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Rhode Island’s Renewable Portfolio Standard: A Draft Design Proposal

This draft proposal outlines the design objectives, principles, and structure of Rhode Island's Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS), including eligibility, administration, and interactions with other policies. It emphasizes the need for substantial greenhouse gas reductions, local air emission co-benefits, energy security, and balanced cost impacts. The proposal also discusses key decisions points and provides recommendations and best practices for consideration. The RPS design aims to achieve desired environmental benefits, complement competitive market structure, and be cost-effective, credible, and enforceable.

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Rhode Island’s Renewable Portfolio Standard: A Draft Design Proposal

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  1. Rhode Island’s Renewable Portfolio Standard:A Draft Design Proposal Robert C. Grace Sustainable Energy Advantage, LLC R.I. Greenhouse Gas Action Plan Renewable Portfolio Standard Working Group December 4, 2002

  2. Designing a R.I. RPS • Design Memorandum – Overview • Design Objectives and Principles • The Proposed Design: • RPS Structure • RPS Eligibility • RPS Administration • RPS Interactions with Other Policies • Next Steps

  3. Design Memo Structure • For each decision point on RPS design features: • Why is this important? • Relevant benchmarks and best practices • Recommendations and/or design options for consideration

  4. Objectives of RPS • Objectives dictate design (e.g. target, eligibility, geography) • Objectives for R.I. (by priority): • Substantial greenhouse gas reductions • Local and regional air emission co-benefits • Providing a hedge against volatility and enhancing energy security • Fish/water quality benefits • Balanced against limiting cost impacts to R.I. customers to politically acceptable level

  5. Design Principles • Leads to desired environmental benefits • Complementary with competitive market structure • Cost-effective and efficient at meeting objectives • Credible • Enforceable • Applied fairly, consistently and proportionately to all market participants and customers • Predictable (market stability, reduced perception of regulatory risk) • Consistent with other regulations in state and region  Sometimes a balance will need to be achieved between competing principles

  6. 1. Structural Issues • Energy vs. Capacity Basis • Structure (2-tier) • Start Date • Percentage Targets • Duration/end-game • Addressing resource diversity • Applicability • Product vs. company • Federal RPS Interaction

  7. Energy vs. Capacity Basis • Recommendation: • Energy based purchase obligation as a percentage of retail electricity supplier’s end-use load • Benchmarks and Best Practices: • Energy basis used in nearly all cases • Alternative approach (capacity targets) only used in 2 states with regulated monopoly structure

  8. Structure • Recommend 2-tier standard, described as increasing target %, with no more than x% to be met from existing resources • maintenance tier to maintain pre-restructuring contribution of renewables deemed susceptible to closure in competitive market environment (subject to competition from new) • Growth tier to assure increase in renewables (only incremental renewables eligible) • Legislation should give administrator authority to eliminate maintenance tier if supported by future Federal standard

  9. Structure (cont.) • Rationale • RI should so its share to support existing infrastructure, but not more than its share • A single tier allowing new and existing to compete head-to-head would likely fail to meet objectives, because either: • Existing renewables from throughout region would flow to RI, few new renewables would result, or • If new renewables set the clearing price, many existing renewables would reap windfalls (higher compliance costs) • Mimicking MA structure (new/incremental, and existing tiers) maximizes regional consistency and encourages market depth and liquidity

  10. Start Date • Recommendation: • First compliance period 2005 • Allow early compliance in 2004 for 2005 (only for the growth tier) • Rationale • Need minimum development lead time • Early compliance takes pressure off first year

  11. Percentage Targets • Recommendations: • Maintenance Tier: 2.2% based on historic contribution • Overall Initial Target: 3% in 2005, with not more than 2.2% from existing resources [consider rounding up or down] • Annual compliance period • Design Options for Consideration • Option 1: Ultimate Target = 20% by 2020 • Option 2: Ultimate Target = 15% by 2020 • Rates of Increase: 0.5%-1.5%/ year depending on ultimate target, year • Driven by GHG targets tempered by cost impact • Choice between clearly specifying all targets in advance, or providing RPS administrator some discretion to slow the rate of increase after 2010 with significant advance notice • E.g. if non-compliance, penalties, price cap are frequently encountered

  12. Duration & End-Game • Two options for consideration: • Option 1: No specified end-date for the policy – indefinite policy • Some discretion for eventual elimination by administrator in far future with advance warning only if clear that renewables market transformed, RPS no longer needed to maintain desired benefits • Option 2: Leave standard at 15% or 20% from 2020 until (at least) 2030, at which point the RPS ends • Rationale: • important that standard be phased out or eliminated in a way that provides regulatory certainty to all involved • Prevents costs from needlessly increasing in later years due to shorter amortization periods/increasing market risk

  13. Addressing Resource Diversity • Primary reason to consider: additional resource diversity among renewable resource types • Options include: • Resource bands or tiers • Minimum or maximum contribution limits • Credit multipliers (unequal value) • Downside: • Cost, complexity, ability to meet primary policy goals • Recommendation: no specific features to encourage resource diversity • SBC fund better suited to achieve these goals in targeted manner

