DOE Secretary Rick Perry: “Resiliency Pricing Rule” for Coal-fired and Nuclear Power Plants

Guest post by David Middleton

  • DOE = United States Department of Energy
  • FERC = Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

OCT 2, 2017

Rick Perry Directs FERC To Complete Final Action On Resiliency Pricing Rule In 60 Days

Rod Adams , CONTRIBUTOR

One of the most sweeping changes to the U.S. electricity supply market in the past two decades may be implemented before the coming winter heating season. The brief bottom line of the change is that eligible power sources will be able to participate in a details-to-be-determined rate structure that allows the owner to recover its “fully allocated costs” plus a “fair return on equity.”

Eligible grid reliability and resiliency resource is any resource that:

  1. is an electric generation resource physically located within a Commission-approved independent system operator or regional transmission organization;
  2. is able to provide essential energy and ancillary reliability services, including but not limited to voltage support, frequency services, operating reserves, and reactive power;
  3. has a 90-day fuel supply on site enabling it to operate during an emergency, extreme weather conditions, or a natural or man-made disaster;
  4. is compliant with all applicable federal, state, and local environmental laws, rules, and regulations; and
  5. is not subject to cost of service rate regulation by any state or local regulatory authority

All licensed nuclear power plants and a significant portion of existing coal plants can meet those requirements today.

[…]

Along with his letter, Secretary Perry enclosed a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOPR) that directs the Commission to either take final action within 60 days after publication of the NOPR in the Federal Register (which has not yet occurred) or to issue the proposed rule as an interim final rule. Any rules included in the final action will go into effect within 30 days after publication.

The Summary section of the NOPR includes statements with legal justification for the FERC’s authority to issue the proposed rule without an Environmental Assessment or an Environmental Impact Statement.

It also provides an analysis concluding that the proposed rule does not have any significant economic impact on small entities and thus does not need to meet certain description and analysis requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA).

[…]

My Conclusion

Free market purists like R Street may have complained a bit about the hand on the scale in favor of renewable energy resources, but their expressed faith in the market decision making process really triggered by the idea that coal and nuclear plants might not be forced to retire.

As a lifelong fan of reliable electricity who has visited places where brownouts and rolling blackouts are an accepted fact of life, I do not support the Enron-conceived notion that electricity is just another tradable commodity with opportunities for fabulous rates of return in certain conditions.

Blackouts and brownouts impose a far greater cost on the overall economy that most people realize. Electricity is too important to be left to the vagaries of short term markets, especially since the markets have already been tipped heavily in favor of unreliables and natural gas.

Wind and solar power advocates are either confused or disingenuous when claiming that their power sources, which – by definition – cannot be well protected from the weather, are reliable and provide resilience.

The American Petroleum Institute and its partners in the natural gas industry are mad because their long running price war against coal and nuclear may be interrupted before it achieves its desired objective of driving out enough of its competitors to give it scarcity pricing power.

The rule makes sense. The urgency is justified. I fully expect that there will be numerous interests that will seek delays because those will help them achieve their objective of forcing permanent plant closures.

It is too bad the rule wasn’t implemented in time to save valuable, emission-free, fuel-secure assets like Vermont Yankee, Kewaunee, and Ft. Calhoun. Fortunately, it looks like it might have been issued in time to save a couple of dozen other nuclear plants that are at risk of prematurely closing in the next five years.

Forbes

If enacted, this resiliency plan would lead to lower electricity rates than would occur if nuclear and coal-fired plants continue to shut down. The loss of base load capacity would lead to greater dependence on inefficient and expensive “peaker” power plants.

In a purely laissez-faire world, natural gas combined cycle (NGCC) would be the only type of power plant being built. No other type of new power plant has an honestly positive NPV (net present value) using a realistic discount rate. This would be great for my industry (oil & gas), but eventually bad for electricity consumers, because it would drive up natural gas prices. Unlike Australia, we have more than enough natural gas production to meet domestic demand and become a world leader in LNG exports. However, we can’t bet the farm on fracking and shale plays. All shale plays eventually peak. The Marcellus is huge… but it will eventually peak. As natural gas prices gradually creep up from $3/mcf to $5-8/mcf over the next ten years, existing coal and nuclear power plants will become very competitive with NGCC… But, only if those power plants are still existing.

Given a choice between subsidizing reliable base load power plants or unreliable non-dispatchable power plants, it would be foolish to choose the latter.

This isn’t a random pattern:

 

Electricity costs as a function of per capita installed renewable capacity. Wind and solar only, excludes hydropower. [Updated to add Australia and correct the units] – Source: Willis Eschenbach

 

Part of Australia already has the most expensive electricity in the world…

Although the causes of Australia’s high electricity prices are a bit more complicated than Germany’s or Denmark’s. The costs are skyrocketing due to a lack of investment in fossil fuel infrastructure and the inability of wind & solar to actually replace coal…

What caused the power price spike?

