW
remaining
Adaptive Program for
Remainder Implement and track existing programs:1. Which add reliability and/or avoid
transmission?2. Which are most effective in cost
containment?3. Which produce the most generation most
quickly?4. Which are administratively efficient?5. Which support other state policies (RPS,
DR?)6. Which maintain diversity of resources?
Develop and expand on programs that fit integrated resource planning.
•
Projects 20MW & Under in CAISO, PG&E, SCE, and SDG&E Interconnection Study Queues
Fresno93 Projects
Kern117 Projects
Tulare31 Projects
Kings33 Projects
San Bernardino110 Projects
Los Angeles89 Projects
Riverside25 Projects
Imperial2 Projects
San Diego4 Projects
Supply: 504 Projects
Demand: ~30 Projects
(1 out of 17)
Source: Presentation by Seth Israel, Recurrent Energy, 12/2/2011 at Clean Green Local Power Conference
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