Title: Decoupling
1Decoupling
-
- April 26, 2007
- Fran Cummings, Policy Director
- Renewable Energy Trust
- Massachusetts Technology Collaborative
- 75 North Drive, Westborough, MA 01581-3340
- tel (508) 870-0312 ext. 270
- cell (978) 985-1557
- www.masstech.org/dg/decoupling.htm
2Potential topics for discussion
Introduction
- Activities underway in Massachusetts
- Resources available on MTC website
- Decoupling in the MADRI process
- Model Rule and Tariff
- PEPCO decoupling filing of 11/17/06
- Spreadsheets
- Decoupling status in other states
- CA
- Next Steps
3What is Decoupling?
Introduction
- Breaks the mathematical link between sales
volumes and profits - Objective is to make profit levels immune to
changes in sales volumes - This is a revenue issue, not a pricing issue
- Not intended to decouple customers bills from
consumption - Volumetric pricing approaches need not be changed
- The material in this slide is taken directly
from Aligning Incentives with Public Policy, a
presentation on Decoupling by Rick Weston, RAP,
during an April 4, 2007 EPRI/STAC Massachusetts
Stakeholder Conference Call
4Why Decoupling?
Introduction
- A way to encourage or adapt to substantial
increases in customer-sited Distributed Energy
Resources (DER) - Energy efficiency
- Renewable energy
- Distributed generation
- Demand response
- A way to protect shareholder value in the face of
declining revenue growth
5Recent decisions
Activities Underway in Massachusetts
- DPU/DTE
- March 23, 2007 -- DTE 07-6 Order Opening
Investigation into standby rates and alternative
rate structures that will promote efficient
deployment of distributed generation - February 16, 2007 -- Order On Revised Model
Interconnection Standards And Procedures Tariff - issues related to the appropriate ratemaking
treatment of DG will be addressed in a subsequent
Order - FCM
- April 16, 2007 -- FERC Approval
- February 8, 2007 -- Forward Capacity Market Rules
approved by NEPOOL Participants Committee - participation by Intermittent and Demand
Resources - RGGI
- January 18, 2007 -- Governor Patrick Signs RGGI
- Auction of emissions allowances ... estimated
25 million to 125 million/year ... to fund
energy efficiency, demand reduction, renewable
energy programs, and combined heat and power
(CHP) projects.
6Recent articles
Activities Underway in Massachusetts
- April 18, 2007 -- Governor Patrick Sets Ambitious
New Energy Standards for State Buildings - Executive Order No. 484 Leading by Example,
Clean Energy and Efficient Buildings - April 17, 2007 -- Governor Patrick Announces New
Manufacturing Plant for Evergreen Solar, Plan to
Boost Clean Energy, Jobs Evergreen Solar and
NSTAR Announce Alliance to Spur Interest in Solar
Energy (pdf with multiple press releases and
articles) - April 14, 2007 -- Saving power and profit State
Seeks Way for Utilities to Push Conservation, Not
Lose Money, Boston Globe
7www.masstech.org/dg/decoupling.htm
Resources Available on MTC Website
- Includes most significant documents on
decoupling, sorted by date - Reports and studies (1994 - present)
- Recent presentations
- Some articles
- Some state-specific regulatory filings, orders
- Links to related source materials
- masstech.org/dg/rates.htm
- masstech.org/dg/benefits.htm
- masstech.org/dg/winwin.htm
- masstech.org/dg/epri-stac.htm
- masstech.org/dg/PV.htm
- masstech.org/dg/CHP.htm
- masstech.org/dg/collab-reports.htm
8Reports/Documents on Decoupling Recent
Resources Available on MTC Website
- October 2006 -- Aligning Utility Interests with
Energy Efficiency Objectives, Kushlet et. al.,
ACEEE Report U-061 - August 2006 -- Aligning Regulatory Incentives
with Demand-Side Resources, a workshop hosted by
NARUC and EPA (various presentations) - April 2006 -- Distributed Resources Incentives,
by NERA for EEI (in MADRI process) - October 2005 -- Decoupling White Paper 1,
Presented for discussion at the Strategic Issues
