Title: 6th Plan Conservation Resource CostEffectiveness
16th Plan Conservation Resource Cost-Effectiveness
- Conservation Resource Advisory Committee
- March 12, 2009
2How the Plans Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Impacts Regional Conservation Programs
- Council Plan
- Establishes regional conservation targets based
its interpretation of the Acts requirements - Contains methodology and assumptions (e.g.,
future market prices, measure cost savings) for
determining cost-effectiveness - Contains specific measure level (e.g. high
efficiency electric water heaters) determinations
of cost-effectiveness - Bonnevilles resource acquisitions are to be
consistent with the Councils Plan - Utilities covered by I-937 in Washington state
must adhere to the Councils methodology
3The Plans Definition of Resource
Cost-Effectiveness Comes From the Regional Act
- "Cost-effective, means that a measure or
resource must be forecast - to be reliable and available within the time it
is needed - to meet or reduce the electric power demand of
the consumers at an estimated incremental system
cost no greater than that of the least-cost
similarly reliable and available alternative
measure or resource, or any combination thereof.
4Under the Act the term "system cost" means
- An estimate of all direct costs of a measure or
resource over its effective life, including - the cost of distribution and transmission to the
consumer - waste disposal costs
- end-of-cycle costs
- fuel costs (including projected increases)
- and such quantifiable environmental costs and
benefits as are directly attributable to such
measure or resource
5The Acts Definition of Cost-Effectiveness
- Seeks to minimize the total cost of meeting the
regions need for the services provided by
electricity, i.e., its goal is economic
efficiency. - Does not address the distribution of these costs
among parties in the region
6The Council Does Not Use A Single Regional
Avoided Cost To Determine Conservations
Cost-Effectiveness
- We Use What We Learn from the Portfolio Model
- Pick any forecast of future market prices
- Add Risk Premiums for conservations hedge
value to that forecast (different ones for
lost-opportunity dispatchable) - Use this risk adjusted price to determine the
value of the energy savings
7IRP Methodology
- 6th Plan is testing thousands of plans against
750 futures - Model identifies plans with the lowest cost for
a given level of risk - Model tests alternative conservation deployment
schedules (amount and timing) as well as risk
mitigation benefits of buying conservation above
forecast avoided cost - Regional Conservation Targets are derived from
Plans on lowest-cost lowest-risk frontier
8Council Process for Estimating Cost-Effective
Conservation Resource Potential Setting
Acquisition Targets
Measure Cost
Measure Lifetime
Measure Savings and Load Shape
- Program Data
- Contractor Bids
- Retail Price Surveys
- Evaluations
- Census Data
- Manufacturers Data
- Engineering Estimates
- End Use Load Research
- Engineering Models
- Billing History Analysis
- Independent Testing Labs
Portfolio Model
Market Model
Cost-Effectiveness Model
- Determines measure and program level
cost-effectiveness using - Measure costs, savings load shape
- Aurora Market prices
- TD savings (losses deferred )
- 10 Act Credit
- Quantifiable non-energy costs benefits
- Financial Assumptions (e.g. Discount Rate)
- Risk Premium from Porfolio Model
Provides 20-year Forecast of Hourly Wholesale
Market Prices CO2 Emission/kWh Under Average
Water Conditions, Medium Gas Price Forecast for
Medium Load Growth Scenario
Determines NPV of Portfolios with Alternative
Levels of Conservation vs Other Resources Under
Wide Range for Future Conditions
Plans Conservation Target
9Portfolio Analysis Determines How Much Energy
Efficiency to Develop in the Face of Uncertainty
Frequency Chart
1,000 Trials
1,000 Displayed
.043
43
Portfolio Analysis Model
.032
32.25
.022
21.5
.011
10.75
Mean 689
.000
0
(3,509)
(1,131)
1,247
3,625
6,003
Dollars
NPV System Cost
Efficient Frontier
10Plans Along the Efficient Frontier Permit
Trade-Offs of Costs Against Risk
Least Cost
Least Risk
11Alternative Cost-Effectiveness Tests
- Participant Cost Test (PTC)
- Costs and benefits to the program participant
- Total Resource Cost (TRC)
- All Quantifiable costs benefits regardless of
who accrues them. Includes participant and
others costs - Utility Cost Test (UTC)
- Quantifiable costs benefits that accrue only to
the utility system. Specifically excludes
participant costs - Rate Impact Measure (RIM)
- Net change in electricity utility revenue
requirements. - Attempts to measure rate impact on all utility
customers especially those that do not directly
