California Energy News https://californiaenergynews.com/ Mon, 20 Nov 2023 21:04:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 194021425 Improving Energy Usage for Disadvantaged Residents Very Difficult https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/improving-energy-usage-for-disadvantaged-residents-very-difficult/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/improving-energy-usage-for-disadvantaged-residents-very-difficult/#respond Fri, 17 Nov 2023 23:53:20 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=982 Improving Energy Usage for Disadvantaged Residents Very Difficult October 2023 Former California State Assembly member Henry T Perea (D) wanted to bring affordable energy to disadvantaged communities in his district in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The State Legislature passed Perea’s bill in 2014 with a budget of $56.4 million. But work had not yet been […]

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Improving Energy Usage for Disadvantaged Residents Very Difficult

October 2023

Former California State Assembly member Henry T Perea (D) wanted to bring affordable energy to disadvantaged communities in his district in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The State Legislature passed Perea’s bill in 2014 with a budget of $56.4 million. But work had not yet been completed in mid-2023.

Acknowledged to be one of the poorest areas in the state, the San Joaquin Valley is considered to be one of the major food producing centers of the country. The population, which works in the valley’s agricultural fields, is largely Hispanic.

The bill required the California Public Utilities Commission to identify and analyze economically feasible options to increase access to cost-effective and affordable energy in 11 San Joaquin Valley communities.  It approved a pilot program in December 2018 (D18-12-015). Work was finally launched in January 2020.

The CPUC designed pilot project offered free electrical appliances to 1,914 households in the chosen communities who were currently burning wood or propane. The state’s investor-owned utilities ran the pilots along with an independent firm, Richard Heath and Associates, and offered the free electrical appliances such as stoves and water heaters to replace those which burned natural gas, propane or wood. Alternatively, new gas hookups were offered to those residences to allow new gas appliances to replace wood or propane burning appliances.

The eventual goal is to determine if the program could be extended to all disadvantaged residents in the central valley. A full analysis will be conducted in 2024, a full 10 years after the law was passed.

In a rare dissent of the 2018 decision, then CPUC President Michael Vickers wrote, “In a well-meaning desire to help people, the commission … has created an overly complicated program that is likely to disappoint both its sponsors and intended beneficiaries.” More on his criticism later.

Results of the Pilot

By May 2023, out of the 1,914 participants chosen for the pilot, 34% or 612 homes received new energy efficient appliances or natural gas service. Program administrators foresee more homes will receive new appliances by the time the pilot ends on December 31, 2023. However, another one-third – a full 36% of households contacted (636), did not move forward to submit applications.

Many problems led to the low success rate, the least of which was the pandemic which slowed down or postponed resident interviews and evaluations of homes where the new appliances would be installed. Reasons why residents chose not to participate in the pilot ranged from the conviction that in the end the appliances would not be free to fears of increased electric bills. Also, many of those contacted were in the process of moving or had already moved. Many were not interested and gave no reason.  A few preferred their propane appliances.

Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric ran their programs through designated program managers.  Richard Heath and Associates (RHA) was hired to conduct an independent pilot in five communities located in PG&E territory.

Another pilot operated by Southern California Gas offered new gas equipment to replace wood and propane-burning appliances and, when needed, to extend connections to gas lines. Further, two community solar projects are in the process of being designed with about 90 residents already signed up.

The Work Force Struggled

Synergy, which had already been operating related energy savings programs in the disadvantaged communities, was tasked with hiring experienced electrical, HVAC, plumbing and efficiency workers.  Most of the 20 employees came from Synergy’s programs and six were new hires. Richard Heath reported that 70% of its staff lived in disadvantaged communities, but not necessarily those included in the pilot projects. Problems over the three years of the pilot ranged from staff and participant exposure to COVID-19, to staffing inefficiencies, and to shortages of new appliances.

Furthermore, some of the experienced electricians and other tradespeople were lured away by higher salaries in the competitive construction industry which was not impacted by COVID-19 work stoppages according to Richard Heath’s reporting in its annual review. It reported this led to difficulty maintaining a full workforce.

Challenges that led to Diminished Results

Soon after staff began contacting the selected households in January 2020, COID-19 hit not only households but the crews contacting homes and managed the installations. The result led to cancelled appointments and a six-month slowdown in the work schedule.

Other delays occurred due to the management system which often led to participants receiving calls from staffers who did not make the initial contact to schedule home visits or installations. Participants often did not respond because they did not recognize phone numbers

Homeowners also held back submitting an application requesting an assessment for new appliances until they could see work completed in their community. Richard Heath found this to be a real challenge given the “scatter-shot” nature of the program design.  They were required to work in all communities at one time instead of serving each of the five communities they were assigned before moving on to the next.  This “created significant inefficiencies and delayed implementation of the pilot,” the company said in its 2022 Annual Report.

Former President Picker Predicted Diminished Success

Former CPUC president, Michael Picker foresaw many of the difficulties the program experienced, particularly with its design.  In his dissenting opinion at the time it was approved in 2014. He wrote, “It raises community expectations for outcomes that the Commission is poorly situated to measure or achieve.” He alleged that the Commission has allowed individual, financially interested organizations to shape program designs.    