  14. Applicability • Recommendations: • Apply RPS to competitive electricity suppliers and standard offer and default service providers • Doing otherwise undermines policy objectives, market stability and fairness principles • Other considerations: • Should standard apply to publicly owned utilities? • Often not applied due to jurisdictional issues • What about Block Island? • Apply to self-generators, or exempt from RPS (initially)? • Despite fairness arguments to the contrary, level may currently be too small to justify complexity • Possibly reconsider at standard increases over time (avoid incentive for bypass)

  15. Product vs. Company • Recommendation: RPS percentage standard applies to each product • Rationale: • Consumer protection – maintain credibility and viability of voluntary green power market • Promotes credible product differentiation • Consistent with fairness principle • NEPOOL GIS built to support product-level tracking

  16. Federal RPS Interaction • Recommendations: • RPS administrator should anticipate & monitor Federal policy efforts on RPS, and be ready to assess interaction issues as they arise, including coordination of accounting and verification mechanisms • Anticipate interaction in legislation • Two options for consideration: • compliance with RI RPS would offset federal RPS requirements, but excess credits cannot be sold elsewhere, (e.g. if RI>Federal, incremental RI % is truly incremental); or • compliance with RI RPS would not offset or reduce federal RPS obligations (RI RPS is truly additive to Federal) Consider eliminating maintenance tier if a Federal RPS adopted that has a similar effect

  17. 2. Eligibility Issues • Where can resources be located to participate? • Resource type • Multi-fuel • Definition of new/incremental • Off-grid and behind the meter • Exposure to market forces

  18. Geographic Scope • Relevant “Market Area” defined as NEPOOL • A single wholesale market (today) • Alternative #1: Rely on creation of NEPOOL GIS Certificates • All generation within New England, plus imports meeting strict delivered eligibility (e.g. bilateral bundled import of energy + attributes transmitted to NE in real time) receive source-specific certificates • Relaxing rules to allow monthly settlement being considered later this month • Rationale: multiple objectives; policy coordination; consistency with neighbors; deep and fluid markets • Alternative #2: Rely on NEPOOL GIC Certificates plus attributes from upwind New York generation (supported by RECs or other evidence) without requiring energy import • If resources are too short, costs too high… • Requires reliable evidence; currently may not be adequately supported by NY rules, but this may change • Modeling analysis will provide data to aid in decision

  19. Resource Type (Definition of Eligible Renewable) • Recommendations discussed in 1st Working Group mtg: • Hydro: • not to exceed 30 MW eligible for maintenance tier; • growth tier limited to incremental hydro generation so long as it does not require any new impoundment • Biomass: • meeting the MA definition of eligible fuels; • no emission requirement other than valid permit; • co-firing with fossil fuels allowed; • MSW excluded. • Solar electric; Wind; Ocean; Geothermal • Fuel cells using renewable fuels

  20. Multi-Fuel Resources • Recommendation: Allow as eligible the renewable energy portion of multi-fuel facilities • As per NEPOOL GIS, allow incidental use of fossil fuels in biomass start-up without penalty • Rationale: • Provide important benefits, fuel diversity at low incremental cost • GIS prepared to support this feature • Open for consideration: apply emissions requirements on overall facility, as Massachusetts has done? • Based on objectives, we recommend no specific emissions limitations (will still need to meet local air permits)

  21. Definition of New/Incremental • Recommendation: Based on recommended structure, and for regional consistency, mirror the Massachusetts treatment: • Generation with Commercial Operation after 12/31/1997 • Vintage generation at eligible plants above historical baseline generation (1995-1997 average) • Treat as vintage generator any plant on a site with renewable generation between 1995 and 1997 • Addresses potential complications with new fuel at existing facilities, expansions, retrofits, repowering, moving equipment, etc.

  22. Off-grid and Behind-the-Meter Generators • Recommendation: • So long as generator is certified as eligible… allow off-grid and customer-sited renewable energy facilities that are located in Rhode Island, as long as supported by the NE-GIS • Question: include Block Island? • Presume that owner of DG unit has initial title • Rationale: • in both cases, renewables generation is typically offsetting other, more traditional sources of electricity • minimal administrative complexity

  23. Exposure to Market Forces as an Eligibility Basis? • Recommend only consider excluding resources not exposed to market due to inclusion in regulated rate base or which result in stranded cost mitigation to non-RI customers • To assure incrementality, avoid unneeded transfer payment • Options for consideration: • Place no requirements on eligible generators on this basis • recommended due to administrative complexity, difficulty in drawing clear line • For “existing resources” only - apply an “exposure to market forces” standard on existing facilities • could be addressed in generator certification step • Default presumption of non-eligibility, with possibility of waiver • Burden of proof on generator to demonstrate