participate in the conservation program - Treats lost revenues (lower participant bills)
as a cost
12Plan Uses Total Resource Cost ( Benefits)
Perspective
- Best meets the requirements of the Regional Act
- Considers all quantifiable costs benefits
regardless of who accrues them - Ensures that conservation expenditures are good
for the power system, the customer and society - Allows conservation to be compared to other
resources considered for development by including
all quantifiable costs benefits - Was strongly recommended by utilities in first
Council Plan - Plan targets would be significantly higher if
Plan had considered only Utility Cost
13Some Utilities Now Recommend Use of Utility Cost
Test Perspective
- Considers only those costs benefits that accrue
to electric utility system - Energy kWh at avoided wholesale cost at time
saved - Transmission distribution kW benefits if
coincident with system peak and at value of
deferred expansion cost - Utility cost for incentives program
administration - Does not count customer costs or benefits
- Ensure that conservation is good for the utility
- Acts as the upper limit on utility incentives for
measures with large non-electricity benefits - Used as a measure of utility cost efficiency
- Striving for low utility cost share keeps revenue
requirements lower
14NEET Process Raised Additional Issues
- Review method of calculating cost-effectiveness
- Is the Councils existing interpretation of the
Acts definition too conservative? - At what level of aggregation should the
calculation of costs and benefits be performed? - Measure
- System
- Building
- Program
- Portfolio
15Why Council Uses TRCAvoids Potential Double
Counting of the Savings
- Utility invest 2500 in efficient motor to
acquire 5000 kWh/yr savings - Levelized Cost 3.4 cents/kWh
- B/C 1.32
- Customer matches 2500 utility investment to save
the same 5000 kWh/yr - Simple payback 10 years, motor last 20 years
- Total of all direct cost is 5000 for 5000 kWh/yr
of savings - Levelized cost 6.8 cents/kWh
- B/C ratio 0.66
16Why Council Uses TRCDirects Funds Toward
Measures That Optimize Total Utility and Customer
Investments
- Utility invest 600 toward cost of 6000 solar PV
system that saves 1200 kWh/yr - Alternatively utility and consumer could
- Invest 160 in 40 CFLs to save 1200 kWh, reducing
cost 440 - Invest 600 to buy 150 CFLs, saving 5000 kWh,
quadrupling savings - Especially important when budgets are limited
17Why Council Uses TRCAvoids promoting measures
that may impose non-energy costs on others
- Act directs the Council give second priority to
the use of renewable resources - Analysis in 1st Plan concluded that cost of using
wood stoves to offset use of electric heat was
below cost of electricity from new generating
facilities - 1st Plan excluded use of wood heat due to
non-energy cost (air pollution) imposed on the
region
18Why Council Uses TRCExpands list of conservation
options by allowing consideration of quantifiable
non-energy benefits
- Energy Star Clothes Washer in Homes with Gas
Water Heater and Dryer - Present Value Capital Cost
- 58/MWh
- Present Value to Power System 17/MWh (B/C
0.3) - Value to Region/Society (includes natural gas,
detergent water savings) 110/MWh (B/C
2.0) - Power systems willingness-to-pay for these
savings should be limited to its present value
benefits - Electric Utility could provide incentive up to
17/MWh for washer in a home with gas water and
dryer heat
19Consideration of Non-Energy Benefits Expands the
Conservation Supply Curve
Conservation Resources in Plan Created by
Consideration of Non-Energy Benefits
20Care Must Be Used in Applying The Plans
Cost-Effectiveness Results Prescriptively
- Not all measures are in the draft 6th Plan
- Plan contains over 1000 applications of specific
EE technologies - NOT an exhaustive list of all possible measures
applications (e.g. custom measures) - Plan assumes administrative costs 20 of
capital - Administrative cost vary widely by measure by
program design - Measure cost-effectiveness in Plan is an estimate
- Measure costs and savings are a single point
estimate, but vary widely in practice - Plan targets are based on full portfolio model
analysis, 750 forecasts of avoided costs - Measure/Program/Portfolio cost-effectiveness
generally determined on a single forecast of
avoided costs for the next 20 years (with
adders for hedge risk)
21Granularity/Bundling So Whats A Measure?
- "Resource" means-- electric power, including the
actual or planned electric power capability of
generating facilities, or actual or planned load
reduction resulting from direct application of a
renewable energy resource by a consumer, or from
a conservation measure.
