EMFC Addresses Head-on the Tectonic Industry Changes

With record attendance in one of the most iconic tourist destinations in the world, the 20th Annual Electric Market Forecasting Conference (EMFC) took place September 6-8 in Las Vegas, NV. This industry-leading conference assembled top-notch speakers and gave an exclusive networking experience to attendees from start to finish.

The pre-conference day featured in-depth sessions designed to maximize the value of the Aurora software for its users. Advanced sessions included discussions on resource modeling and improving model productivity, recent database enhancements including the disaggregation of U.S. resources, an update on the nodal capability and data, and other model enhancements.

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Michael Soni, Economist, Support | EPIS

Before the afternoon Users’ Group meeting started, EPIS announced that it was dropping “xmp” from the name of its flagship product to purely Aurora, and unveiled a fresh logo. Ben Thompson, CEO of EPIS said, “The new logo reflects our core principles of being solid and dependable, of continuously improving speed and performance, and of our commitment to helping our customers be successful well into this more complex future.”

That evening, attendees kicked-off the main conference with a night under the stars at Eldorado Canyon for drinks, a BBQ dinner and a tour of the Techatticup Mine; the oldest, richest and most famous gold mine in Southern Nevada.

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Eldorado Canyon, Techatticup Mine

On Thursday, thought leaders from across the industry presented various perspectives on the complex implications that recent industry changes will have on grid operations, future planning and investments. The forum session opened with Arne Olson, a partner with E3 Consulting in San Francisco, discussing California’s proposed legislation SB-100, which aimed to mandate that 100% of California’s energy must be met by renewable sources by 2045, along with the bill’s implications for Western power markets and systems. He pointed out that SB-32, last year’s expansion of earlier legislation, which mandates a 40% reduction in GHG emissions (below the 1990 levels by 2030), is actually more binding than SB-100. He explained the economics of negative prices, why solar output will be increasingly curtailed and posited that CAISO’s famous “duck curve” is becoming more an economic issue vs. the reliability issue it was originally intended to illustrate.

Other Thursday morning presentations included “The Rise of Utility-Scale Storage: past, present, and future” by Cody Hill, energy storage manager for IPP LS Power, who outlined the advances in utility-scale lithium ion batteries, and their expected contributions to reserves as well as energy; Masood Parvania, Ph.D., professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Utah, who described recent advances in continuous-time operation and pricing models that more accurately capture and compensate for the fast-ramping capability of demand response (DR) and energy storage device; and Mahesh Morjaria, Ph.D., vice president of PV systems for First Solar who discussed innovations in PV solar module technology, plant capabilities and integration with storage.

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Masood Parvania, Ph.D., Director – Utah Smart Energy Lab | The University of Utah

The afternoon proceeded with Mark Cook, general manager of Hoover Dam, who gave a fascinating glimpse into the operations and improvements of one of the most iconic sources of hydro power in the country; and concluded with Lee Alter, senior resource planning analyst and policy expert for Tucson Electric Power, who shared some of the challenges and lessons learned in integrating renewables at a mid-sized utility.

Networking continued Thursday afternoon with a few of the unique opportunities Las Vegas offers. In smaller groups attendees were able to better connect with each other while enjoying one of three options which included a delicious foodie tour, swinging clubs at TopGolf, or solving a mystery at the Mob Museum.

The final day of the conference was devoted to giving Aurora clients the opportunity to see how their peers are using the software to solve complex power market issues. It featured practical discussions on how to model battery storage, ancillary services, the integration of renewables and an analysis of the impact of clean energy policies all while using Aurora.

The conference adjourned and attendees headed out for a special tour of the Hoover Dam which included a comprehensive view of the massive dam and its operations, and highlighted many of the unique features around the site.

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Hoover Dam, Power Plant Tour

The EMFC is a once-a-year opportunity for industry professionals. The 20th Annual EMFC addressed head-on the tectonic industry changes (occurring and expected) from deep renewable penetration, advances in storage technologies, and greater uncertainty. Join EPIS next year for the 21st Annual EMFC!

For more information on the 2017 speakers, please visit http://epis.com/events/2017-emfc/speakers.html
To obtain a copy of any or all of the presentations from this year’s EMFC, Aurora clients can go to EPIS’s Knowledge Base website using their login credentials here. If you do not have login credentials, please email info@epis.com to request copies.

