Title: Roy McCoy
1Roy McCoy Manager, Congestion and Renewable
Credits www.texasrenewables.com
2Renewable Energy Credit (REC) Program
- Purpose
- To meet the SB7 goal to develop 2000 MWs of NEW
renewable capacity in TX by 2009 (in addition to
880 MWs already in place) - REC defined
- A tradable instrument that represents all of the
renewable attributes associated with one MWh of
production from a certified renewable generator.
RECs may be traded separately from energy. - Good for 3 Compliance Periods.
- Kickoff
- Full Program began on January 1, 2002
3Renewable Energy Technology
- EXCLUSIVELY relies on an energy source that is
naturally regenerated - SUN
- WIND
- GEOTHERMAL
- HYDRO-ELECTRIC
- WAVE (Tidal Activity)
- BIOMASS OR
- BIOMASS WASTE PRODUCTS
- Not derived from fossil fuels, waste products
from fossil fuels, or waste products from
inorganic sources.
4New Capacity Targets
5REC Program Overview
- Parties Involved
- Competitive Retailers (REPs and opt-in entities)
- Renewable Resource Generators
- Munis and Coops
- Public Utility Commission
- ERCOT (Program Administrator)
- General Public
- Texas-wide (includes non-ERCOT areas)
6Competitive Retailer Responsibilities and
Activities
- Register with ERCOT
- Retire RECs annually to comply with annual REC
requirements - Report MWh Load to ERCOT via ERCOT EPS Meter Data
or Manual Input - May qualify for REC Offsets (PUCT Subst. R.
25.173(i))
7Generator Responsibilities
- Register with the Commission and be certified as
a REC Generator - Register with ERCOT
- Produce electricity that qualifies to earn RECs
- Produce electricity to retain Allocated Offsets
- Report MWh Production to ERCOT via ERCOT EPS
Meter Data or Manual Input
8REC Offsets
- A REC Offset represents one MWh of renewable
energy from an existing renewable generation
facility (in place prior to 9/1/99) that may be
used by a Competitive Retailer in place of a REC
to meet a renewable energy requirement. REC
offsets may not be traded. - To qualify for REC offsets in the REC Program,
participants (REPs, Munis and Coops) must have
applied with the Commission by June 1, 2001. - Generators must generate electricity to retain
Allocated Offsets - Long term contracts must remain in effect
9Muni Coop Activities
- May have qualified for REC Offsets even though
they have not yet opted into competition. - Qualifying Munis and Coops, once opted in (and
required to participate in the REC Program as
Competitive Retailers), may use REC Offsets to
satisfy all or part of their annual REC
requirement.
10Commission Activities
- Certification of REC Generators and Retail
Electricity Providers as Competitive Retailers - Approval of offset credits for qualifying
Generation entities and their member Competitive
Retailers - Develop equations to determine the MWh of
renewable energy produced by generation-offset
technologies) and other renewable generators that
are not interval metered (e.g. landfill gas)
11ERCOT Responsibilities
- Register and create accounts for REC Generators,
REC Offset Generators, Competitive Retailers and
other participating entities. - Assign RECs to generator REC accounts on a
quarterly basis - Determine the annual REC requirement for each
Competitive Retailer (taking into account any REC
Offsets) - Report annually (April 15) to the Commission on
the status of the REC Program and compliance with
REC requirements. - Retire RECs as directed or as they expire
- Maintain REC Program web site with required
information.
12Capacity Target vs. ActualThrough October, 2004
1187
1186
989
842
13REC Accounts As Of October, 2004
68
50
37
32 23
14Renewable Resources by Type, added since REC
Program initiatedMW Capacity in 2004
1140 10.3 5.4 30.7 .02
15Calculation Acronyms - Definitions
- REC Renewable Energy Credit
- CCF Capacity Conversion Factor
- PRR Preliminary REC Requirement
- SRR Statewide REC Requirement
- CRS Competitive Retailer Sales
- TCS Total Texas Competitive Sales
- ARR Adjusted REC Requirement
- AO Allocated Offsets
- TUO Total Usable Offsets
- SARR Sum of Adjusted REC Requirements
- FRR Final REC Requirement
16Statewide REC Requirement Calculation
- Target MW Capacity for the year
- x 8,760 Hours in the year
- x Current Capacity Conversion Factor
Example for 2004 2004 Target Capacity 850 MW x
Hours In Year 8,760 x Current CCF
35 REC Requirement 2,606,100 RECs
17Capacity Conversion Factor Calculation
- For Each Competitive Retailer
- Find their maximum possible output level
- Capacity x Total Hours in the year
- Ex. 150 MW capacity x 8,760 Hours 1,314,000
MWh - Then Divide their Actual Output by this maximum
capability - Ex. 450,000 MWh actual production / 1,314,000
- 34 CCF
- Get the Weighted Average of all CRs CCFs for a
Program CCF.
18The REC Requirement Calculation
- Annual REC Requirement
- PRR SRR x (CRS / TCS)
- ARR PRR AO (not lt 0)
- TUO SRR SARR
- FRR ARR (TUO x (CRS / TCS))
- /- (CARRYOVERS/ADJUSTMENTS)
- ERCOT is required to recalculate the FRR for
the previous compliance period.
19REC Requirement Calculation Example
- Using example Load of 13,000,000 MWh and
- 15,000 Allocated Offsets
PRR 2,606,100 x (13,000,000 / 239,500,000)
141,459 ARR 141,459 15,000 126,459
TUO 2,606,100 2,591,100 15,000 FRR
126,459 (15,000 x (13,000,000/239,500,000))
127,273
20www.texasrenewables.com