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Climate Change and Colorado’s Regulatory Strategies

Climate Change and Colorado’s Regulatory Strategies. Colorado Sierra Club Energy Committees Presentation of Ron Binz, Chairman Colorado Public Utilities Commission November 6, 2008. ‘Tis a privilege to live in Colorado. Outline of this presentation. Introduction to the Colorado PUC

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Climate Change and Colorado’s Regulatory Strategies

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  1. Climate Change and Colorado’s Regulatory Strategies Colorado Sierra Club Energy Committees Presentation of Ron Binz, Chairman Colorado Public Utilities Commission November 6, 2008

  2. ‘Tis a privilege to live in Colorado

  3. Outline of this presentation • Introduction to the Colorado PUC • The challenge we face with climate change • Implications of proposed federal GHG policies • Our state’s strategies • Renewable energy • Energy efficiency • Discussion

  4. Caveat • I am one of three equal commissioners • My positions are my own • I am confused by many things and have not made up my mind on much at all • I don’t even agree with some of the things I say • Good advice: don’t believe everything you think

  5. The Colorado PUC The Public Utilities Commission's mission is to achieve a flexible regulatory environment that provides safe, reliable and quality services to utility customers on just and reasonable terms, while managing the transition to effective competition where appropriate. • Independent agency, created in the constitution • Three Commissioners, appointed by the Governor • Four year terms • Partly judicial, partly legislative • Ninety-member staff is an agency within the Department of Regulatory Agencies

  6. Colorado Commissioners Matt Baker Ron Binz Jim Tarpey

  7. The Challenge We Face Energy Supply, Energy Efficiency, Consumer Prices and Climate Change

  8. Colorado Electric Generation by Fuel

  9. Generation Fuels in Colorado

  10. Projected Colorado Electric Energy Growth 2007-2025

  11. The Take-Aways • Colorado’s demand for electric energy services is projected to grow 60% in the next seventeen years. • Think of this curve as demand for energy services denominated in kilowatt-hours • Projection does not include transportation applications for electricity (plug-in hybrids).

  12. Sources of US Carbon Emissions (2002) Source: Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  13. EPRI “Prism” Analysis

  14. ASES “Wedge” Analysis

  15. EPA Analysis of S. 2191, the Lieberman Warner Bill

  16. EPA’s Modeled Impact of S. 2191 on electricity prices

  17. Key (Sensitive) EPA Assumptions • Growth of nuclear generation 2020-2050 • Efficacy of CCS for new coal generation 2019-2050 • Stability in natural gas prices delivered for electric generation ($6 to $7 in $2005)

  18. Potential Alternate Assumptions for EPA Reference Case • Nuclear growth is modest • CCS is substantially more costly for new coal generation • Natural gas prices stabilize at higher level • PHEV development impacts transportation emissions • Energy efficiency gains are greater

  19. EIA Analysis of Electricity Prices under S. 2191

  20. Dingell-Boucher Discussion Draft • Sets GHG goals that equal L-W in 2050, are less aggressive in earlier years • Preempts any state or regional GHG cap and trade schemes • Allocates larger number of free allowances to LSEs • Significantly larger use of offsets • Draft contains many options

  21. Colorado’s Balanced Approach • Coal producing state (8th in US) • Gas producing state (7th in US) • Substantial wind and solar resources • Moderate electric rates • Popular governor with a focus on the “New Energy Economy”

  22. Reduce Colorado’s carbon emissions by 20% below 2005 levels by 2020 • Reduce Colorado’s carbon emissions by 80% below 2005 levels by 2050

  23. Elements Of A State Energy Strategy • Boost Energy Efficiency • Customer: education • Utility: engagement • Rate structure changes • Smart grid test bed in Boulder, Colorado • Stress renewable resources • Regulators and utilities with a commitment to addressing climate change • State RPS • Progressive resource planning at Commission • Healthy renewables industry • Advanced generation development • Research and demonstration for carbon sequestration • CAES and other storage strategies

  24. Colorado Regulatory Response -- Resource Planning -- New Rule Prior Rule • Resource Planning • Least Cost Planning • Fuel Neutrality • Clean Energy Preference • Independent Evaluator • Utility models new portfolio • Optional Post-bid Review • Utility selects bid resources • New DSM emphasis

  25. Major Issues in PSCo’s ERP Filing • Closure of Arapahoe and Cameo coal plants • Level of utility-owned incremental resources • Proposed “debt equivalence” adder for IPP bids • Financial impacts of capital leases and consolidation • How to measure PSCo’s carbon reductions • What model inputs to assume: • Load growth forecast (with ranges) • Planning reserve margin • Natural gas price forecast (with ranges) • Coal price forecast • CO2 costs • Assumed DSM levels • “Section 123” resource levels • Which scenarios to model using STRATEGIST

  26. PUC’s ERP Decision for Public Service Company of Colorado Major Decision Items • Closure of two coal plants • Likely approval of large solar projects (200 - 600 MW) • Continued growth of wind • CO2 price assumed in modeling ($20/ton + 7% growth) • Explicit move away from least cost planning • Consideration of significant utility ownership • Decision not to include debt equivalence adder

  27. Renewable Energy: Focus on Solar

  28. Concentrating Solar in Colorado Concentrating solar w/storage $ Other baseload (coal w CCS; nuclear)

  29. San Luis Valley

  30. Solar Thermal Electric Density • Use: 100 MW(ac)/mile2 • Colorado Peak Integrated Demand: 11GW • Result: 110 mile2 required land area

  31. San Luis Valley 2

  32. Rate Structure Issues “Are those alien crop circles...?” Joes, Colorado

  33. ½ mile 126 acres 5.8 acres

  34. Electric Rate Structures • Net metering rules apply in this situation • “meter spins backwards” • Commercial rate (up to 25 kW demand) • $8.98 Service and Facility Charge • 9.3¢ per kWh • A 50 horsepower pump has a 40 kW demand • Secondary General (above 25 kW demand) • $25.00 Service and Facility Charge • $14.77/Monthly Peak KW • 3.0¢ per kWh

  35. Energy Efficiency

  36. ACEEE’s 2008 State Rankings

  37. ACEEE State Rankings

  38. EE Strategies • Get regulation right: secure utility engagement • Promote EE in building codes • Role of new buildings • Rethink customer education • Investigate 3rd party provision of EE • Tie EE (and RE) to rate structure changes

  39. Utility Engagement • DSM goals in legislation • Focus: utility should make efficiency a business • Recent Commission rules establishing: • bonus mechanism • expedited cost recovery • Tie-in to utility resource planning • Conditions on a recent generator approval • Demand response solicitation • Expanding residential AC program

  40. NREL Research of Ron Judkoff

  41. Customer Education Two 75-watt Compact Fluorescent Lights will reduce CO2 emissions by One Metric Ton over their lifetime

  42. Some thoughts about energy efficiency • This is no time for small ideas. • Most states’ energy efficiency activities are too small, probably by an order of magnitude. We need transformation opportunities. • Demand reductions and demand response are important to pursue in addition to energy reductions. • Leadership and political will are needed. • “We are the leaders we’ve been waiting for”

  43. Thanks for the invitation. I look forward to your questions.

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