There are two main causes of the sudden jump in electricity prices. And despite the frothing anger from the shock jocks, it has nothing to do with the rise of renewables.

The main cause is a lack of investment. And the second is the soaring price of gas.

As old coal-fired plants have been retired, there has been insufficient investment to replace them because power companies have been left in policy limbo over carbon pricing.

[…]

How does gas affect electricity prices?

The second contributor to soaring electricity prices has been the sudden spike in gas prices.

In the absence of any political leadership, the power industry correctly figured renewables such as wind and solar eventually would be cheaper and more efficient than coal. That is because the fuel — wind and sun — is free and the maintenance costs of the plants is low.

The problem with renewables is their unreliability. Given Australia’s gas abundance, the idea was that gas would cut in whenever there was an energy shortfall.

Unlike coal plants that take weeks to fire up or shut down, gas turbines can be turned on and off at short notice, making them ideal to fill the breech when renewables are offline.

As the last player to enter the market, during power shortages, gas becomes the overall price setter. In case you have not noticed, gas prices have quadrupled because the exporters — many of which are the electricity generators — have sold more gas to offshore customers than their reserves. So, they pillaged local supplies, sending domestic gas prices through the roof.

[…]

ABC (Aus)

This sentence is 100% disingenuous:

And despite the frothing anger from the shock jocks, it has nothing to do with the rise of renewables.

The “rise of renewables” may not be the direct cause of Australia’s high electricity prices. However the transition from coal to [fill in the blank] is the direct cause.

Unlike the US, Australia doesn’t produce enough natural gas to export large volumes of LNG without driving up domestic prices.   Australian LNG landed in Japan is actually 40% cheaper than natural gas produced and sold in Australia.

Australia’s coal-fired plants are shutting down and being replaced by unreliable wind & solar and expensive natural gas plants. Claims that wind & solar are now less expensive than coal per MWh are wholly irrelevant. Solar and wind have to be 1/4 to 1/2 the price of coal per MWh to compete. And, even then, they can’t actually provide base load, because they are non-dispatchable.

Even if we assume this is accurate, neither storage nor back-up is factored into the cost of new power generation.

Let’s assume that they can purchase battery backup for $140/kWh and the Li-ion cells last 10 years. Over ten years, $140/kWh works out to about $38.50 (US) per MWh of generation.

Over the twenty year lifespan of the wind and solar power plants, the batteries would have to be replaced once.  That brings the storage cost up to $77 (US) per MWh of generation.  Convert to AUD and it’s $99/MWh.  Tack that on to the LCOE:

Energy supply Cost of energy w/Storage  (AUD/MWh)
Solar $177 $239
Wind $160 $217
Ultra supercritical coal (so-called “clean coal”) $134 $203

Wind & solar only appear to be affordable…

Until you add in the cost of storage…

(CCGT = combined cycle gas technology.  OCGT = open cycle gas technology, a common type of “peaker” generator.  AUS $8/GJ ~ US $6.30/mcf)

Even with Australia’s high natural gas prices, combined cycle natural gas and coal are much cheaper than wind & solar, if you factor in the storage costs.

Australia’s electricity rates have skyrocketed because they didn’t maintain their base load capacity (mostly coal-fired generation). Perry’s resiliency pricing plan would prevent this from happening here.  While allowing natural gas to kill coal & nuclear would be very good for my industry, in the long run, it wouldn’t be good for grid resiliency, electricity consumers or our nation’s energy security.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

123 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Samuel C Cogar
October 19, 2017 11:41 am

Excerpted from above published commentary:

Unlike the US, Australia doesn’t produce enough natural gas to export large volumes of LNG without driving up domestic prices. Australian LNG landed in Japan is actually 40% cheaper than natural gas produced and sold in Australia.

HA, …….. “Different strokes for different folks”, …… to wit:

Unlike Australia, the US produces enough prescription drugs to export large volumes of prescription drugs thus driving up domestic prices. US prescription drugs exported to Canada are actually 50+% cheaper than the same prescription drugs produced and sold in US of A.

Larry Hamlin
October 19, 2017 11:53 am

This is an excellent proposal which finally exposes and addresses the costly and unfair “must take” provisions mandated in energy markets for renewable energy which drive up costs of generation which provide critical reliability and stability requirements necessary for dependable and cost effective electric systems operation.

These “must take” provisions for renewables have grossly distorted electric energy market pricing by undervaluing dispatchable generation, unfairly driving up unit costs of production for dispatchable generation and over valuing renewables based on politics devoid of real energy market value contributions.

