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Future Power Outlook:

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Down phase in generation will last 3 years with generators competing for survival ... Current struggle to grow natural gas supply highlights attractiveness of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Future Power Outlook:


1
Future Power Outlook
  • The Shakeout

73rd Annual KMU Conference
The Energy Team http//www.theenergyteam.com
2
Power industry is at a crossroads
  • Natural Gas Outlook
  • Mixed fundamentals have created market volatility
  • Electric Power Outlook
  • Waves of new generating capacity have led to
    oversupply in power markets resulting in
    depressed power prices
  • Transmission/Delivery Outlook
  • Delays in transmission restructuring (RTOs) have
    induced many challenges
  • Renewable Energy Outlook
  • New Federal Renewable Portfolio Standards mandate
    will create new requirements for power producers
  • These issues are now becoming defining factors
    for differentiationand survival

TheEnergyTeam.com
3
Future Power Outlook
  • Natural Gas

TheEnergyTeam.com
4
Natural Gas Outlook
  • Short Term
  • Mixed fundamentals have made market volatile
  • High levels of natural gas in storage 47 full
    as of 5/1/02, vs. 26 in May 2001
  • Economic recovery bringing back industrial demand
  • Warm summer weather forecast
  • Low rig count
  • Oil Prices
  • Actual summer weather

TheEnergyTeam.com
5
SPP North Spot Gas Prices (/MMBtu)
TheEnergyTeam.com
6
Natural Gas Outlook
Mid Term
  • Price volatility will continue into 2003
  • Prices will climb this fall and will continue to
    rise into 2003
  • Production will struggle to meet demand because
    of low rig count
  • Demand from gas-fired generation will increase
    from last year
  • Price sensitive demand will return industrial
    plants
  • Weather will play the biggest role in ultimately
    deciding how high prices go, but prices should
    not rise to the levels reached in winter 00-01

TheEnergyTeam.com
7
TheEnergyTeam.com
8
Why we wont see 10.00 gas in 02-03
TheEnergyTeam.com
9
Why we will see 3.00-4.00 gas in 02-03
TheEnergyTeam.com
10
Natural Gas Outlook
Long Term
  • Long term gas demand growth will be substantial
    resulting from new power generation capacity
  • Supply becomes more of an issue as production
    decreases in mature gas fields (such as the
    Anadarko and Hugoton basins)
  • No major new natural gas reserves expected for
    several years
  • Pipeline infrastructure also becomes concern with
    additional power generation

TheEnergyTeam.com
11
Natural Gas Forward Pricing
TheEnergyTeam.com
12
Future Power Outlook
  • Electric Power

TheEnergyTeam.com
13
Electric Power Outlook
Pricing
  • Energy prices at historical lows
  • Barely cover variable costs of new CC plants
  • Volatility expected with natural gas prices
  • No price volatility expected due to capacity
    surplus

TheEnergyTeam.com
14
Electric Power Outlook
Projected Supply vs. Demand
  • Boom of adding new power plant capacity (i.e.
    supplies) at a much faster rate than demand is
    leading to lower power prices
  • Most regions face significant surplus in 2002 and
    next few years (even if 50 announced projects
    cancelled
  • Market scarcity had been detrimental to consumers
    while projected over-saturation will have
    negative effect for producers
  • May take more than 3 years to overcome oversupply
    in power markets

TheEnergyTeam.com
15
Generation Projects
  • Areas of Concern
  • Majority of new generation plants are gas-fired
  • On average, new power plants operate only on-peak
    (16 Hr/Day, 150 Days/Yr)
  • Heat rate of plants built range from 7,000 to
    8,500
  • Power prices will be below levels needed to cover
    fixed costs plus variable costs of power plants
  • Down phase in generation will last 3 years with
    generators competing for survival

TheEnergyTeam.com
16
Projected Generating Capacity by Fuel
Source NERC ESD for 2001
TheEnergyTeam.com
17
Total Generation Mix by Fuel
Coal
Natural Gas
Source NERC ESD for 2001
TheEnergyTeam.com
18
Most Significant Growth by Fuel
Other
Natural Gas
Dual Fuel
Source NERC ESD for 2001
TheEnergyTeam.com
19
Electric Power Outlook
Generation Projects
  • Substantial reductions in capital spending will
    result in construction delays cancellations
  • Only projects currently under construction will
    be completed (? 40 of announced plants)
  • Additional new construction underway will further
    exasperate oversupply (dampen both price levels
    and volatility of wholesale prices)
  • Expect additional cancellations and postponements
    of plants not under construction

TheEnergyTeam.com
20
Will excess capacity lead to retirements of
existing generation?
  • Retirement strategies will depend on
  • Continuing cost-of-service ratemaking
  • Potential to reduce costs at plants
  • Fragmentation of the market who will make the
    first move?
  • Environmental regulations
  • Plant owners perception of market recovery
  • Retirements not likely until after 2002
  • When retirements do occur, they will probably be
    concentrated in Texas, the Northeast, and the West

TheEnergyTeam.com
21
SPP New Generation through 2003
TheEnergyTeam.com
22
Announced
Const.
Capacity
Demand
23
TheEnergyTeam.com
24
Internal Summer Power Capacity Margin(Total
Internal Capacity Summer Demand)
TheEnergyTeam.com
25
Future Power Outlook
  • Transmission/Delivery