Filed under: Events, UncategorizedTagged with: , , , , ,

Integrated Modeling of Natural Gas & Power

Natural gas (NG) and electric power markets are becoming increasingly intertwined. The clean burning nature of NG, not to mention its low cost due to increases in discovery and extraction technologies over the past several years, has made it a very popular fuel for the generation of electricity. As a result, the power sector is consistently the largest NG consumer. For example, in 2014, 30.5% of the total NG consumption in the United States was used for the generation of electricity (Figure 1).

 

Figure 1: U.S. Natural Gas Consumption by Sector, 2014. Source

According to EIA’s Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2015 projections,

“…natural gas fuels more than 60% of the new generation needed from 2025 to 2040, and growth in generation from renewable energy supplies most of the remainder. Generation from coal and nuclear energy remains fairly flat, as high utilization rates at existing units and high capital costs and long lead times for new units mitigate growth in nuclear and coal-fired generation.”

Economic, environmental and technological changes have helped NG begin to displace coal from its dominant position in power production. Although it was just for a single month, NG surpassed coal for the first time as the most used fuel for electricity generation in April 2015. The EIA also notes that considerable variation in the fuel mix can occur when fuel prices or economic conditions differ from those in the AEO 2015 reference case. The AEO reference case assumes adoption of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) implementation of Mercury and Air Toxics Standard (MATS) in 2016, but not the Clean Power Plan (CPP). Adoption of CPP, along with favorable market forces, could change the projections of the AEO 2015 reference case significantly. There is a consensus within both NG and power industry that NG-fired power generation will likely increase with the adoption of CPP.

Quantifying such a trend is non-trivial, but is crucial for stakeholders and regulators in both gas and power markets to fully understand what the future holds. Proper accounting of the interdependencies between NG and power markets is integral to the quality of any long-term predictions. Approaches for modelling an integrated NG-power capacity expansion that account for economics and market operations is the key to the most effective analysis.

The issue of gas-power integration has been a topic of active interest in the industry, and that interest is increasing. For example, the East Interconnect Planning Collaborative coordinated a major study in 2013 – 2014 to evaluate the capability of NG infrastructure to: satisfy the needs of electric generation, identify contingencies that could impact reliability in both directions and review dual-fuel capability. Likewise, the notorious “polar vortex” during the winter of 2013-2014 caused unusually cold weather in the New England region, which “tested the ability of gas-fired generators to access fuel supplies,” and caused ISO-NE and others to acknowledge the need to further investigate the issues affecting synchronization between gas and electric systems. More recently, companies like PIRA Energy are sharpening their focus on the interdependencies between gas and electric power.

There is a need for new and improved modeling approaches that realistically consider this growing gas-power market integration. An even greater need is to integrate the modeling of these markets in a way that is both efficient and practical for the end user, and still able to produce commercially viable results. EPIS has extensively tested interfacing AURORAxmp with GPCM, a calibrated NG model developed by RBAC, Inc. Several organizations and agencies have found this approach successful. Utilizing the two models allows us to develop projections for endogenously derived capacity additions (in both electric generation expansion and gas-pipeline expansion), electricity pricing, gas usage and pricing, etc. which are consistent between the two markets. This consistency leads to greater insight and confidence to aid decision-makers.

Figure 2: Abstract representation of integrated NG-power modeling using AURORAxmp and GPCM..

Although the industry is now anxiously waiting for the judiciary to weigh in on the legality of CPP regulations, there is a consensus that some form of carbon emission regulation will likely be in effect in the near future. Some states, such as Colorado, have already undertaken several regulatory initiatives and may implement a state-level CPP-like emissions regulation even if the federal plan is vacated by the courts.

As part of our ongoing research on the topic of gas-power modeling, we have designed and executed a series of test scenarios comparing the standard calibrated cases of AURORAxmp and GPCM against a potential implementation of CPP. If the proposed form of CPP is upheld in the courts, states have a number of implementation options. At this early stage, there has been no good evidence to indicate that one option would be more popular over another. This necessitated we make some broad assumptions in our experimental gas-power integration process. In our test scenarios, we assumed that all states would adopt the mass-based goal with new resource complement option.

An integrated gas-power framework allows us to better understand the most probable direction for the two markets. Our integrated GPCM-AURORAxmp CPP test scenario for the Eastern Interconnect took 7 iterations to converge to a common solution that satisfied both markets. By comparing resulting capacity expansions, fuel share changes, and gas prices between the starting point (Iteration 0) and ending point (Iteration 6) we get a sense of how the markets will coevolve.

