Title: Tacoma Power Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Program Proposed
1Sixth Power Plan A Public Utility Point of
View Bill Gaines, Director, Tacoma Public
Utilities Craig Smith, Assistant General Manager,
Snohomish PUD Northwest Power and Conservation
Council Meeting June 11, 2009
2Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
3Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
4Conservation Philosophy
- Public power utilities are committed to acquiring
all cost-effective energy efficiency for the
benefit of the region and our customers - Increasing marginal costs and State requirements
(e.g., I-937)provide additional incentive to
pursue energy efficiency - Many utilities, Tacoma and Snohomish included,
are increasing internal savings targets and
expanding delivery capabilities
5Draft Sixth Plan Economic Potential
6Draft Sixth Plan Five Year Target
aMW
7Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
8Measure ReadinessWork Group Assessment of
Individual Measures Developed by Utility,
Bonneville and NEEA Staff
- Technology Readiness (Full/Partial/Low)
- Full no technical or product related issues
- Partially some questions about technology or
application in the NW - Low product needs major work to validate
performance or modify technology for NW - Verified Savings Readiness (Full/Partial/Low
- Full robust savings assessments (deemed savings
or savings calculation methodology defined)
completed in region - Partial transferrable savings assessments
outside of the region or preliminary assessments
within the region - Low little or no savings verification conducted
to date - Market Readiness (Full/Partial/Low)
- Full all elements of the supply side channel
are fully capable of delivering and can be scaled
up easily - Partial missing pieces of delivery chain or
difficulties with scaling - Low significant work required for delivery
chain and scaling - Program Readiness (Full/Partial/Low)
- Full successful program experience in region
- Partial pilot experience in region or
transferrable program experience outside of
region - Low Little or no program experience
9Measure ReadinessWork Group Assessment of
Individual Measures Developed by Utility,
Bonneville and NEEA Staff
aMW
10Measure ReadinessWork Group Assessment of
Individual Measures Developed by Utility,
Bonneville and NEEA Staff
aMW
11Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
12Regional Cumulative Conservation Achievement
- According to the Council, only about half of the
conservation achievements recorded since 1980
have been achieved via BPA/Utility Programs - The other half are reported to have been achieved
via alliance programs, state codes and federal
standards
Source NWPCC
13Annual Conservation Achievement Utility vs.
Alliance Programs
- Over the last 10 or so years, Alliance Programs
such as NEEA sponsored programs have been
responsible for a significant portion of reported
acquisitions - This is expected to continue to be the case in
the future
Source NWPCC
14Potential Alternative Treatment of Emerging
Measures
Energy Trust of OR Resource Assessment Example
15Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
165th Plan vs. Draft 6th Plan Annual Targets
17Historical Accomplishments vs. Draft 6th Plan
Annual Targets
2007-2008 CFL are estimates
Note CFL Accomplishments based on BPA/Public
acquisitions extrapolated to region
18Accomplishments vs. 5th Plan Targets
- Council staff states that targets provide both a
floor and ceiling for achievement - Recent experience shows that utilities and others
in the region are willing to exceed regional
targets if conservation is available, achievable,
reliable and cost-effective - Measures should meet threshold criteria before
inclusion in targets - Plan can address RD, market development,
evaluation needs
Note CFL Accomplishments based on BPA/Public
acquisitions extrapolated to region
19Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
20Effect of Increased Targets
- With the phasing out of CFLs, savings will come
from higher cost/higher touch measures - To meet aggressive goals may require
- Increased share of the measure borne by utility
vs. by customers - Administrative costs may increase for marketing,
RD, evaluation, etc. - EE budgets requirements will increase by 200 to
250 (more than the increase in savings) - Staffing and infrastructure will need to grow to
support higher targets
21Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
22 23Conservation Target Sensitivity to Carbon Cost
Assumptions?
- Council has run some sensitivity analyses on
Carbon Variable (i.e. no Carbon Cost run) - Results suggest only minor decrease in
conservation acquisition target (about 5400 in
no Carbon Cost scenario vs. 5800 in Base case) - However, it is uncertain whether this is a
meaningful result since RPS requirements were not
included in the no Carbon Cost run, but were
included in the Base Case run (i.e. apples to
oranges comparison) - Recommendation Run new Sensitivity case only
modifying Carbon Costs (leave other variables
same as base)
24Topics
- Draft 6th Plan Potential and Targets
- New and Revised Measure Readiness
- Targets Outside of Utility Control
- Acquisition Ramp Concerns
- Revenue Requirement Impacts
- Carbon Cost Assumptions
- Conservation Ramps - Council I-937
25WA RPS (I-937) Further Acceleration of Utility
Targets
26Summary
- Significant efforts are underway to assess the
Conservation Supply Curves and associated targets
for understanding and to prepare for
implementation - The action plan should set aggressive, but
achievable, targets for the region the targets
recommended by the Council staff are
unrealistically high - Strong incentives exist for utilities to adopt
measures that meet the cost and reliability
thresholds as they come available - Establishing a range for acquisition targets
could address uncertainty - In addition to acquisition targets, the action
plan should include plan to develop new and
emerging technologies to ensure sustained
potential before they become targets