22Why Bundle
- Measures are interactive, so total savings are
not the sum of their parts - Example Heat pumps, duct sealing and
commissioning - Deeper savings are lower cost
- Example Conversions and/upgrades to HSPF 9.0
have a higher TRC B/C ratio than to HSPF 8.5 - Adding a non-cost effective measure reduces
cost per unit of savings by increasing market
penetration - Example Adding prime window replacements
increases participation in weatherization
program, spreading fixed cost over more savings
23Risks of Bundling
- Reduces in economic benefits of conservation
- If the average cost of all conservation equals
the avoided cost, theres no room for a mistakes - If non-cost effective measure dominates
program/portfolio, it places all savings at risk
(i.e., not recoverable, not counted toward
target) - Slippery slope Can bundling of any measures
(e.g. PVs w/CFLs) be justified? - Is there a need for consistent application across
the region?
24Care Must Be Used in Applying The Plans
Cost-Effectiveness Results Prescriptively
- Plans cost savings estimates are averages
- Site-specific applications may be more or less
cost-effective than in Plan - The Plan average may not accurately reflect
specific program conditions - Programs should be tailored to reflect specific
program designs, delivery mechanisms, measure
applications, location and other key cost or
savings factors - Program estimates need to be more or less
granular than Plan estimates - Individual measures evaluated in Plan are
aggregated into programs/portfolios (e.g., Plan
doesnt have Energy Star New Homes as a measure)
25Avoided Costs Are Forecast to Be Significantly
Higher
26Energy Efficiency is Still the Cheapest Option
Assumptions Efficiency Cost Average Cost of
All Conservation Targeted in 5th Power
Plan Transmission cost losses to point of LSE
wholesale delivery No federal investment or
production tax credits Baseload operation (CC -
85CF, Nuclear 87.5 CF, SCPC 85, Wind 32
CF) Medium NG and coal price forecast (Proposed
6th Plan) Bingaman/Specter safety valve CO2 cost
27Draft 6th MWa of Technically Achievable
Conservation Potential
28Draft 6th MWa of Technically Achievable
Conservation Potential
5th Plan Estimate
29Backup Slides
30Customer Perspective
- Considers only those costs benefits that accrue
to end use consumer - Electric bill savings
- Quantifiable non-energy benefits
- Customer share of capital labor cost
- Customer share of periodic replacement cost
- Customer operation and maintenance cost/savings
- Ensure that conservation is good for the customer
- Common metrics B/C ratio, by simple payback,
return on investment, years to positive cash flow
31Common Expressions of Cost-Effectiveness
- Payback
- Expressed as time to recoup investment
- Benefit/Cost ratio
- Expressed as a ratio
- Net Present Value
- Expressed as dollar value
- Levelized Cost
- Expressed as cost per kWh or /MWh
32Common Metrics for TRC Cost-Effectiveness
Benefit/Cost Ratio
Discounted Present Value of Benefits ()
Discounted Present Value of Costs ()
Net Present Value
Discounted PV of Benefits Discounted PV of
Costs ()
Levelized Cost (for comparison to other resources)
Discounted Present Value Costs Annualized over
Life ()
Annual kWh Saved at Bus Bar (kWh)
33Conservation Measure Cost-EffectivenessInputs
and Outputs
Bulk Power System Value
ECM Costs, Savings, Load Shapes Coincidence
Factors
Bulk Transmission System Benefits
Local Distribution System Value
PNW Avoided Cost by Transmission Control Area
ProCost
Local Distribution System TD Benefits
Aurora West Coast Market Price Forecast
Total Societal Value
Non-Energy Benefits
Carbon Emissions Benefits
34Council 5th Plan Forecast of Future Average
Monthly Market Prices(Mid C-Trading Hub)
35Typical On-Peak Load Profiles
36Forecast On-Peak Market Power Prices by Month and
Year
37Typical Off-Peak Load Profiles
38Forecast Off-Peak Market Power Prices by Month
and Year
39The Councils Conservations Cost-Effectiveness
Analysis Compares Savings with Forecast Market
Prices at the time the savings occur
- Four Load Segments are used to compute the
value of savings - Weekday Peak Load Hours
- Weekday Ramp Up/Ramp Down hours and Weekend
Peak Load Hours - Weekday and Weekend Off-Peak hours
- Weekend and Holiday Very-Low
40(No Transcript)
41Each Conservation Measure Has a Different
Cost-Effectiveness Limit Based on When Its
Savings Occur
Weighted Average Value of Space Heating Savings
41/MWh
Weighted Average Value of Space CoolingSavings
78/MWh
