When the U.S. Dept. of Energy’s long-awaited staff report on grid reliability came out in August, a lot of observers didn’t know what to make of it. In the long run-up to the report’s release, we at AEE had worked with our fellow industry groups AWEA, SEIA, and ACORE to challenge the premise of the study as ordered by Secretary Rick Perry, which was that the electric power system was in jeopardy due to the “premature” retirement of baseload power plants – namely coal and nuclear. When the report came out, it largely vindicated our view that cheap natural gas and slow load growth, not renewable energy policies, were forcing uneconomic power plants out of business, and that the changing mix of resources was being managed reliably by grid operators.
This led some observers to call the report a “rorschach test,” allowing anyone to read into it anything they’d like, or even a “nothingburger” (check out the URL to this analysiss). But we at AEE saw in it just enough grounds for proposing out-of-market financial supports for these uncompetitive power plants that would turn electricity markets upside down – and our CEO Graham Richards said so, in a statement picked up by The New York Times. Lo and behold, on Sept. 30 DOE submitted a proposed rule to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) doing just that, and on an accelerated timeline. Since then, a broad-based coalition of industry groups – call them “strange bedfellows” – has been fighting back against this wrongheaded, costly, and unnecessary bailout of failing power plants.
Earlier this week, we held a well-attended press conference on the Joint Industry Comments submitted to FERC in opposition to the proposed rule by energy industry associations ranging from AEE, AWEA, SEIA, ACORE, and the Energy Storage Association to the Natural Gas Supply Association (NGSA) and the American Petroleum Institute (API). In the joint comments, the industry groups stated that:
“The group of industry associations is so wide-ranging across industry segments that some might consider us strange bedfellows. Yet we're united in opposing this proposed rule,” said AEE’s Malcolm Woolf in kicking off the press briefing. Amy Farrell of AWEA, Christopher Mansour of SEIA, Marty Durbin of API, Dena Wiggins of NGSA, and Todd Foley of ACORE all offered comments as to why the proposed rule would slam customers with higher electricity costs for no benefit in reliability or resilience. The briefing contributed to coverage of opposition to the proposed rule in E&E News, Greentech Media, and Financial Times, among other publications.
But for those who want to know what this DOE proposal is all about – and why it would be bad for the advanced energy industry as well as electric power customers – without wading through 96 pages of formal comments, AEE has put together Bailout Without Benefit, a background paper that describes the DOE plan to give guaranteed profits to generating units with 90-day onsite fuel supply as “a solution in search of a problem.”
As Bailout explains, we are already investing a lot in improved reliability, defined as anticipating, preventing, and quickly resolving the kind of interruptions in electric power service that can happen even on “blue sky” days – everything from falling tree branches to squirrels gnawing on distribution equipment to simple human error. This involves tree trimming, training, equipment maintenance, grid monitoring, and rapid response to isolated power outages.
Increasing attention is also being paid to what is properly called “resilience” – maintaining or restoring power during or after what is called a “black sky” day, when the distribution grid is challenged by an extreme event such as hurricane, wildfire, or terrorist attack. Transmission owners replace wooden poles in vulnerable locations with poles made of reinforced concrete, which are more resistant to wind, flooding, and fire. Power plant owners coat equipment with hydrophobic material that repels flood water and reduces ice build-up during extreme cold. Transmission planners build redundant power lines or place the most vulnerable or valuable power lines underground.
There are also increasingly elaborate plans to prepare for other catastrophic scenarios. But none of them focus on the “problem” DOE’s proposed rule purports to solve with onsite fuel supply. That’s because comprehensive analyses of outages in the last decade show that they are hardly ever the result of insufficient fuel supply.
That said, there are ways that the electric system could, and should, be made more resilient, improving grid operations on a day-to-day basis at the same time. As the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) has written, “resilient infrastructure does more than one thing well, because a resilience investment needs to pay for itself and create value for ratepayers, even when it’s not being used.” Advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) is one example cited by NARUC, because it improves outage management while also enabling other applications, like demand response, that can be used in both emergency and non-emergency situations.
But there are others – many of them forms of advanced energy. A well-balanced mix of flexible and renewable resources, including natural gas, biomass, solar, wind, geothermal, hydropower, and distributed resources like fuel cells, can work with traditional resources to provide electricity that is both low-cost and reliable. Advanced grid technologies are helping to integrate variable generation, increasing the output from these resources and amplifying their contribution to resource adequacy, and providing the grid with other operational benefits. These technologies include energy storage, advanced metering infrastructure, demand response, distribution automation, microgrids, high voltage direct current transmission, and smart grid management technologies. Meanwhile, demand-side management technologies, such as energy efficiency and demand response, reduce peak demand, thus lowering necessary reserve capacity and improving resource adequacy.
Rather than proposing continued development and deployment of technologies that offer actual resilience benefits, DOE has called on FERC to impose federal cost-of-service regulation for certain power plants in states that have explicitly chosen to rely on competitive markets instead. It would do so only for a narrowly defined set of power plants – those that maintain a 90-day supply of fuel onsite. Not only would this exempt some perfectly solvent coal-fired and nuclear power plants from the discipline of competition and reward them with above-market compensation, it would bail out power plants that would otherwise go out of business as a natural consequence of competitive dynamics, all at ratepayer expense – estimated by The Brattle Group to be as high as $11 billion.
This rule would also come at the expense of those market participants that are currently winning the competition – namely, high efficiency, low emission natural gas power generation; wind and solar energy and energy storage, which are increasingly selected by utilities and corporate purchasers based on cost and price stability; and even demand management services like energy efficiency and demand response. These are all lower-cost, higher-value ways of meeting electric power needs, as demonstrated by market outcomes – and they contribute to a more reliable and resilient grid by increasing flexibility and fuel diversity. It is this market-based reality that the DOE proposed rule would overturn by federal fiat – and leave customers to foot the bill.