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Renewable Energy Production Payments

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Often referred to as the European 'Feed-in' law. Prices set by a political process ... The amount of installed capacity determined by market forces. This is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Renewable Energy Production Payments


1
Renewable Energy Production Payments
Renewable Energy Working Group Bend, March 22,
2006
Carel DeWinkel Renewable Energy
Division carel.dewinkel_at_state.or.us
2
Outline of presentation
  • Renewable Energy Production Payments (REPPs)
  • Community-based energy development (C-BED)
  • A Cost scenario for REPPs to meet part of the
    REAP goal

3
Renewable Energy Production Payments
  • Often referred to as the European Feed-in
    law
  • Prices set by a political process
  • The amount of installed capacity determined by
    market forces
  • This is the reverse of the RPS process
  • Worldwide to date, this is the most consistent
    and successful policy tool to promote renewables

4
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6
Renewable Energy Production Payments
  • Excellent tool for the development of local
    manufacturing capacity for example, countries
    with the strongest domestic wind manufacturing
    industry all had some kind of feed-in law

7
Renewable Energy Production Payments
  • Production based payments in the State of
    Washington for PV, wind and digesters
  • In Minnesota 1.5 cents/kWh for small,
    locally-owned wind farms and now the
    Community-Based Energy Development Tariff

8
REPPs Critical characteristics
  • Tariff must be sufficiently high to drive
    development
  • Private investors need fair and sufficient
    profitability
  • Local banks often play an important role and see
    these investments as relatively low risk
  • Long term contracts with minimum prices
  • (often with an initial period of higher prices,
    followed by a period of lower prices after the
    loan has been paid off)
  • Rate based, like public purpose charge, no state
    aid

9
Critical characteristics, contd
  • Prices are
  • Adjusted by technology
  • Adjusted by location (sites with the best
    resource gets the lowest payment to avoid
    windfall profits)
  • Adjusted by plant size
  • Declining annually for new projects that come on
    line
  • Flexible to adjust to technological changes
  • Adjusted every two years by an independent
    entity to adjust market penetration to reach the
    desired goals

10
Critical characteristics, contd
  • Right to interconnect (like our PURPA)
  • Elimination of barriers to interconnect
  • Uniform standards for interconnection
  • Easy permitting and siting
  • High level of transparency

11
Renewable Energy Production Payments
  • This policy tool
  • Promotes the development of distributed
    renewable resources by smaller companies, coops
    and individual citizens
  • Builds a strong constituency in favor of
    renewables (compare wind in the UK with lots of
    NIMBY problems versus Germany)
  • Can be used to promote renewables in
    geographical areas where the resource is lower
    than the most optimum sites
  • Can support a diversified portfolio of renewable
    energy technologies

12
Renewable Energy Production Payments Why?
  • An RPS will not necessarily result in more
    community-based renewable energy development
    projects
  • Some RPS designs could actually make
    community-based renewable energy development
    impossible
  • utilities tend to use periodic RFPs to meet RPS
    goals
  • only large-scale projects qualify for most RFPs
    (some have minimum capacity requirements that
    are larger than typical community-based
    projects)
  • large scale wind has lower costs to rate payers
  • But, who cares about community-based energy
    development and what is it anyway?

13
Community-based energy development (C-BED)
  • Definition
  • A community-based or locally-owned energy
    project is generally defined as an energy project
    in which one or more members of the local
    community have a significant direct financial
    stake in the project, other than through land
    lease payments, tax revenue, or other payments in
    lieu of taxes. The size of the projects is small
    in comparison to typical large generating
    projects owned by utilities or large commercial
    developers (for example, large wind farms). But
    they are bigger than the typical net-metering
    type installations for homes and businesses.

