Title: Electricity Restructuring: A Fine Mess
1Electricity Restructuring A Fine Mess
- Electricity markets are under stress due to
higher fuel prices and the costs of new
generation - Legislative eruptions in a number of organized
states IL, MD, VA, OH, and PA indicate
problems in the wholesale markets - What does Washington think? FERC feels the heat
as Congress remains a sleeping giant
2Electricity Markets are Under Stress
- Forward electricity market prices are much higher
year-to-year in the beginning of a cycle that
could last for years - Natural gas prices are increasingly important to
setting electricity prices in every region of the
country - The increasing cost of new construction will add
to upward pressure on price as demand in most
regions has caught-up with the last wave of
natural gas generation investment between
1995-2004
3Fuel Prices to Remain Strong
- Electricity price increases resulting from high
fuel prices - Natural gas often determines prices at the margin
- While US gas production has increased in the past
two years, the markets anticipate continuing high
prices - Gas generation will increase demand as the price
of LNG will be bid-up due to global competition
for supply
4Forward Gas Prices Remain Strong
Source Forward gas prices are Nymex. Annual
average spot gas are Platts.
5Increasing Coal Prices
- Coal is often on the margin in the Midwest and
Southeast and plays a major role in setting
average prices over time - The price of Central Appalachian coal has doubled
in the past year and forward markets suggest
continued high prices for next three years - The majority of Powder River Basin coal costs are
for transportation, and railroads have the power
when contracts are renewals
6Coal Prices Increasing and Strong
Source Forward coal prices are Nymex. Coal Spot
Prices are Bloomberg.
7New Generation/Increased Capital Costs
- Input costs for new plants have almost-doubled
since 2003 including labor, copper, zinc,
nickel, aluminum, iron, steel, cement - We will pay more- not less- for the next new
round of plant construction - Major financial risks affect coal and nuclear
plant construction - Wind and new nuclear technologies are riskier
than mature technologies
8Estimated Cost ofNew Generation
Source Compiled by FERC Staff from various
sources. Cost estimates exclude carbon capture
and sequestration costs.
9Carbon Pricing Is Affecting Investments
- Its likely Congress will put a price on carbon
duringthe next presidency - Without CCS, coal emits 4 times the carbon as
natural gas combined cycle plants per MWH - Uncertainty about when and how carbon policy is
implemented has resulted in cancellation/postponem
ent of 50 coal plants since Jan 2007 26 remain
under construction - However climate debate ends, coal and natural gas
production costs will increase - As long as carbon policy is unresolved, it will
remain difficult to invest in coal plant
10Back to the Future Natural Gas is the Near-term
Fuel of Choice
- Neither new coal nor nuclear units will supply
new capacity for a decade - Renewable sources are a growing share of total
new generation but will remain relatively small
sources to total need - Demand response and energy efficiency will be
important but wont eliminate the need for new
capacity - Natural gas will continue to be the leading fuel
for at least the next five years Gas
consumption for power increased 55 since 2000
Estimates for a 70 increase by 2017
11Net Natural Gas Generation by Region
(TWh)
- Region 2000 2007 Difference
- Northeast 66.3 103.9 37.6
- RFC 41.0 64.5 23.5
- SERC 86.9 150.5 63.6
- FRCC 42.0 96.7 54.7
- ERCOT 155.9 163.3 7.4
- Midwest 44.2 62.8 18.5
- WECC-Rockies and SW 28.1 77.6 49.5
- WECC-CA and NW 115.4 129.7 14.4
Source Derived from Energy Velocity
(differences due to rounding).
12Capital Costs Increasing
Power Capital Costs Index (PCCI)
Source Cambridge Energy Research Associates.
71023-12
13NERC Net Load Projections through 2016
- Region Total Difference (GW) Percent Change
- Northeast 9.7 17
- RFC 23.2 13
- SERC 28.2 14
- FRCC 7.1 15
- ERCOT 14.7 24
- Midwest 17.2 21
- WECC-Rockies and SW 7.6 25
- WECC-CA and NW 10.9 10
- Total 108.8 14
Source Derived from NERC 2007 Long Term
Reliability Assessment, Oct. 2007 and NERC data
request, June 2008.
14The State of Electricity Restructuring
- Restructuring isnt going well no traditional
states are considering restructuring - States that restructured have had political
eruptions that are not over - High prices are not putting steel in the ground
- Congestion pricing, marginal cost pricing, and
capacity charges are adding to residential
customer bills
15The RTO/ISO Structures
- Created by FERC following passage of the 1992
Energy Policy Act - RTOs are voluntary structures/ no statutory
protection - FERC is under pressure to get markets right
- GAO study this fall
- Public power and municipal utilities unhappy with
RTOs
16What is The Likely Outcome?
- You cant be something with nothing.
- Congress will have hearings/ the states will
continue to press changes to wholesale markets - FERC will have new leadership in January
- So long as commodity prices stay high, investment
languishes, and the states agitate on high
prices, sector uncertainty will persist