Title: Future Power Outlook:
1Future Power Outlook
73rd Annual KMU Conference
The Energy Team http//www.theenergyteam.com
2Power 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
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3Future Power Outlook
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4Natural 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
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5SPP North Spot Gas Prices (/MMBtu)
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6Natural 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
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8Why we wont see 10.00 gas in 02-03
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9Why we will see 3.00-4.00 gas in 02-03
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10Natural 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
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11Natural Gas Forward Pricing
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12Future Power Outlook
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13Electric 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
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14Electric 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
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15Generation 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
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16Projected Generating Capacity by Fuel
Source NERC ESD for 2001
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17Total Generation Mix by Fuel
Coal
Natural Gas
Source NERC ESD for 2001
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18Most Significant Growth by Fuel
Other
Natural Gas
Dual Fuel
Source NERC ESD for 2001
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19Electric 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
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20Will 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
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21SPP New Generation through 2003
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22Announced
Const.
Capacity
Demand
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24Internal Summer Power Capacity Margin(Total
Internal Capacity Summer Demand)
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25Future Power Outlook
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26Transmission/Delivery Outlook
- Plentiful and Economical Gas and Power is No Good
Without an Adequate and Accessible Transmission
System
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27How 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
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28Congestion Too Much Over Too Little
2000
2001
1999
2002
1998
1997
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29How Accessible is the Transmission Grid?
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30Roadblocks 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
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31When 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
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32Present Status of RTO Participation
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33FERCs Goal Seamless Marketplace from RTOs
But FERC takes the slice and dice approach
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34Midwest 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
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35Key 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)
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36A 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
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37Transmission 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)
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38Future Power Outlook
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39Renewable 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
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40Renewable 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.
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41Kansas 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
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42Tradable 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
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43Summary
- 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
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