1 / 10

Power from the North

Restructuring Roundtable Peter D. Fuller February 29, 2008. Power from the North. NRG Company Overview. 3 rd Fastest Growing Co. in Fortune 500 Listed: NYSE (NRG) Market Cap.: ~$9 billion Employees: 3,640 Generating Assets: 23,000 MW, primarily in four domestic regions. Northeast.

junior
Télécharger la présentation

Power from the North

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Restructuring Roundtable Peter D. Fuller February 29, 2008 Power from the North

  2. NRG Company Overview 3rd Fastest Growing Co. in Fortune 500 Listed: NYSE (NRG) Market Cap.: ~$9 billion Employees: 3,640 Generating Assets: 23,000 MW, primarily in four domestic regions Northeast Western Gas 1,555 MW Gas 21% 1,965 MW Oil 3,555 MW Coal 100% 2,130 MW 50% 29% Texas South Central 1 Combined Scale Nuclear 1,100 MW 10% Gas 1,360 MW Oil Coal 48% 1,490 Nuclear 3,555 MW Gas Coal 52% 1,100 MW 15% 5,480 MW 4,180 MW 5% 51% 39% Gas 10,470 MW 46% Coal 7,815 MW 34% Includes 125 MW as part of NRG ’ s Thermal assets. For combined scale, approximately 3,430 MW is dual - 1 fueled capable. Reflects only domestic generation capacity as of December 31, 2006 MW data as of December 31, 2006 NRG: The center of the power industry value chain.

  3. NRG Capabilities & Strategies Capabilities Strategies • NRG Energy • Develop and finance a large range of power projects • Padoma Wind Power • NRG wind team –– focused on developing projects across the nation • NRG Thermal • CHP and district heating installations across the country • Repowering NRG • Nuclear • Advanced Coal • Carbon Capture and • Sequestration • Wind • Natural Gas • US Climate Action Partnership • advocating federal legislation • to reduce greenhouse gas • emissions • Combating Climate Change (“3C”) • advocating for the global • business community to lead on • creating a low-carbon society NRG is committed to leadership in addressing carbon emissions

  4. A Comprehensive Development Program that Meets the Growing Energy Needs of our Domestic Markets

  5. NRG’s Low/No Carbon Lineup PADOMA WIND POWER • NRG wind team – Padoma Wind Power – focused on projects across the nation. • Plan to develop over 500MW by the beginning of the next decade. IGCC (Gasified Coal) • Convert coal to synthesis gas via partial oxidation; Removes pollutants from gas prior to combustion • Removes 95% of SO2, NOx and 65% of CO2 with carbon capture and sequestration. ECO2 POWERSPAN • Partnership with Powerspan to implement pre-combustion carbon capture large-scale test at WA Parish coal plant in Texas. PLASMA • Plasma torches break coal down into its molecular structure to become synthetic gas; similar emissions profile to IGCC. • Can be used on smaller plants that might not otherwise be retrofitted

  6. Power System Economics • Power system managers historically have found the least-cost way to satisfy the service, reliability and environmental needs of their customers • Scenario Analysis (2007) found that gas-fired generation is among the only economically-viable options • RPS, RGGI, and other cap-and-trade programs are efforts to internalize in power system economics the societal externalities related to fuel sources, climate change, etc.

  7. RPS Requirements are Increasing • Approximately 10.8% of regional load in 2012, rising to approximately 15.8% by 2020 Source: Compiled from Union of Concerned Scientists data, www.ucsusa.org/clean_energy (2007); NH HB 873-FN-LOCAL

  8. Market Response • RGGI and RPS alter the economics in favor of low/zero emission sources, but how much? • RGGI • auction rules yet to be finalized; price estimates vary widely • RPS • According to ISO’s RSP07, the projects currently in the queue could satisfy 81% of new RPS requirements • CT Clean Energy Fund has testified that the current project pipeline can meet the region’s RPS in 2012, and is robust into the future • State and regional siting policies will be critical in meeting the requirements

  9. Tie Benefits • ‘Leaning’ on neighbors may no longer be the right model • Placing a market value on capacity benefits from neighboring regions will ensure efficient decisions Source: New England Power Generators Association

  10. Expanded Imports vs. Internal Development • Economics of new transmission and generation development in Canada • All-in costs not yet considered • Any new resources should be tested against the market • Any new resources should be contractual, not tie benefits • Economic Development impacts • Imports create operational challenges, contingency considerations

More Related