More about these decades old energy market pricing distortions of renewables can be found here https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/06/21/renewable-energy-cost-and-reliability-claims-exposed-and-debunked/

Leonard Lane
October 19, 2017 12:55 pm

With Dept of Energy and EPA being run by adult patriots, things are looking up.

October 19, 2017 3:35 pm

This is government doing what it should be doing.
Taking sound technical advice and acting to protect the long term interests of citizens and the economy, rather than playing politics with the future of a country and it’s population.
Watermelons should look and learn.

October 19, 2017 7:34 pm

Posting again – third time lucky? Or have I been banished into the outer darkness?

Here in Alberta the cost of generating natural gas-fired or coal-fired power is about 2-4cents/KWh.

Then this cost ~QUADRUPLES due to the way our $%^&* politicians have mismanaged the costs of Transmission, Distribution and Administration. Costs also increase due to the addition of unreliable, non-dispatchable wind power into the grid.

Alberta recently added a new $2 billion DC transmission line that actually has higher (AC-DC-AC Conversion + Line) losses than the old AC system, because the AC-DC-AC conversion losses are about 5%, much higher than the total line losses of the old AC lines (which obviously required no AC-DC-AC conversion).

Then they had to take power off the old AC lines and put it on the new DC line – otherwise the new DC line would have run at less than 10% of capacity.

The math IS that simple, but clearly too much for our Alberta politicians.

Warren Buffet owns the new DC line and gets a guaranteed utility rate-of-return from this nonsense.

Preliminary Scoping and Engineering was apparently done by Phoebe Buffet.

John Klug
October 19, 2017 8:43 pm

Nuclear isn’t all that resilient. Most cannot operate without outside power. As I recall, when the big blackout affected the northeast in 2003, nuclear plants were among the last to come back. I would reserve this for plants that can run on their own with stockpiled fuel and no outside power, and in the case of a nuclear plan they need their own backup generators.

KenB
Reply to  John Klug
October 20, 2017 2:34 am

John
If nuclear electricity was produced in small distributed reactors like those that the USA built for the NR1 nuclear miniaturized submarine in the 1960’s, those or similar units could boost power grids for strategic operation. It seems strange that the United States built and operationally used small nuclear power plants at that time, but now the world waits while China develops the concept for mobile and town size electricity generation plants. Read the excellent book Dark Waters written by Lee Vyborny and Don Davis published by Random House Company UK – a good read too

Andrew
October 20, 2017 4:32 am

Of course, those claimed Oz coal prices are on the basis of clean sheet, greenfield construction of a new electricity industry.

The marginal cost of coal power from an existing plant, with existing grid, next to an already stripped coal seam with more coal than needed for the life of the plant, is for all practical purposes zero. They only shut them because of the Renewable Energy Certificate impost.

The people who tell us that wind is cheaper on their preferred measurement basis are saying “Toyota has a special today – let’s dynamic our Ford.”

Shawn Marshall
October 20, 2017 4:43 am

The real problem: Why are governments running our energy production?

October 20, 2017 4:19 pm

ABC Australia are talking through their hats on the issue of gas. Australia’s gas production in 2106 was 91.2bcm, while their consumption was 41.1bcm – hardly a shortage. They claim that LNG landed CIF Japan was selling for less than gas staying behind in Australia. There’s a very easy deal to do for the Japanese and an astute gas trader: buy the gas back off the Japanese and sell it to the Australian domestic market, saving the cost of LNG manufacture and shipping. The Japanese can buy in replacement gas for much the same CIF price from other sources, and everyone is better off.

So why doesn’t this happen? Partly because South Australia to relies on gas produced locally in the Gippsland basin, which is now in decline – and it lacks pipeline capacity to import from the new producing areas. Perhaps they should simply invest in an LNG discharge terminal, and buy the gas they need from the Japanese. It’s the lack of local distribution potential that is the problem.

Zeke
October 20, 2017 5:15 pm

“has a 90-day fuel supply on site enabling it to operate during an emergency, extreme weather conditions, or a natural or man-made disaster;”

Hello, coal!

The coal seams provide so much more than reliable energy for homes and manufacturing and in an emergency. The coke is necessary for cement, and coal tar provides many useful items. The incredible machinery used for domestic production of coal allows prices to stay lower across the entire ecomomy, from lumber to sheet rock to nylon to agriculture. We need more massive diggers than ever. This is no time to lose the machinery at firesale prices to foreigners who will use them.

Perhaps we could offer to mine the massive coal seams under the coastal shelf of the UK.

Finally, to the worthless wind turbines and panels isn’t it about time we said, “Get your own damcement.”

Verified by MonsterInsights