Title: Mandatory Electric Reliability Standards and Transmission Expansion
1Mandatory Electric Reliability Standards and
Transmission Expansion
- Suedeen G. Kelly
- Commissioner
- Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
- The Canadian Institute Energy Group
- Transmission Planning Reliability
- Toronto, Canada
- January 26, 2005
2Standards and expansion go hand in hand
- Canada and the U.S. should continue and expand
our cooperative efforts on improving grid
reliability. - We need both mandatory reliability standards and
at least in the U.S. - cost-effective
transmission expansion - One without the other is simply second best
3 FERC has added Reliability to the
Infrastructure portion of its Strategic Plan
- Allow prompt recovery of prudent expenses to
safeguard reliability, security and safety - Oversee the development and enforcement of
grid-reliability standards - Work with other agencies, especially the states,
to improve infrastructure security - Work with the states to support robust programs
for customer demand-side participation
4Transmission infrastructure investment problems
- Not just one problem
- Siting
- Uncertainty about
- Restructuring
- Who builds?
- Who pays?
- Lack of regional overview of needs
- We have many roads, few regional highways.
- What can the FERC and others do?
5Lagging ElectricTransmission Investment
Half as much annual investment in 2000 as in 1975
Annual growth rates in Gen, Trans, Load
6Solutions
- Generator interconnection policies
- Clarify transmission rights pricing
- Provide incentives where effective
- Support others efforts
- FERCs Infrastructure Conferences
- Improve RTO transmission planning
- States (NGA, MSEs, RSCs) merchants
- DOE critical infrastructure bottlenecks
- Legislation
- Take a regional focus
7FERCs new Reliability Division
8FERC reliability efforts in 2004
- Completion of the Blackout Report
- Participation in the Readiness Audits with NERC
- Policy Statement Bulk Power System Reliability
(107 FERC 61,052) - Encouraging the revision of NERC standards to be
specific and enforceable (Version 0)
9 More 2004 reliability efforts
- Specific investigations studies -- e.g.,
Vegetation Management (107 FERC 61,053) - Operator training study
- Coordination with the NRC for grid reliability
and nuclear plant safety issues - Participation in a natural gas pipeline
disruption impact analysis - Study and identification of best tools and
practices for IT functions
10Possible future FERC initiatives
- Cyber security evaluations of SCADA systems and
IT platforms - Reactive power oversight, including planning,
operations, and compensation - Transmission planning oversight including
adequacy and extreme contingency plans - Work that will be required by any reliability
legislation various rulemakings
11Reliability legislation needed
- FERC would certify an Electric Reliability
Organization ERO for the United States. - The ERO would develop reliability standards
applicable in the U.S., subject to FERC approval
or remand. - The ERO would enforce standards and impose
penalties. - Note the ERO could not require transmission
expansion separate expansion policies needed as
discussed earlier.
12After legislation passes
- FERC issues a proposed rule implementing the
legislation - Rulemaking process must follow the Administrative
Procedures Act notice comment decisions
based on the record - Ex parte does not apply no prejudgment
- Issue final rule within 180 days a tight
deadline
13After the final rule issues
- One (or more unlikely) parties may apply to
FERC to be the ERO in the U.S. - FERC selects and certifies one ERO for the U.S.
- The ERO then pursues recognition in Canada and
Mexico, according to the law. - Canada and Mexico may choose to have a similar or
different process.
14 An International ERO
- The proposed law urges the President to negotiate
international ERO agreements with Canada and
Mexico. - FERC, DOE and Canada have been consulting
frequently for several years about working
together on implementing the new law. - U.S. is committed to a cooperative effort.
15 Binational ERO Oversight Group
- Formed in the early Spring 2004 by the Canadian
Federal-Provincial-Territorial task force, DOE,
and FERC. - Government staff from NRCan, Provincial
Regulators, DOE, FERC. - Identifying issues and possible solutions
- Have not yet involved principals
- Mexico to be included later
16 A Cooperative Effort
- Common Goal of Enhancing Reliability
- FERC is working in partnership with
- Canadian government officials
- U.S. Federal and State Agencies (DOE, NRC, DHS)
- NERC, regional reliability councils and industry
stakeholder groups - Non-jurisdictional entities
- Overlapping Roles and Responsibilities
17Examples of Issues
- ERO as an International Organization
- Standards Development Process
- Regulatory Review/Approval of Standards
- Enforcement of Standards
- Intergovernmental Cooperation
- Other Issues roles of regions members
18 Two Governments One Goal
- Reliability standards should be more than the
least common denominator of the current
practices of todays grid operators. - The ERO must be an advocate for excellence in
North American reliability. - Blackouts like in 2003 should be, if not a thing
of the past, as rare as humanly possible.