HomeMy WebLinkAbout20040217_754.pdfDECISION MEMORANDUM
TO:CO MMISSI 0 NER KJELLAND ER
COMMISSIONER SMITH
COMMISSIONER HANSEN
COMMISSION SECRETARY
COMMISSION STAFF
LEGAL
FROM:SCOTT WOODBURY
DATE:FEBRUARY 13, 2004
SUBJECT:CASE NO. IPC-04-2 (Idaho Power)
PETITION FOR DECLARATORY ORDER
OWNERSHIP OF MARKETABLE "ENVIRONMENTAL ATTRIBUTES"
ASSOCIATED WITH PURPA QF
On February 5, 2004, Idaho Power Company (Idaho Power; Company) filed a Petition
with the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (Commission) requesting an Order determining
ownership of the marketable "environmental attributes j associated with a PURP A qualifying
facility (QF) when Idaho Power enters into a long-term, fixed rate contract to purchase the energy
produced by that QF. Reference IDAP A 31.01.01.101.
Background
In June 2003 , the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) received a Petition
for Declaratory Order from PURP A QFs seeking FERC interpretation of its avoided cost rules
under PURP A. Specifically, Petitioners sought an Order declaring that avoided cost contracts
entered into pursuant to PURP A, absent express provisions to the contrary, do not inherently
convey to the purchasing utility any renewable energy credits (RECs) or similar tradable
certificates. It was the contention of Petitioners that the power purchase price that the utility pays
under such a contract compensates a QF only for the energy and capacity produced by that facility
and not for any environmental attributes associated with the facility. Reference FERC Docket
EL03-133-000.
I Idaho Power does not derIDe "environmental attributes." A good defmition is included in a white paper prepared by
the Energy Trust of Oregon Inc,- Green Tag Ownership and Disposition (September 17, 2003), See attached
Appendix A."
DECISION MEMORANDUM
In an Order issued on October 1 , 2003 (105 FERC 'II 004), FERC granted the
Petitioners request for a declaratory order, to the extent that the petition asked the Commission to
declare that Commission s avoided cost regulations did not contemplate the existence of RECs and
that the avoided cost rates for capacity and energy sold under contracts entered into pursuant to
PURP A do not convey the RECs, in the absence of an expressed contractual provision. FERC's
Order made the following specific findings:
19. Section 2l0(a) of PURPA requires the Commission to prescribe rules
imposing on electric utilities the obligation to offer to purchase electric
energy from QFs. Under Section 210(b) ofPURPA, such purchases must be
at rates that are: (1) just and reasonable to electric consumers and in the
public interest; (2) not discriminatory against QFs; and (3) not in excess of
the incremental cost to the electric utility of alternative electric energy.
Section 21 O( d) of PURP A, in turn, defines "incremental costs of alternative
electric energy" as "the cost to the electric utility of the electric energy of
which, but for the purchases from (the QF), such utility would generate or
purchase from another source.
20. The Commission implemented the purchase obligations set forth in PURPA
in Section 292.303 of its regulations, 18 CFR 9 292.303(a) (2003), which
provides:
Each electric utility shall purchase in accordance with Section 292.304, any
energy and capacity which is made available from a qualifying facility. . . .
Section 292.304, in turn, requires that rates for purchases shall: (1) be just
and reasonable to the electric customer of the electric utility and in the
public interest; and (2) not discriminate against qualifying cogeneration and
small power production facilities. 18 CFR 9 292.304(a)(1) (2003). The
regulation further provides that nothing in the regulation requires any
electric utility to pay more than the avoided costs for purchases. 18 CFR 9
292.304(a)(2) (2003). Avoided costs" is defined as the "incremental costs
to an electric utility of electric energy or capacity or both which, but for the
purchase from the qualifying facility or qualifying facilities, such utility
would generate itself or purchase from another source.18 CFR 9
292.lOl(b)(6) (2003).
21. Section 292.304 sets forth what factors are to be considered in determining
avoided costs. See 18 CFR 9 292.304(e) (2003). The factors to be
considered include:
(1) The utility's system cost data;
(2) The availability of capacity or energy from a QF during the system
daily and season peak periods;
DECISION MEMORANDUM
(3) The relationship between the availability of energy or capacity from
the QF to the ability of the electric utility to avoid costs; and
(4) The costs or savings resulting from variations in line losses from
those that would have existed in the absence of purchases from the
QF.
22. Significantly, what factor is not mentioned in the Commission s regulations
is the environmental attributes of the QF selling to the utility. This
because avoided costs were intended to put the utility into the same position
when purchasing QF capacity and energy as if the utility generated the
energy itself or purchased the energy from another source. In this regard
the avoided costs that a utility pays a QF does not depend on the type of QF
, whether it is a fossil-fuel-cogeneration facility or a renewable-energy
small power production facility. The avoided costs rates, in short, are not
intended to compensate the QF for more than capacity and energy.
23. As noted above, RECs are relative recent creations of the states. Seven
states have adopted renewable portfolio standards that use unbundled RECs.
What is relevant here is that the RECs are created by the states. They exist
outside the confines of PURP A. PURP A thus does not address the
ownership of RECs. The contracts for sales of QF capacity and energy,
entered into pursuant to PURP A, likewise do not control the ownership of
the RECs (absent an express provision in the contract). States, in creating
RECs, have the power to determine who owns the REC in the initial
instance, and how they may be sold and traded; it is not an issue controlled
by PURP A.
