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Swimming Upstream: Influencing the Influencers

Swimming Upstream: Influencing the Influencers. Accelerating Change for Renewables and Energy Efficiency Presentation of Ron Binz, Chairman Colorado Public Utilities Commission April 8, 2008. Outline of this presentation. Introduction to the Colorado PUC The challenge we face

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Swimming Upstream: Influencing the Influencers

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  1. Swimming Upstream: Influencing the Influencers Accelerating Change for Renewables and Energy Efficiency Presentation of Ron Binz, Chairman Colorado Public Utilities Commission April 8, 2008

  2. Outline of this presentation • Introduction to the Colorado PUC • The challenge we face • Elements of a state energy policy • Some concrete suggestions

  3. 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

  4. 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

  5. Colorado Commissioners Matt Baker Ron Binz Jim Tarpey

  6. The Challenge We Face

  7. Colorado Climate Change Action Plan • Reduce state’s carbon emissions by 20% below 2005 levels by 2020 • Reduce Colorado’s carbon emissions by 80% below 2005 levels by 2050

  8. Projected Colorado Electric Energy Growth 2007-2025

  9. 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).

  10. EPRI “Prism” Analysis

  11. ASES “Wedge” Analysis

  12. Meet a Colorado residential electric customer • Average monthly electric use: 686 kWh • Average monthly electric bill: $62.23 • CO2 Emissions for electricity: 1301 lbs/mo • Annual CO2 emissions for electricity: 7.1 Metric Tonnes

  13. Colorado Electric Generation by Fuel

  14. Generation Fuels in Colorado

  15. US Residential Electric Rates by State – 2007

  16. Elements Of A State Energy Strategy • Boost Efficiency • Customer: education • Utility: engagement • Rate structure changes • 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

  17. Elements Of A State Energy Strategy • Boost Efficiency • Customer: education • Utility: engagement • Rate structure changes

  18. ACEEE State Rankings

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

  20. Customer Education

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

  22. Customer Education • Consumer need to be told that the future belongs to the energy efficient. • In more mundane terms, the key to avoiding future higher bills is using energy more efficiently. • DSM programs should be spread to all customer classes • Market transformation and early intervention is essential

  23. Utility Engagement • DSM goals in legislation • Commission rules establishing a bonus mechanism • Expedited cost recovery • Tie-in to utility resource planning • Requirement of a recent CPCN • Demand response solicitation • Expanding residential AC program

  24. Utility Engagement, cont’d • Colorado Investigation of Utility Incentives • “Stem to stern” look at regulatory incentives • How to alleviate “build vs. buy” biases • How to align incentives for efficiency investment • How to retain management efficiency incentives

  25. Changes in Rate Structures • Colorado’s Investigation of Rate Structure • Seasonal rates • “Inverted-block” rates • Time of use rates • Impact of smart grid technologies

  26. Elements Of A State Energy Strategy • Stress renewable resources • Regulators and utilities with a commitment to addressing climate change • State RPS • Progressive resource planning at Commission • Healthy renewables industry • See: Colorado’s New Energy Economy

  27. HB 1281 – Colorado’s Renewable Energy Standard • IOUs -- 20% renewables by 2020 • REAs, Munis -- 10% renewables by 2020 • For IOUs, 4% of renewables must be solar, half on-site • 1.25x for in-state resources • 1.5x for community-based projects • 3.0x for REAs use of solar • Maximum rate impact 2% for IOUs, 1% for Munis and REAs

  28. Back to the wedge...

  29. 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

  30. Some Conclusions • This is no time for small ideas. • Most states’ energy efficiency activities are too small, probably by an order of magnitude. Look for transformation opportunities. • Demand reductions are important to pursue in addition to energy reductions. • It is possible to acquire significant renewable resources with an acceptable rate impact. • Leadership and political will are needed. • We are the leaders we’ve been waiting for.

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

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