1 / 19

Northeast States-EPA Workshop on Siting Renewable Energy Projects at Closed Solid Waste Landfills and Contaminated Sites

Northeast States-EPA Workshop on Siting Renewable Energy Projects at Closed Solid Waste Landfills and Contaminated Sites. Pat Stanton Conservation Services Group June 2008. Who is CSG?. Founded in 1984; nonprofit corporation 300 staff, 12 offices nationwide

madge
Télécharger la présentation

Northeast States-EPA Workshop on Siting Renewable Energy Projects at Closed Solid Waste Landfills and Contaminated Sites

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. Northeast States-EPA Workshop on Siting Renewable Energy Projects at Closed Solid Waste Landfills and Contaminated Sites Pat Stanton Conservation Services Group June 2008

  2. Who is CSG? • Founded in 1984; nonprofit corporation • 300 staff, 12 offices nationwide • US EPA Climate Leader - committed to Net Zero GHG emissions • Design, develop, and deliver energy efficiency and clean energy programs and projects • Clean Energy Markets Group founded in 2002 to assist Clean Energy Projects access emerging markets • Transact ~ $20 million in RECs per year

  3. Message from the ISO and RGGI • New large central station coal plants are not likely to be in our future • Carbon Emissions • Line loses for transmission and distributions • Costs of transporting coal • Can not be sited near load • More distributed generation (both on grid and on customer side of the meter) • More renewables – supported by RPSs • More energy efficiency

  4. Is there a Match? #1 challenge for new renewable projects? Siting, Siting, Siting Closed Landfills and Contaminated Sites • Lower NIMBY resistance • Potentially strategic locations in NEMA, SEMA, and CT

  5. Understanding Incentives • Energy • Capacity • Tax and production credits • RGGI – Climate Change • Renewable Portfolio Standards • Utility or state backed long term contracts

  6. Energy • LMP (Locational Marginal Pricing) • Higher prices • NEMA, SEMA & CT • NYC, Long Island and Southeast NY • Lower prices • ME, NH, VT & WEMA • Upstate and Western CT • Further locational incentives by distribution companies

  7. Capacity • Forward Capacity Markets in ISO-NE • Very structure process • Very time sensitive for developers • Benefit of five year contract in advance • Annual Capacity in NY-ISO • If you show up you can participate • Exploring forward strategy

  8. Tax and Production Credits • Often critical to project finance • Different technologies covered by different provisions • “sunset” creates REAL timeline crisis

  9. Why Renewables don’t get offsets under RGGI • Conundrum of “indirect emissions” • RGGI solution/ one of multiple possible approaches • Good News: Strong RPS REC markets going forward • Bad News: Don’t know if a national program will include same strategy.

  10. RPS Eligible RECs • State set requirement levels (demand) • Private investment determines supply • Supply/Demand balance dictates price • Up to a price ceiling set by the states • No price floor

  11. Contact Information Patricia Stanton Stephanie Hamilton Vice President, Clean Energy Markets Legal Affairs and Policy Analyst Conservation Services Group Conservation Services Group 40 Washington Street 40 Washington Street Westborough, MA  01581 Westborough, MA 01851 Phone 508-836-9500 x 13297 Phone 508-836-9500 x 13285 Cell     508-740-2836 Cell 508-439-0417

  12. Connecticut RPS Class III • First Compliance year 2007 • Eligible Resources: 1) Combined Heat & Power 2) Conservation and load-management programs 3) Demand Response • Only Commercial and Industrial (C&I) measures • Independent verification required

  13. Connecticut RPS Class III continued. . . • Retain ownership of Class III REC or sell to Fund • NEPOOL GIS enhanced for Class III RECs Public Act No. 06-74 • Lifts the ban on imports • Class I eligible biomass plants must now burn “sustainable biomass” , no C& D Public Act 07-242 • Effective on October 10th, 2007, extends the CT RPS requirement beyond 2010, until 2020.

  14. Massachusetts RPS Provisions under New Energy Bill • Creates a Tiered classification program • Class I New Renewables with limited technologies • Class II old renewables or technologies not Class I eligible • Class III coal gasification. • Annual demand increase from ½ % to 1% starting 2010. • New requirements for renewables importing from outside of ISO-NE

  15. Rhode Island RES • 2007: first compliance year • 2 categories: New (post-1997) and Existing Resources (pre-1998) • Third party verification for behind-the-meter generation required • NEPOOL GIS rule change to allow third party verification to enter data in the tracking system

  16. Maine RPS • Public Law Chapter 403, enacted on June 22nd, 2007, requires that 10% of Maine electricity be produced by new resources by 2017. • Begins in 2008 at 1%, and scales up 1% a year until 2017. • New: anything in-service after September 1st, 2005; or any incremental generation after September 1st, 2005.

  17. New Hampshire • Effective July 10, 2007; requires 23% and in 2025, 23.8%   • Class I - New Renewable Energy: operation after January 1, 2006: • Class II - New Solar: operation after January 1, 2006.   • Class III - Existing Biomass(>25MW) and Methane: operation prior to January 1, 2006:   • Class IV - Existing Small Hydroelectric, 5MW or less • Docket is open to develop regulations

  18. Vermont • Goal: meet demand increase 2005-2012 with renewable energy resources and energy efficiency • If goal is not met by 2013 then it becomes a Renewable Portfolio Standard

  19. Summary • RPS policy continues to change and develop in New England • The New England RPS experience can provide valuable lessons to other states developing their RPS

More Related