Starting capacity expansion in the Eastern Interconnect for GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

Figure 3: Starting capacity expansion in the Eastern Interconnect for GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

Figure 3 shows the capacity expansion resulting from Iteration 0, the starting point of the integrated iterations. Iteration 0 is essentially a standalone power model with no regard for the impact the capacity expansion would have on the gas market. Figure 4 shows the capacity expansion after Iteration 6.

Resulting capacity expansion in the Eastern Interconnect for GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

Figure 4: Resulting capacity expansion in the Eastern Interconnect for GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

The convergent prices of NG were lower for Iteration 6 than Iteration 0 at all major gas hubs. Figure 5 shows the monthly prices at Henry Hub for both the iterations. The lower gas prices are unintuitive, but plausible. The combined gas-power sector has several market forces that are interdependent. We are currently working with gas experts to understand some of the mechanisms that could lead to lower gas prices. We hypothesize that our accounting for capacity expansion in both the markets is one of the drivers for this behaviors and our findings will be reported in a future publication.

Comparison of starting and ending price trajectories with integrated GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

Figure 5: Comparison of starting and ending price trajectories with integrated GPCM-AURORAxmp model.

The lower gas prices highlight one of the key benefits of integrated gas-power models. Standalone modeling frameworks are likely to misrepresent the impact of the complex cross-market mechanisms. Integrated models avoid this particular pitfall by explicitly modeling each market and is a more apt tool for evaluating policies such the CPP. AURORAxmp provides the capability to model any of the implementation plans that states might adopt in the future – rate-based, mass-based, emission trading schemes and so forth. The ability to interface with widely used NG models, such as GPCM, provides a convenient option for analysts to confidently navigate the highly uncertain future of intertwined NG and power markets.

Filed under: Clean Power Plan, Natural GasTagged with: , , ,

Uncertainty for ERCOT Markets

AURORAxmp data is ready to take on the unpredictable nature of ERCOT’s markets.

The ERCOT reserve margin is by no means certain in 2016. According to the latest NERC 2015 Long-Term Reliability Assessment, ERCOT is showing a healthy reserve in the summer of 2016. However, NERC and others have had a tendency to miss the target in regards to reserve margin in this region. Reviewing projections for the 2015 summer period, the NERC Summer Reliability Assessment showed anticipated reserves in ERCOT of 16.24%, and the final Seasonal Assessment of Resource Adequacy (SARA) from ERCOT agreed that the region was expected to have sufficient capacity to meet peak demands with a 14.26% margin. Interestingly, the final forecast was an abrupt change from the preliminary forecast issued only 2 months prior which anticipated an 11.45% margin, or a 2% shortfall of the NERC reference margin of 13.75%. According to the final report:

The ERCOT Region is expected to have sufficient installed generating capacity to serve forecasted peak demands in the upcoming summer season (June – September 2015)… The primary reason for this change is the summer weather forecast, which generally indicates milder conditions than the 12-year normal forecast used in the Preliminary Summer SARA. As a result, the demand forecast for summer has decreased…

However, a few months later, ERCOT announced in a press release that it experienced its highest peak demand on record, “For the first time in this grid operator’s history, hourly demand within the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) system today broke the 69,000 MW threshold…”. Days later, in another press release, ERCOT reported the record peak was broken again by over 800 MW. Ultimately ERCOT missed the mark in its final, more optimistic report, and this shows how volatile projections can be. Not to say that NERC, FERC, ISO or RTO assessments aren’t excellent tools for understanding some of the fundamentals of a market, it’s just important to remember how significantly reality can differ from constantly changing expectations and how important it is to do analysis around the key fundamental drivers.

Once again, ERCOT has released its latest demand forecast. Has it overstated its margin once again? That question is enough to make one pause. Compliance extensions filed in 2015 for over 5 GW of Mercury and Air Toxic Standards (MATS) forced retirements, expire in 2016. Will they all be compliant and stick around or were they just hoping to operate one more year before finally deciding to retire? A lot of unknowns, but certainly the situation in ERCOT could be much tighter than some of these assessments suggest. With so much going on in 2016 for ERCOT, this year could be a pretty wild ride.

We are in the midst of a large ERCOT update of resources and demand that will be coupled with the latest ERCOT nodal case. Our data is net up in supply, but this is accompanied by an increase in the demand forecast. We have also added demand response units to capture their paramount importance to proper modeling of the system.  This database release is due out in Q1 2016 and is ripe for 2016 summer analysis.  Couple this with AURORAxmp’s risk analysis and you’ll be prepared for the market’s uncertainties.

For additional information, please contact us

Filed under: Power Market InsightsTagged with: , ,