14
Community-based energy development (C-BED)
  • Benefits
  • Increased economic benefits to rural Oregon
    (see recent OSU study for Umatilla county)
  • Community-based projects might get more local
    buy-in for renewables and foster a climate for
    more renewable development (fewer NIMBYs)
  • Distributed generation can be interconnected to
    smaller transmission lines, thereby possibly
    avoiding the need for additional power lines or
    help avoid transmission problems
  • Smaller, multiple generating sites may help
    stabilize the grid.
  • Spreading production facilities helps offset
    variability in resources such as wind and solar,
    plus it provides an increased level of energy
    security
  • Small-scale projects may help develop bigger
    projects in the future

15
Community-based energy development (C-BED)
  • But doesnt it cost more?
  • In comparison to what?
  • One answer is, yes, from a simple rate payers
    perspective, a large wind farm is cheaper than,
    for example, a community-based small wind farm.
  • BUT, a C-BED project may very well be cheaper
    than its fossil fuel alternatives..Lets look
    at some numbers

16
Renewables Value of fuel savings and carbon
reductions only
  • Fuel cost savings only, for a gas fired power
    plant with a heat rate of 7,000 Btu per kWh
  • /BBL Oil /MMBtu Nat. Gas /MWh
  • 60.00 10 70
  • Carbon dioxide reduction, assuming a gas fired
    power plant
  • 800 lbs/MWh, valued at 20/ton equals 8/
    MWh
  • Total value of fuel savings and carbon reduction
    is 78/MWh or 7.8 cents/kWh

17
Numbers in the REAP context
  • Assume that
  • we agree that the value of fuel savings plus the
    carbon reduction is 78/MWh or 7.8 cents/kWh
    (from the previous page)
  • the REPP policy will only be used for projects of
    10 MW or less, to fit the OPUC decision in UM
    1129 (standard contracts, etc.)
  • UM1129 proceeding results in a PURPA tariff of
    5.8 cents/kWh, but in constant real terms over
    the contract period
  • the COUs as a group have the same avoided cost as
    the IOUs
  • Then, from a societal point of view, we have 2
    cents/kWh available for a production payment to
    equal societys avoided cost of the fossil fuel
    alternative...

18
Numbers in the REAP context, the year 2015
  • 10 renewables equals 571 aMW (IOUs408 aMW,
    COUs163 aMW)
  • Assume that the average REPP would be 2 cents/kWh
    and that the market of C-BED projects would grow
    to about 20 of the REAP goal, or about 115 aMW
    by the year 2015
  • Assume that the REPP would be paid for by a
    Public Purpose Charge
  • This would mean a ramp-up to the following costs
    by 2015
  • an annual cost for the IOUs of about 14 million
    and for the COUs about 5.7 million
  • Or an extra cost of about 0.04 cents/kWh to the
    rate payer
  • Or a rate increase of about 0.6 (current average
    rate about 7 cents/kWh)
  • Or an extra annual cost of 4 for a rate payer
    using 10,000 kWh/yr

19
Numbers in the REAP context, the year 2015
  • Note that the numbers shown in the previous slide
    assume that the same incentive level is needed
    for the whole period to 2015
  • In reality, the avoided cost for the utilities
    will most likely go up
  • Thus, unless the cost of the renewables increases
    more rapidly than the utilities avoided cost,
    the required REPP level to make new projects a
    reality will decrease
  • It is possible that there wont be a need for a
    REPP for new projects by the year 2015

20
And finally
  • The primary incentive tools currently available
    in Oregon are all focussed on the smaller scale
    projects
  • BETC with its 10 million limit per eligible
    project cost
  • SELP with its 20 million limit on project cost
  • The ETOs renewable budget of about 10 million
    per year
  • The USDA Farm Bill with its grants, loans and
    loan guarantees
  • To integrate Renewable Energy Production Payments
    for projects of 10 MW or less with these existing
    programs appears not to be overly difficult.

21
Information Workshop
Renewable Energy Production Payments for small
to medium sized projects Salem, April 5, 2006
For more information, contact
carel.dewinkel_at_state.or.us
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