ISO New Englands Winter 20052006 Assessment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

ISO New Englands Winter 20052006 Assessment

Description:

New England is subject to great uncertainty/high risks in the price, ... Because the majority of the New England generation sector does not have firm gas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:88
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: iso6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ISO New Englands Winter 20052006 Assessment


1
ISO New EnglandsWinter 2005/2006 Assessment
Action PlanPreparing for Cold Weather
Reliability
  • October 6, 2005

2
Needs Assessment
3
New England Faces a Potential Shortfallin
Electricity Supply this Winter
  • ISO-NE believes that there is a significant risk
    that there will be insufficient availability from
    gas-fired generating units to meet peak
    electrical demands this winter
  • A shortfall in gas-only generating unit
    availability would be a system-wide resource
    issue as opposed to a specific load pocket issue
  • ISO-NE is proposing a number of remedial action
    to reduce this risk

4
January 2004 Cold Snap Experience
  • During the January 2004 Cold Snap, all of the
    natural gas pipelines firm customers were served
    in accordance with their tariffs
  • 9,000 MW of generation was out-of-service in
    New England
  • 7,200 MW of this capacity consisted of gas-only
    units that were unavailable due to fuel and
    weather related outages/reductions
  • The damage to the gas and oil production
    infrastructure inflicted by the recent Gulf
    hurricanes poses an increased risk to the
    availability of gas-fired generation this winter
  • 25 of New Englands peak-day natural gas comes
    from Gulf sources

5
Cold Snap Process Improvements
  • Since 2004, ISO New England has implemented a
    number of process improvements that should
    improve the availability of New England
    generation
  • Increased Coordination
  • Gas/Electric Operations Committee
  • Day Ahead Market timing
  • Improved Availability
  • Timely switching to alternate fuels
  • Improved winterization of generating units
  • Additional dual fuel units

6
Summary of Problem Issues
  • New England is subject to great uncertainty/high
    risks in the price, availability and
    deliverability of natural gas during Winter 05/06
    due to the impacts of Hurricanes Katrina and
    Rita
  • The regional gas pipelines have indicated they
    are well prepared to serve firm customers
  • New England LDC storage is on track
  • Because the majority of the New England
    generation sector does not have firm gas
    entitlements, it is exposed to high risk because
    of limitations on both gas supply and
    transportation

7
Summary of Problem Issues (cont.)
  • Generators have the choice to use gas to generate
    electricity or sell gas back into the market
    based on economics
  • LDCs have an obligation to serve firm customers
  • Recent experience during periods of volatile gas
    prices shows that generators have limited
    incentives under the current market rules to turn
    gas into electricity during the most critical
    winter periods
  • The major planned market enhancements that will
    address this problem will not be in place for
    this winter

8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
What are the Contingency Concerns?
  • Increased quantities of gas-only generation are
    likely to be out of service during a Cold Snap
    period
  • Forecast peak electricity demand for Winter 05/06
    is about 1,000 MW greater than January 2004
    actual Cold Snap peak
  • Multiple Cold Snap events would exacerbate supply
    and price issues for New England generators
  • Ability to withstand the loss of a major
    generating unit during a Cold Snap event without
    invoking load shedding may be at risk

11
Risk Analysis
  • The following charts depict the risk exposure New
    England has to unit availability and electricity
    supply shortages during this winter based on a
    range of potential impacts
  • Total gas pipeline import capability is 3.5
    Bcf/d
  • Based on firm pipeline transportation contracts
  • 3.0 Bcf/d to the LDCs and other end users
  • 0.5 Bcf/d to the electric generators
  • Based on the above entitlements, a maximum of
    3,000 MW of gas-only units can be supported from
    pipeline deliveries during a Cold Snap event (See
    Bar 1 of Supply Scenarios Chart)
  • This is approximately equal to what was available
    during the January 2004 Cold Snap
  • It is assumed that Mystic generation will be
    available because it has a separate supply source
    (i.e. LNG)

12
Risk Analysis
  • The other supply scenarios depicted in the chart
    describe the hypothetical reduction in gas supply
    to 90 of pipeline capability and its impacts on
    LDC and power generation availability
  • Bar 2 assumes a pro-rata share of supply to the
    LDC and generation sectors
  • Bar 3 assumes a market response where the LDC
    acquires the requisite volumes of gas to fulfill
    their obligations
  • The last scenario shown in the Operable Capacity
    Analysis depicts the New England power supply
    situation if all gas-fired generation (except for
    Mystic) becomes unavailable, which could happen
    if there is an extreme gas shortfall or gas price
    instability

13
Supply Scenarios
14
Winter Peak Operable Capacity Analysis
Includes 900 MW of ICAP Sales to NY
(currently 640 MW scheduled) Assumes only 3
,000 MW of the 8,700 MW of gas-only generation
has firm pipeline transportation contracts
Includes increase in 90/10 peak load due to
increase in electric heating load (400 MW)
15
Contingency Plans
16
ISO-NE Contingency Plan Summary
17
Actions Needed to Protect Reliability for Winter
2005/06
  • Communications/Conservation
  • Reduce consumption in all hours to conserve fuel
  • Secure Additional Dual Fuel Capability
  • Via change to MR1
  • Demand Side Management/Load Management
  • Expand DSM programs in New England
  • Add capacity resources to help maintain 30-minute
    reserves
  • Develop/Implement Energy Emergency Procedures
  • Cold Weather Event Operations (Appendix H)
  • Expand Actions During a Capacity Deficiency
    (OP4)
  • Develop new operating procedure and/or change to
    MR1 for multi-period energy shortfall conditions

18
Upcoming Dates
  • We propose the following dates for working on the
    Contingency Plan
  • Thursday, October 13 joint Markets/Reliability
    Committee meeting (Marlboro)
  • Materials to go out on Friday, October 7
  • Friday, October 14 NPC meeting (Boston)
  • Wednesday, October 19 joint Markets/Reliability
    Committee meeting (Marlboro)
  • Materials to go out on Monday, October 16, or
    sooner if possible
  • Friday, October 21 Special NPC meeting
    (teleconference)
  • Friday, October 28 Target date for FERC filings 
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com