Forum, Rutgers Center for Energy, Economic and
Environmental Policy
9Reports/Documents on Decoupling 1994
Resources Available on MTC Website
- August 1994 -- Decoupling and Public Utility
Regulation, R. Graniere et. al., The National
Regulatory Research Institute - June 1994 -- Regulatory Reform Removing
Disincentives to Utility Investment in Energy
Efficiency, RAP - January 1994, The Theory and Practice of
Decoupling, Eto, J. et.al. (LBL-34555)
10Decoupling addressed in larger rate context
Resources Available on MTC Website
- February 2007 The Potential Benefits of DG and
Rate-Related Issues that May Impede Their
Expansion, A Study Pursuant to Section 1817 of
the Energy Policy Act of 2005, US DOE - 2006 Clean Energy-Environment Guide to Action
- Utility Incentives for Demand-Side Resources,
section 6.2 of EPA's Guide - Removing Unintended Utility Rate Barriers to DG,
section 6.3 of EPA's Guide - May 2006 The Value of DG under Different Tariff
Structures, by Ryan Firestone et. al., LBNL-60589
- December 2005 Rate Structures for Customers With
Onsite Generation Practice and Innovation, by
Synapse Energy Economics and Regulatory
Assistance Project, NREL/SR-560-39142 - November 1997 Performance-Based Regulation in a
Restructured Electric Industry, for NARUC, by
Bruce Biewald and Tim Woolf, Synapse Energy
Economics, Inc. et.al.
11MADRI Model Rule and Tariff
Decoupling in the MADRI process
- Used BGE Rate Rider as starting point
- Model Rule is product of collaborative
stakeholder process - Available at http//www.raponline.org/Feature.asp
?select78 - Tracks on demand and energy basis
- Currently 60-day lag between consumption
recovery may present rate design issue - Lag can be eliminated with a use and file
approach - As written, places weather risk on customer but
this is not a policy position per se
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
12Electric Utility Revenue Stability Adjustment
Factor (5/16/06)
Decoupling in the MADRI process
- Full cycle for this mechanism involves the
following steps - A. Test-year revenue requirements should be
established for the customer, demand, and energy
charge components for each rate schedule to which
this rider applies. - B. Determine a date on which the Revenue
Stability Adjustment Clause is to be effective - C. There are three different months used in
each Revenue Stability Adjustment Factor
calculation - Filing Month means the month in which a Revenue
Stability Adjustment Reconciliation filing is
due. - Reference Month means the month that is two
months prior to the filing month. - Billing Month means the month that is the second
succeeding month after the Filing Month and is
the month during which the Revenue Stability
Adjustment is applied to customers bills.
13Decoupling in the MADRI process
- D. Prepare and file, on or before a set day
(e.g., the 10th) of the Filing Month, an
adjustment factor computation for each applicable
rate schedule. - E. Each subsequent Filing Month would use three
different types of data - Test year data is used as the base for computing
the target revenues for each tariff component,
based on the per-customer average billing units
for that component. Test year data is assumed to
be based on the test information for each
calendar month in the test year, in order to
capture expected monthly deviations in
consumption. This data should be weather
normalized and should match the underlying
billing units used to compute the current tariff
rates. - Test year data is also used to compute a K
factor for the kWh and kW (if applicable)
distribution charges. The K factor is computed
by comparing use per customers during the test
year to use per customer during the year prior to
the test year. In order to capture longer term
trends and to help mitigate anomalies in the test
year and pre-test year data, this factor could be
recomputed annually on a rolling average basis.
