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Transmission for Renewables - The New England Blueprint and Interconnection-Wide Planning. Paul J. Hibbard, Chairman Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities Roundtable March 2010. Overview. New England Blueprint Quick reminder Current status Eastern Interconnect Planning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Transmission for Renewables-The New England Blueprint and Interconnection-Wide Planning
Paul J. Hibbard, ChairmanMassachusetts Department of Public Utilities
RoundtableMarch 2010
Overview
• New England Blueprint– Quick reminder– Current status
• Eastern Interconnect Planning – JCSP, EWITS, EIPC/EISPC– Modeling approaches– Observations– Potential Role in the Federal Context
The Blueprint’s Path • September 2008
– NEGC Resolution• February 2009
– Governors write to President Obama, Congressional leaders
• March 2009– States request ISO-NE perform technical analysis
• July 2009– ISO-NE issues draft Renewable Development Scenario
Analysis• September 2009
– NEGC Adopts Blueprint
Policy Choices Informed By Data • States asked ISO-NE to study “significant sources of renewable energy available to New
England, the most effective means to integrate them into our power grid, and the estimated costs” and then developed study assumptions
ISO-NE conducted RDSA» Looks out 20 years» 9 conceptual transmission scenarios » Focus on wind resources
» Up to 12,000 MW of wind in New England» 7,500 MW onshore & 4,500 MW offshore» Incremental cases from 2,000 to 8,000 MW
Conclusions• The New England region has a vast quantity of
untapped renewable resources • More than 10,000 MW (nameplate) on & off-
shore wind power potential• If developed at conservative levels, there are
ample renewable resources to enable New England to meet renewable energy goals
• More aggressive development could enable New England to export renewable power to neighboring regions
New England Governors’ and NEG/ECP Resolutions
Charge to Energy Officials• Consider available renewable resources
identified in the Blueprint• New England onshore• New England offshore• Canada
• Investigate mechanisms for competitive procurement and development
• Coordinated or joint solicitations• Coordinated/collaborative siting• Workable contract and pricing structures• Regulatory approval mechanisms
Status, Timeline• Initial policy review
• Vast resources• Siting processes similar; coordination feasible• Contract approval mechanisms in place• Common theme: competitive procurement,
lowest possible cost
• Current efforts• Workplan – report to Governors by summer• Drafting RFP, considering procurement levels• Developing price structure alternatives, model
terms and conditions• Deeper review: contract approval processes
Bottom Line
• Region has a long history of working cooperatively to address energy and environmental policy issues
• Recognize untapped renewable potential• Interested in “out-of-box” thinking on
supporting renewable development• …without compromising commitment to
markets, competition• Successful progress, promising outlook
The Federal Context• Urgency around climate change• Problem: much of national terrestrial renewable
potential is geographically-challenged• Concern: financial signals from cap/trade, RES
not sufficient for investment calculus• Other issues/opportunities:
– Integration of intermittent resources– Better capacity utilization– Seams elimination; loop flows; congestion relief– Jobs, economic benefit
• Can widescale, coordinated planning help?– JCSP, EWITS, EIPC/EISPC
EWITS• Emerged from JCSP; model for EIPC?• Northeast has some concerns
– Goal: review technical integration of large amounts of wind
– Review costs, quantify benefits– But weight of analysis seems more focused on
economic integration of wholesale electricity markets across the Eastern Interconnect
• Confusion in the messaging?
EWITS: NESCOE Comments• Model Approach – focused more on transmission for all generation in
Midwest, rather than integrating wind.• Coal By Wire: Transmission expansion likely to increase generation from
Midwest traditional sources, undermining the goals of carbon control• Messaging In The National Context – Framed to suggest transmission
should be charged to electricity customers, rather than generation owners that benefit
• Production Profits Charged to East, Accrue to Midwest – All scenarios likely result in massive increases in generation from (and associated revenues to) power plants in the Midwest, relative to now
• Limits Off-Shore Wind Potential – No more than six (6) miles off shore; no deep water wind resources
• Canadian Provinces Neglected – Minimal expansion of Canadian resources
• Feasibility and Cost of Underlying Network? – Scenarios could require significant in-region infrastructure
EWITS• Steps in analysis
– Existing system, load grown to 2024– Pick “best” wind resources to meet 6%, 20%, 30%
goals, with some regional allocation, ascribed 20% capacity value
– EGEAS-based capacity addition for remaining needs – “Copper Sheet” dispatch of EI; determine economic
power flows– Design transmission to accommodate this “economic”
result (Even in the “Reference Case”)– Identify economic benefits by comparing to
constrained dispatch– Identify wind integration issues (reserves)
EWITS - Conclusions• Basic results:
– We can integrate a lot of wind…– Provided we build massive transmission…– Which will deliver economic benefits to
consumers by lowering LMPs…– Because it will move massive amounts of
energy from Midwest fossil, nuclear, etc. generation to the East, displacing gas.
• But wait! Wasn’t this supposed to be about wind??
EWITS - Conclusions• Economic benefits (PROMOD IV)
– Driven by price differential between midwest and eastern power markets
– Increases in midwest generation, decreases in eastern gas (hundreds of TWh annually)
– Lost generation revenues in East; gains in the Midwest • Net revenues to Midwest generation likely to
exceed transmission cost
Does this help answer the cost allocation debate?
JCSP/EWITS: Price Separation…
JCSP, April, 2007
JCSP/EWITS: …Drives Power Flow Outcomes
JCSP, April, 2007
JCSP: Resulting Shift in Generation
JCSP, April, 2007
EWITS: Same Result…
EWITS Report
Dictates Transmission
EWITS Report
EIPC/EISPC• Long Overdue• Interregional transmission plan coordination; greater
cooperation across planning authorities• Review seams, loop flow issues, identify technical fixes• Consider projects to help integrate greater quantities of
intermittent resources• Identify interregional projects to address intraregional
reliability issues• Help quantify cost of policy approaches• Provide “scenario analysis” guidance for policy makers
and stakeholders– Value of EE, renewables, nuclear, CCS– Info for development ventures
EIPC/EISPC: Caution• Emerging context: Federal integrated resource planning,
federal siting, mandated cost allocation to load• Senate legislation: Begins with an Interconnect-wide
plan• EIPC/EISPC meets the specs• Could this “scenario analysis” exercise turn into a
federally-endorsed plan?• Need to get the analysis right
– Real base case, in same year as “scenarios”– Clear identification of purpose (carbon? renewables? reliability?
economic transfer?)– States must have primary role in guiding and interpreting
analysis • EIPC analysis must be closely coordinated with EISPC• State share of EIPC stakeholder group
Wrap Up
• Blueprint represents a unique collaboration among the New England states; focused on competitive mechanisms to deliver renewables; progress continuing
• Federal context: similar goals in principle• New England experience with joint state-ISO
Blueprint development is an excellent model for federal effort
• EIPC can provide great value to the nation, provided– Goals are clear at the outset– Modeling is suited to the task, answers right questions– States provide guidance commensurate with public interest
role
Paul J. Hibbard, ChairmanMA Department of Public UtilitiesOne South StationBoston, MA
www.mass.gov/dpu
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