24. We thus grant Petitioners' Petition for Declaratory Order , to the extent that
they ask the Commission to declare that contracts for the sale of QF capacity
and energy entered into pursuant to PURP A do not convey RECs to the
purchasing utility (absent an express provision in a contract to the contrary).
While a state may decide that a sale of power at wholesale automatically
transfers ownership of the state-created RECs, that requirement must find its
authority in state law, not PURP A.
Regional organizations, the Company contends, exist to facilitate green energy
transactions from resources that have been certified as green energy compliant by those
organizations e., Bonneville Environmental Foundation (BEF).These entities issue tradable
green tags" to certified renewable energy producers.Green tags are also known as green
certificates , renewable energy credits (RECs) and tradable renewable certificates (TRCs). A green
tag represents the environmental and other non-power attributes associated with 1 megawatt hour
(MWh) of electricity generated from a renewable resource. Some of the QFs from whom Idaho
Power anticipates making purchases in the future, the Company contends, have indicated an
DECISION MEMORANDUM
intention to obtain marketable green tags as a result of entering into contracts with Idaho Power.
Green tags avoid the need to package the electricity with its environmental attributes. The tags
provide a way in which to "unbundle" the environmental attributes from the electricity and permit
the sale of the environmental attributes of renewable generation separately from the electricity
generated. In effect, the Company states that green tags are a currency that can be traded to
individuals and entities wishing to support "green" energy. Example: Idaho Power Schedule
Green Energy Purchase Program (Case No. IPC-00-, Order No. 28655).
Referencing the foregoing FERC Order, Idaho Power states that FERC suggested that
individual states may decide ownership of the green tags. As a result, the Company seeks guidance
from the Commission as to ownership of potentially marketable certificates in Idaho.
Idaho Power contends that in Idaho, a utility and its customers confer additional value
on QFs by virtue of the long-term, levelized, fixed rate contracts that the utility enters into with the
QFs. That value, it asserts, is in addition to the avoided costs paid to the QFs for the energy
produced. Vesting the utility with some ownership interest in the green tags, it states, would
remunerate the utility for the additional value conferred to the QFs. The QF position, the Company
represents, is that QF ownership of the green tags provides the incentive they need to invest in the
production of energy from a renewable resource. They assert that the sale of the green tags
associated with the generation of green power compensates the QF with the facility s environmental
attributes and rewards the additional risks associated with the investment in and the design and
operation of a renewable energy resource plant.
In this Petition, Idaho Power Company requests a declaratory order from the
Commission clarifying ownership of these green tags. The "respective arguments" of the Company
and QFs are presented in the Company s Petition.
Despite Idaho Power s interest in owning the green tags, the Company acknowledges
that retention of those tags by the QF developers may encourage the development of additional
green energy resources in Idaho without the need to increase energy purchase prices. Given the
heightened public interest in the development of new renewable resources, Idaho Power respectfully
recommends that the Commission determine that the developers of such generation facilities receive
full ownership rights in any green tags issued to them conditioned upon the requirement that the QF
developers who qualify for green tags and from whom Idaho Power purchases energy grant the
Company a "right of first refusal" to purchase those tags.
DECISION MEMORANDUM
COMMISSION DECISION:
Idaho Power requests that its Petition for Declaratory Ruling be processed pursuant to
Modified Procedure, i., by written submission rather than by hearing. Reference Commission
Rules of Procedure, IDAPA 31.01.01.201-204. Staff concurs with the requested procedure and
recommends that a standard comment period be established. Does the Commission agree?
Scott D. Woodbury
blslM:IPCEO402
DECISION MEMORANDUM
APPENDIX A
Energy Trust Green Tag Definition
Environmental Attributes" means any and all credits, benefits, emissions reductions, offsets,
and allowances, howsoever entitled, resulting from the avoidance of the emission of any gas,
chemical, or other substance to the air, soil, or water attributable to the Specified Resource,
which are deemed of value by a Green Tag purchaser. Environmental Attributes include but
are not limited to: (I) any avoided emissions of pollutants to the air, soil, or water such as
(subject to the foregoing) sulfur oxides (SOx), nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide
(CO), and other pollutants; (2) any avoided emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane
(CH4), and other greenhouse gases (GHGs) that have been determined by the United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to contribute to the actual or potential
threat of altering the Earth's climate by trapping heat in the atmosphere; and (3) the Green
Tag Reporting Rights to these avoided emissions. Subject to the foregoing, Environmental
Attributes do not include any energy, capacity, reliability, or other power attributes from
the Specified Resource nor production tax credits or certain other financial incentives
existing now or in the future associated with the construction or operation of the Specified
Resource.
Green Tag" means the Environmental Attributes associated with the power generated from
the Specified Resource, together with the Green Tag Reporting Rights associated thereto.
One Green Tag represents the Environmental Attributes made available by the generation
of I MWh from the Specified Resource.
Green Tag Reporting Right(s)" means the right of a Green Tag purchaser to report
ownership of Green Tags in compliance with federal or state Law, if applicable, and to a
federal or state agency, or other parties at the Green Tag purchaser s discretion, and
include those accruing under Section 1 605 (b) of the Energy Policy Act of 1992, or under any
present or future domestic, international, or foreign emissions trading program.