TheEnergyTeam.com
26
Transmission/Delivery Outlook
  • Plentiful and Economical Gas and Power is No Good
    Without an Adequate and Accessible Transmission
    System

TheEnergyTeam.com
27
How Adequate is the Transmission Grid?
280
1990
260
Actual
TRANSMISSION CAPACITY
1995
(miles/GW demand)
240
2000
220
200
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
Dr. Eric Hirst www.EHirst.com
TheEnergyTeam.com
28
Congestion Too Much Over Too Little
2000
2001
1999
2002
1998
1997
TheEnergyTeam.com
29
How Accessible is the Transmission Grid?
TheEnergyTeam.com
30
Roadblocks to Accessibility
  • Adequacy - designed for different purpose time
  • Some owners still exert market power and some not
    under FERC jurisdiction
  • FERCs authority influenced by politics
  • Artificial seams and pancaked rates

TheEnergyTeam.com
31
When Will Accessibility be Fixed?
FERC Shifting into Passing Gear But Theres
Water in the Gas
  • Caution is key after California/Enron events
  • Sept 11th added reliability security issues
  • FERCs pressing to merge RTO efforts (better
    design but takes longer to develop)
  • Complexity requires time to design develop

TheEnergyTeam.com
32
Present Status of RTO Participation
TheEnergyTeam.com
33
FERCs Goal Seamless Marketplace from RTOs
But FERC takes the slice and dice approach
TheEnergyTeam.com
34
Midwest RTO Status
  • 2/1/02 MISO providing transmission service for 22
    transmission owning members (16 have turned over
    functional control) and completed merger with 31
    MAPP members
  • MISO/SPP plan to merge by Q3, 2002 combine
    tariffs by Q3, 2003
  • TRANSLink to start operation under MISO as an ITC
    by 1/1/2003
  • Crescent Moon is expected to join MISO as an ITC
    later this year

TheEnergyTeam.com
35
Key Elements in FERC April 24th Orders
  • Conditional approval of the TRANSLink ITC model
  • Alliance members have 30 days to decide which RTO
    to join have guidance on 5 disputed areas with
    MISO
  • NOPR issued on standardized interconnection
    procedures (consensus approach)

TheEnergyTeam.com
36
A Light at the End of the Tunnel
FERCs White Paper SMD (Standardized
Transmission Service and Wholesale Market Design)
  • Centralized markets single NAT (Network Access
    Tariff)
  • Markets linked to congestion management tools,
    tradable transmission rights/hedging for price
    certainty
  • Long-term planning incorporating demand responses
    with generation/transmission expansion

TheEnergyTeam.com
37
Transmission Adequacy/Accessibility?
  • After 10 years we are on the down hill side
  • Full implementation of large RTOs critical
  • Finalizing/Implementing SMD is next key
  • Central market and single NAT
  • Timely transparent price signals
  • Central planning and incentives to build
    transmission
  • Need to investigate capacity market (old MOKAN
    pooling concept)

TheEnergyTeam.com
38
Future Power Outlook
  • Renewable Energy

TheEnergyTeam.com
39
Renewable Energy Outlook
  • Current struggle to grow natural gas supply
    highlights attractiveness of alternative sources
  • National focus on power plants Green House Gas
    Reductions
  • Renewable Portfolio Standards incorporated as
    States address customer choice
  • Transmission constraints create challenges
    delivering renewable energy

TheEnergyTeam.com
40
Renewable Portfolio Standards Overhaul of
National Energy Policy Act
  • Implement Renewable Portfolio Standards
  • Mandated percentage from specified renewable
    energy sources 10 by 2020
  • Wind, hydroelectric, solar energy, landfill gas,
    geothermal, biomass.
  • Renewable credits can be used to meet mandates
  • Tax incentives 2.3 billion for renewable energy
  • Initiatives are being reviewed and implemented in
    17 states.

TheEnergyTeam.com
41
Kansas Wind Energy Benefits
  • Kansas ranks third among U.S. states in wind
    power potential (1st North Dakota 2nd Texas)
  • Gray County Wind Farm reduces carbon dioxide
    emissions by 600 tons annually
  • CO2 emission absorption equivalent of a
    120-square mile forest

TheEnergyTeam.com
42
Tradable Renewable Credits (TRCs)
  • TRCs is the purchase, sell, or trade credits to
    meet voluntary or mandatory Renewable Portfolio
    Standards
  • TRCs represent environmental attributes of power
    generated from renewable energy plants
  • Aquila is active with the DOE, EPA, Utilities and
    other industrial organizations in pioneering this
    critical renewable market
  • Advantages
  • Avoids transmission constraints
  • Cost efficient No transmission purchase
  • No ancillary services required
  • Eliminates backing down existing off-peak
    generation

TheEnergyTeam.com
43
Summary
  • Natural Gas
  • Price increase and volatility will continue
  • Production will struggle to meet substantial
    demand
  • Electric Power
  • Oversupply in generation resulting in depressed
    power prices
  • Demand for natural gas to generate will continue
    to increase
  • Transmission/Delivery
  • Delays in restructuring to RTOs has induced many
    challenges
  • Significant changes in how we utilize
    transmission will occur before we are done
  • Renewable Energy
  • Federal Renewable Portfolio Standards create new
    requirements
  • Tradable Renewable Credits are seen as the market
    to meet those standards

TheEnergyTeam.com
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