42Impact Load Shape on Regional Bulk Power System
Value
- Impact on Present Value Benefit (20-year measure
life) - Low End
- Street Lighting - 41/MWh
- Residential Space Heating - 41/MWh
- High End
- Central AC - 78/MWh
- Solar Water Heating - 74/MWh
-
43Impact of Bulk Transmission System TD on Power
System Value
- Assumed Bulk Transmission System Avoided Cost
of 3.00/kW-year - Impact on Present Value Benefit (20 year measure
life) - Low end
- Irrigated Agriculture - 0.00/MWh
- Residential AC - 0.00/MWh
- High end
- Residential Space Heating - 1.05/MWh
- Residential Water Heating - 0.52/MWh
44Local Transmission and Distribution Benefits
- There is value in delaying utility investments in
local distribution networks (and sub-High Voltage
Transmission) that is caused by load growth - Not all load growth results in the immediate need
to increase local distribution system network
capacity - Other Demand Side Management (e.g. load
control) programs may be better suited to
deferring network expansion - The value of reducing load growth defer
distribution capacity expansions - Capital expansion cost/KW-yr Probability
expansion will be deferred by conservation
measures impact on distribution system peak
45Illustrative Local Distribution System T D
Benefits
46Impact of Local TD on Power System Value
- Assumed Local Distribution System Avoided Cost
of 20/kW-year - Impact on Present Value Benefit (20-year measure
life) - Low end
- Solar PV - 0.14/MWh
- Solar Water Heating - 0.30 MWh
- High end
- Residential Ovens - 26/MWh
- Residential Air Source Heat Pumps - 19/MWh
47Environmental Externalities Value
- Based on Carbon Dioxide Emissions from West Coast
Power System - Consensus that 0 is wrong
- Used 5- 40/ton of CO2 emitted
- Varied amount and future date of carbon control
implementation - Adds about 3/MWh to Present Value Benefit of
Savings (also varies by shape of savings)
48Expected Value of CO2 Control Cost by Year
49CO2/MWh Trends for Conservation Savings by Load
Segment
50Cost-Effectiveness of Conservation Varies by
Perspective
- Energy Star Clothes Washer (MEF 2.2)
- with Electric Water Heating and Electric Dryer
- Present Value Capital Cost 0.44/kWh
- Value to Bulk Power System 53/MWh (B/C 1.17)
- Value to Local Distribution System (includes bulk
power system value) 66/MWh (B/C 1.47) - Value to Region/Society (includes detergent
water savings, plus carbon credit) 123/MWh
(B/C 2.8)
51Northwest Energy Efficiency Implementation Web
Northwest Power and Conservation Council
Bonneville Power Administration
The Plan
Regional Technical Forum
Public Utilities
State Regulatory Commissions
Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance
Investor Owned Utilities
Energy Trust of Oregon
Rate Revenues
Markets, Codes Standards
End Use Consumers
Policy
Policy Recommendations
Conservation Programs
Market Transformation Programs/Projects
Technical Recommendations
Program Funding
525th Plan Identified Nearly 4,600 MWa of
Technically Available Conservation Potential
53Adjustments to 5th Plans Conservation Resource
Potential
- Reductions in Available Potential
- Program Accomplishments
- Changes in Law
- Federal Standards for general service lighting
- State Building Codes
- Changes in Markets
- Improved Current Practice due to Energy Star,
LEED, Programs, Market Transformation - Other Changes to Federal Standards (10 adopted,
21 under revision, and 12 with effective dates by
2014) - Changes in Forecast
- Less new commercial floor area
- Lower industrial forecast
54Adjustments to 5th Plans Conservation Resource
Potential
- Increases in Available Potential
- Changes in Scope
- Distribution System Efficiency Improvements
- Consumer electronics (TVs, set top boxes)
- Irrigation Water Management and Dairy Farm
- Changes in Data and Technology
- Detailed Industrial Sector Potential
- New Measures (e.g. ductless heat pumps, solid
state lighting)
55Avoided Costs Are Forecast to Be Significantly
Higher
56Energy Efficiency is Still the Cheapest Option
Assumptions Efficiency Cost Average Cost of
All Conservation Targeted in 5th Power
Plan Transmission cost losses to point of LSE
wholesale delivery No federal investment or
production tax credits Baseload operation (CC -
85CF, Nuclear 87.5 CF, SCPC 85, Wind 32
CF) Medium NG and coal price forecast (Proposed
6th Plan) Bingaman/Specter safety valve CO2 cost
57Draft 6th MWa of Technically Achievable
Conservation Potential
58Draft 6th MWa of Technically Achievable
Conservation Potential
5th Plan Estimate