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Wild Backstory Aside, House Bill 6 Opens a Door for Energy Efficiency Monetization in Ohio

January 27, 2021

Ohio House Bill 6 had the kind of year that, if it hadn’t taken place during 2020, might have garnered national headlines and caught the attention of Hollywood. 

Before we succumb to the temptation of divulging exploitative details–which include outcries of scandal, bribery, corruption, and racketeering–let’s cover the fundamentals of the bill and what they mean to organizations in the Buckeye State looking to monetize their energy efficiency (EE) projects in 2021 and beyond.

HB 6 was enacted into law on Oct. 19, 2019, and requires all energy efficiency (EE) programs offered by electric utilities in Ohio to end by December 31, 2020.

That utility EE programs are no longer offered in 2021 means any rebate rewards offered by utilities are no longer available to organizations who complete or have completed, EE projects. 

But that DOES NOT mean that organizations and EE project developers in Ohio who help the electric grid by permanently reducing electric demand are shut out from earning revenue for their efforts. 

When one door closes…

In Ohio, organizations and EE project developers can, with the help of a licensed curtailment service provider (CSP), offer their permanently reduced demand (“negawatts”) into PJM’s capacity market, the Reliability Pricing Model.

Once the reduced load is accepted into the market, the organization will earn revenue from PJM for four years after the project was completed. 

To learn more about monetizing energy efficiency projects in PJM in the wake of Ohio House Bill 6’s enactment, click here.  

To learn more about the wild ride House Bill 6 had, Google it and pick from any number of vitriol-laced articles that show up on the first page. 

Fun as it may be to shine a light on the mudslinging around HB 6, it’s not our place at The Current to feed the political maelstrom. We’re here to inform, so you can make educated energy management decisions.

That said, you might want to make sure you do your reading on HB 6 indoors and away from the windows. There is a lot of lightning out there right now.

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The Truth About PJM’s Pricing Models

December 10, 2020

PJM Pricing Spaghetti

PJM and the National Weather Service have at least this in common. Both create model simulations to give insight into what might happen in the future. 

If you’ve ever been in the path of a hurricane, you’ve probably spent some time deciphering spaghetti models–computer-generated simulations that predict a storm’s trajectory. 

These simulations offer a range of possibilities for where a given storm might land so the public can make informed decisions about how to respond. 

PJM, it turns out, creates similar models offering a range for future pricing in its ancillary services market. These models, however, are not publicly available. 

That’s where the problem of misleading information in the marketplace begins.

If we look at any spaghetti model tracking a storm path, we’ll likely see a single predictive strand that lies well outside the pack of probabilities–an outlier that is highly unlikely to occur but is still within the realm of possibility. 

PJM’s pricing models have their outliers, too–a single, far-from-the-mean prediction that may seem attractive to market participants because of its favorable price tag. 

Like most things in the regulatory arena of the energy industry, however, the truth isn’t as simple as the spaghetti model analogy might suggest.  

Let’s look at a real pricing model PJM recently submitted to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) as part of a proposal to change its Operating Reserves, which would place a premium on Synchronous Reserves (SR) per FERC’s direction. 

In its synchronous reserve pricing simulation,  PJM ran a model, changing one element of the data.  They then ran a 2nd model changing a different element of data. Both elements are changed as a result of the design changes, but neither model had the ability to capture both changes.

In PJM’s Case C (the highest price noted in the chart below) the key factor was the inclusion of an increased cost driver called the Operating Reserve Demand Curve (ORDC) which showed higher prices.  Case B included just the effects of eliminating Tier 1 SR and then re-dispatching more efficiently.  PJM explains the difference between these two cases is a more accurate indication leading to the $46k value (the middle row of the chart below).

PJM SR Simulations Chart
PJM’s simulation results do not account for market participant response to the higher revenue opportunity and CPower projections take this into account. Source: PJM

One of the simulations–Case C in the chart, an outlier that PJM notes does NOT account for certain offsetting factors–indicates an average SR price of $7.89/MWhr or about $69,000/MWyr could occur as a result of the changes FERC has approved to PJM’s Operating Reserves. 

In this case, the higher pricing model might seem attractive to potential participants in the PJM’s Synchronous Reserves Program. Will this outlier come true?

Not likely according to PJM. Here’s additional information why. 

While PJM’s market changes WILL increase revenue potential in the SR market, the actual increase is uncertain. Faced with that uncertainty of outcome, it’s not terribly scientific (or wise) to assess the data and assume the extreme is destined to come true. 

The chart below offers a history of recent actual SR pricing and a prediction CPower has made and is actively sharing with our customers. 

(Note: these or any predictions should not be considered guarantees of revenue.) 

Committing assets in an energy portfolio believing PJM’s outlier pricing prediction will prove true is akin to making a storm plan based solely on the lone string of spaghetti that predicts the hurricane will land in a different time zone from yours. 

You’re betting on the extreme. 

PJM’s SR market is poised to become more valuable in the wake of recent changes. Time will tell where prices actually land, but it’s important for participants to know the odds before they predict the score. 

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