Both the Test Year data and other data used for K
Factor calculations should be weather normalized. - Reference Month data is used to reflect actual
consumption in the form of billing units on bills
actually sent to customers. Reference Month
customer billing units are multiplied by the test
year revenues per customer and by the K Factor to
determine the target revenues to be collected in
the Billing Month. Reference Month revenues are
taken from customer billing records. The
difference between target revenues and actual
revenues represents the revenue increase or
decrease that must be generated by the adjustment
factor. - Forecast Billing Month billing units are used in
conjunction with the revenue shortfall or overage
to compute an adjustment factor for the given
tariff component (demand or energy).
14Calculation of Revenue Stability Adjustment
Factors
Decoupling in the MADRI process
15From PEPCOs decoupling filing of 11/17/06
Decoupling in the MADRI process
16From PEPCOs decoupling filing of 11/17/06
Decoupling in the MADRI process
17MADRI Spreadsheets
Decoupling in the MADRI process
- June 2006 -- PPL case study forecast simulation
spreadsheet, referenced at Workshop in Trenton,
NJ
18Recent Documents on DER, Other States
Decoupling Status in Other States
- NY Case 07027/03-E-0640 Case 06-G-0746
- April 2007 -- NY PSC SEEKS MORE EFFICIENT ENERGY
USE, Utility Revenue Decoupling Mechanisms to
Eliminate Disincentives (press release) - May 2006 -- NY Order Extending Deadline and
Continuing Standby Rate Exemption, NYPSC, Case
99-E-1470 - MADRI (Mid-Atlantic Distributed Resources
Initiative Working Group) - June 2006 -- Policy Statement in Support of DER
Initiatives - May 16, 2006 -- Electric Utility Revenue
Stability Adjustment Factor - CT March 2006 -- Docket 05-07-16 DPUC Review of
the Development of a Program to Provide Various
Incentives for Customer-Side Distributed
Resources - March 27, 2006 Order, including incentives to
utilities, rebates on gas delivery charges,
provision changing standby charges - OR February 2005 -- DG in Oregon Overview,
Regulatory Barriers and Recommendations, Lisa
Schwartz, Public UtilityCommission Staff - ME February 2004 -- Report on Utility Incentives
Mechanisms for the Promotion of Energy Efficiency
and System Reliability, Maine PUC, presented to
the Utilities and Energy Committee
19Decoupling Examples
Decoupling Status in Other States
- Maryland Gas Utilities (in place), PEPCO
(filed) - North Carolina Gas Utilities
- California 3 IOUs Electric Gas Utilities
- Oregon Northwest Natural Gas
- New Jersey (NJNG Awaiting approval order)
- Utah (Questar)
- Indiana Ohio (Vectren)
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
20California Decoupling Basics
Decoupling Status in Other States
- Part of an aggressive and comprehensive policy
framework designed to deploy cost-effective
energy efficiency - Covers SDGE/SocCalGas, PGE and SCE
- Tracks difference between allowed revenues and
actual revenues - Trued up each year to that years authorized
revenues - Revenue requirements are adjusted each year for
inflation - Each utility has individual mechanisms for
determining annual revenue requirements
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
21California Company Plan Features
Decoupling Status in Other States
- Southern California Edison
- Citing
- Poor financial health of company
- Changed circumstances since such adjustments were
rejected (20 years ago) - Commission approved non-test year revenue
requirement adjustments - Implemented revenue balancing account for over-
under-collections of revenue adjustment - San Diego Gas Electric and SoCalGas
- Each years revenue requirement is determined by
the previous years base margin adjusted by CPI - Minimum max. authorized adjustments (in 3-4
range) - Balancing account for adjustment collections
- Sharing mechanism
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
22California SDGE/SoCalGasShareholder Customer
Sharing
Decoupling Status in Other States
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
23California Pacific Gas Electric
Decoupling Status in Other States
- Separate Distribution and Generation mechanisms
- DRAM (Distribution revenue adjustment mechanism)
and - UGBA (Utility Generation Balancing Account)
revenue adjustment mechanisms - Allowed revenues annual CPI-based attrition
adjustments for 2004-2006, with following
minimums and maximums
The material in this slide is taken directly
from Rick Weston, RAP, 2 April 2007.
24Next Steps