Title: SPP, Wind, and Transmission Expansion
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2SPP, Wind, and Transmission Expansion
Oklahoma Clean Energy Independence
CommissionFebruary 25, 2010 Les Dillahunty,
Senior Vice President, Engineering and Regulatory
Policy
3Introduction
4Our Beginning
- Founded 1941 with 11 members
- Utilities pooled resources to keep Arkansas
aluminum plant powered for critical defense - Maintained after WWII for reliability and
coordination
53 Interconnections / 8 NERC Regions
6Operating Region
- 370,000 square miles service territory
- 50,575 miles transmission lines
- 69 kV 16,182 miles115 kV 10,041
miles138 kV 9,284 miles161 kV 4,469
miles230 kV 3,831 miles345 kV 6,662
miles500 kV 106 miles
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7Members in nine states
856 SPP Members
9Quick Statistics
- 66,175 megawatts capacity resources
- 847 plants 6,079 substations
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10Wind Integration and Transmission Expansion
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12Wind In Service 2001
2009
Source NREL
13Wind Installed by Year (2002-2009)
Source SPP
14Renewable Energy Standards By State
14
Source SPP
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16w/ HVDC Proposals
17Generation Interconnection Requests
17
18Generation Interconnection Clusters and Major
Cities
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19To Scale Height Comparison
Produced by Midwest ISO
20Correlation Between Wind and Load
21Wind Status in Oklahoma
- 865 MW installed through 3Q 2009
- 3 wind generation in 2008
- Ranks 12th total wind installation
Source AWEA, NREL
22Oklahoma Weatherford Wind Energy Center
- 300,000 in annual lease payments to landowners
- 17 million in property taxes over 20 years
- 147 MW
- 150 workers during construction peak 6
full-time OM positions
Source NREL
23Oklahoma CPV OU Spirit project
- Annual allocations from addition of 2.3 MW
Siemens turbines - 1,057,000 in new tax dollars for two school
districts - CareerTech allocation from county revenue will
increase by 227,000 - County general funds will increase by 190,000
will assist with building new jail - EMS services will receive 57,000 increase
- County Heal services will receive 20,000 increase
Source Woodward County Assessor
24Oklahoma, Wind, and Economic Development
- Economic benefit of 1,000 MW 1.25 billion
- 5,530 construction jobs, 215 permanent jobs
- Average wages in component manufacturing industry
40,709 - 15 higher than average state wage - Strong correlation between Western OK counties
that have lost population in recent decades with
counties that have significant wind resources - In many cases, land suited for wind development
has lower per-acre returns for agricultural use - Sooner Survey of 600 registered voters
- 72 of Oklahomans willing to pay more for
wind-generated electricity - 91 approve of further development of wind farms
Source NREL Cole, Hargrave Snodgrass, and
Associates Oklahoma Department of Commerce
25Component Manufacturing-Oklahoma, Kansas
- Bergey WindPower (Oklahoma)
- Employs 42, manufactures one turbine per day
- DMI Industries (Oklahoma)
- Employs 215
- Siemens (Kansas)
- Broke ground September 2009
- Will invest 50 million in new facility
- Expected to employ 400 workers by 2012 _at_
gt16/hour - Planned annual output 650 nacelles
Sources NREL, Wichita Eagle
26Arkansas Becoming Manufacturing Hub
- LM Glasfiber
- Employs 300 workers _at_ 12-15/hour
- Invested 95 million in Little Rock
- Mitsubishi Power Systems
- Announced October 2009
- 100 million plant will bring 400 jobs in 2011
- Nordex
- Sept 2009 - Broke ground on 100 million plant
- Expected to employ 700 by 2014
- Emergya Wind Technologies/Polymarin
- Plans to invest 16 M and create 830 jobs _at_
15/hour
Installed Wind
Existing Manufacturing
Announced manufacturing
Sources NREL, AR Economic Dev. Commission,
Nordex, Arkansas Business
27SPP is Building Transmission
28Transmission Expansion - Costs
29Transmission Expansion - Miles
30Draft EHV Overlay
30
31Priority Projects
Group 2
32Quantitative Benefits
- Study quantified NPV benefits of 1.5 billion
over 40 years - B/C Ratio of 0.74
33Qualitative Benefits
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34Examples of Other Transmission Benefits
- Fuel Diversity
- Market Liquidity Improvements
- Ability to Idle High Cost/Environmental Impact
Resources - Energy Capacity and Ancillary Market Facilitation
- Storm Hardening
- Increased Competition
- Extreme Reliability Event Mitigation (n-1) and
(n-2) Weather Wind - Ability to Serve New Load
- Capacity Factor Improvement of Wind Resources
- Reserve Margin Reduction
- Export and Import Improvement
- Improved Operational Efficiencies
35Larger Transmission Reduces Right of Way
36Cost Allocation
37RSC and CAWG
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38Highway/Byway Cost Allocation
39Current and Future Markets
40What kind of markets does SPP have now?
- Transmission Participants buy and sell use of
regional transmission lines that are owned by
different parties - 2009 transmission market transactions 486
million - Energy Imbalance Service (EIS) Participants buy
and sell wholesale electricity in real-time - Market uses least expensive energy from regional
resources to serve demand (load) first - SPP monitors resource/load balance to ensure
system reliability - 2009 wholesale market transactions 1.14
billion
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41Transmission Service
As Sales Agents, we administer
- Provides one-stop shoppingfor use of regional
transmission lines - Consistent rates, terms, conditions
- Independent
- Process gt 12,000 transactions/month
- 2009 transmission market transactions 486
million
a 1,621 page transmission tariff on behalf of
our members and customers.
42Transmission Service
43Transmission Service
44EIS Market Operation
SPPs energy market is like the NYSE
- Monitors supply/demand balance
- Ensures economic dispatchwhile meeting system
reliability - Provides settlement data
- 2009 wholesale market transactions 1.14
billion
and follows over 200 pages of market protocols.
45Benefits of current real-time energy market
4646
47SPP Pricing Zone Information
47
48Impact of Congestion on Locational Prices
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49Impact of Congestion on Locational Prices
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52Why develop new markets?
- SPP conducts complex cost-benefit studies before
beginning any new market development - Under Regional State Committee oversight
- 2005 Charles River and Associates (CRA) analysis
of the EIS market - Estimated benefit of 86 million for first year
- Actual benefit of 103 million for first year
- New markets will bring estimated average
additional benefits of 100 million - According to 2009 Ventyx analysis
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52
53What type of new markets is SPP implementing?
- Day Ahead SPP determines what generating units
should run the next day for maximum
cost-effectiveness - Ancillary Services Market to buy and sell
reserve energy that - Meets emergency needs
- Regulates instantaneous load and generation
changes - Maintain electricity quality (keeping voltage up,
etc.)
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54Day Ahead market makes regional generation
choices
55Day Ahead market offers regional diversity
56Benefits of Ancillary Services market
- Greater access to reserve electricity
- Improve regional balancing of supply and demand
- Facilitate the integration of renewable resources
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57Perfect Storm of Complex Issues
Greenhouse gas emissions
Growth in demand
Political and technical challenges
Aging infrastructure
Challenges with integrating renewables into grid
Trade imbalance
Lengthy permitting for new generation
Lack of transmission
Rising gas prices
Growth in uncommitted capacity
58Source EPRI
59Summary/Recommendations/Next Steps
- Know the players
- Is it local, state, national, or international?
- Are you really green?
- Know the facts take a position.