  24. 3. Administrative Issues • Oversight and Administration – Who? • Accounting and verification • Certification of generator eligibility • Compliance filings • Penalties/cost caps • Flexibility mechanisms

  25. Oversight and Administration – Who? • Roles: • Design detailed rules and adapt over time (if needed) • Verify compliance • Rule on eligibility • Enforce compliance • Recommendation: Rhode Island PUC as primary oversight and administrative body for the RPS • Rationale: jurisdiction, ability to enforce, interaction with disclosure (potential) • Alternative: State Energy Office, but only if well-coordinated with PUC

  26. Accounting and Verification • Recommendation for geographic scope alternative #1: • Use NEPOOL GIS system to maintain regional consistency • For geographic scope alternative #2 (adding NY generation): • Rely on a compatible REC registry or GIS • Must support unbundling; does not currently exist but being studied

  27. Certification of Generator Eligibility • Recommend applying the MA RPS process to qualify eligible generators through advance filings • Issue statement of qualification (within 90 days of application) • Supported by spot checks, audit powers, rights to withdraw certification, advisory rulings • Where eligibility is the same, allow utilization of Massachusetts qualification results • Rationale: • Regional consistency • Limits admin burden • Clarity and certainty for market • NEPOOL GIS check-box

  28. Compliance Filings • Recommend following MA approach: process for annual compliance filings of REPs, due July 1 following each compliance year • Rationale: • Supported by NEPOOL GIS reports, regional consistency • Filing details for each compliance year: • MWh sales to RI end-use customers (total, by product) in compliance yr • Current-year renewable energy attributes allocated to those sales • GIS reports confirming ownership • For transactions not included in GIS, document independent verification consistent with specified protocol • Identify (a) attributes allocated from early compliance, (b) banked compliance, (c) alternative compliance credits, (d) attributes banked for future compliance • Additional documentation required for Non-NEPOOL attributes under geographic scope alternative #2

  29. Penalties/Cost Caps • Recommendations (mimics MA approach): • Establish “alternative compliance mechanism” of 5¢/kWh • Funds collected to be provided to the RI SBC administrator to support maximum quantity of eligible renewable facilities • Require compliance plans for those that fail to comply • Rationale: • Regional consistency, market stability, avoid inter-state arbitrage • Provide certainty of demand to developers & investors • Consider requiring compliance plans for SO & DS providers as a matter of policy • Assure progress being made • Otherwise, lack of clear signals to developers, investors & middlemen regarding plans of biggest players stifles investment

  30. Flexibility Mechanisms • Rationale is strong, due to characteristics of renewables, and challenges to bringing new renewables on-line • But must avoid conflicts with other regional requirements, green market claims • Recommendations – “must haves”: • Annual settlement period • Banked compliance for two subsequent compliance periods, capped at 30% as done in Massachusetts (new only) • Could consider greater banking percentage • May be helpful: • Early compliance allowance for 2004 for “new” tier, to meet 2005 requirement (Could be eliminated if found too complex) • Deficit banking unnecessary with alternative compliance

  31. 4. Interaction between RPS and Other Policies • Contracting Standards for SO/DS Providers • System-Benefits Charge Interaction

  32. Contracting Standards for SO/DS Providers • Recommendations: • Require long-term contracting for at least a portion of SO and DS supply (for at least a small portion of the supply representing the RPS percentage) • apply to the DISCo itself, or to contract w/ DS and/or SO suppliers • Different contracting standards, contract terms may be appropriate for SO and DS, given their distinct terms, volumes (level and certainty), trends, and commitments for commodity electric supply. • Require annual compliance plan filings by the DISCO, addressing: • how DISCO plans to meet objectives of creating stable markets; minimizing costs to rate payers; maximizing term commitments to support financing new renewables • how procurement plan interact with pre-existing electric energy commitments

  33. Contracting Standards for SO/DS Providers (cont.) • Administrator (PUC) should be empowered by RPS legislation to address issues of reasonableness of cost, prudence and cost recovery • Consider whether reasonable to provide the DISCO with some earnings upside for procuring effectively, minimizing cost of RPS to customers.

  34. System-Benefits Charge Interaction • Ignoring interactions (RPS eligibility and targeting/use of SBC funds) can: • add costs for RI customers without adding benefits • create inefficiencies and unnecessary windfalls • Recommendations: • RI RPS should remain largely silent on SBC interactions • RI & other SBC administrators in region should consider establishing standards & guidance for interaction • e.g. target SBC funds to renewables that would not thrive under RPS • e.g. prospectively prohibit generators receiving substantial SBC funding from use for RPS compliance • RI RPS administrator should be given discretion to address interaction directly if major inefficiencies arise in the future

  35. Left for Next Time • Future changes • Treatment of Emissions Credits in Cap and Trade Environment

  36. Sustainable Energy Advantage, LLC4 Lodge LaneNatick, MA 01760tel. 508.653.6737fax 508.653-6443bgrace@seadvantage.comwww.seadvantage.com

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