For example, Picker pointed out that one of the options the Legislature asked the CPUC to analyze it failed to seriously evaluate ”increasing subsidies such as direct payments or bill credits for electricity for residential customers in disadvantaged communities. [It] would seem to be the most straightforward, rapid, and transparent approach to increase access to affordable energy,” wrote Picker. He suggested that “the approved program funding could be used to equalize the cost of propane and natural gas for customers without access to gas for over thirty years.”

This story is based on CPUC’s decision, “D.18-12-015 plus a series of quarterly progress reports released through May 2023 by the utilities who were tasked to carry out the program plus an October 2022 report by Evergreen Economics. A final report is expected to be released after the program ends in December 2023. Former Commission President Michael Picker’s dissenting opinion can be found accompanying the same decision in Rulemaking 15-03-010.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Former California State Assembly member Henry T Perea (D) wanted to bring affordable energy to disadvantaged communities in his district in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The State Legislature passed Perea’s bill in 2014 with a budget of $56.4 million. But work had not yet been completed in mid-2023.

 

Acknowledged to be one of the poorest areas in the state, the San Joaquin Valley is considered to be one of the major food producing centers of the country. The population, which works in the valley’s agricultural fields, is largely Hispanic.

 

The bill required the California Public Utilities Commission to identify and analyze economically feasible options to increase access to cost-effective and affordable energy in 11 San Joaquin Valley communities.  It approved a pilot program in December 2018 (D18-12-015). Work was finally launched in January 2020.

 

The CPUC designed pilot project offered free electrical appliances to 1,914 households in the chosen communities who were currently burning wood or propane. The state’s investor-owned utilities ran the pilots along with an independent firm, Richard Heath and Associates, and offered the free electrical appliances such as stoves and water heaters to replace those which burned natural gas, propane or wood. Alternatively, new gas hookups were offered to those residences to allow new gas appliances to replace wood or propane burning appliances.

 

The eventual goal is to determine if the program could be extended to all disadvantaged residents in the central valley. A full analysis will be conducted in 2024, a full 10 years after the law was passed.

 

In a rare dissent of the 2018 decision, then CPUC President Michael Vickers wrote, “In a well-meaning desire to help people, the commission … has created an overly complicated program that is likely to disappoint both its sponsors and intended beneficiaries.” More on his criticism later.

 

Results of the Pilot

 

By May 2023, out of the 1,914 participants chosen for the pilot, 34% or 612 homes received new energy efficient appliances or natural gas service. Program administrators foresee more homes will receive new appliances by the time the pilot ends on December 31, 2023. However, another one-third – a full 36% of households contacted (636), did not move forward to submit applications.

 

Many problems led to the low success rate, the least of which was the pandemic which slowed down or postponed resident interviews and evaluations of homes where the new appliances would be installed. Reasons why residents chose not to participate in the pilot ranged from the conviction that in the end the appliances would not be free to fears of increased electric bills. Also, many of those contacted were in the process of moving or had already moved. Many were not interested and gave no reason.  A few preferred their propane appliances.

 

Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric ran their programs through designated program managers.  Richard Heath and Associates (RHA) was hired to conduct an independent pilot in five communities located in PG&E territory.

 

Another pilot operated by Southern California Gas offered new gas equipment to replace wood and propane-burning appliances and, when needed, to extend connections to gas lines. Further, two community solar projects are in the process of being designed with about 90 residents already signed up.

 

The Work Force Struggled

 

Synergy, which had already been operating related energy savings programs in the disadvantaged communities, was tasked with hiring experienced electrical, HVAC, plumbing and efficiency workers.  Most of the 20 employees came from Synergy’s programs and six were new hires. Richard Heath reported that 70% of its staff lived in disadvantaged communities, but not necessarily those included in the pilot projects. Problems over the three years of the pilot ranged from staff and participant exposure to COVID-19, to staffing inefficiencies, and to shortages of new appliances.

 

Furthermore, some of the experienced electricians and other tradespeople were lured away by higher salaries in the competitive construction industry which was not impacted by COVID-19 work stoppages according to Richard Heath’s reporting in its annual review. It reported this led to difficulty maintaining a full workforce.

 

Challenges that led to Diminished Results

 

Soon after staff began contacting the selected households in January 2020, COID-19 hit not only households but the crews contacting homes and managed the installations. The result led to cancelled appointments and a six-month slowdown in the work schedule.

 

Other delays occurred due to the management system which often led to participants receiving calls from staffers who did not make the initial contact to schedule home visits or installations. Participants often did not respond because they did not recognize phone numbers

 

Homeowners also held back submitting an application requesting an assessment for new appliances until they could see work completed in their community. Richard Heath found this to be a real challenge given the “scatter-shot” nature of the program design.  They were required to work in all communities at one time instead of serving each of the five communities they were assigned before moving on to the next.  This “created significant inefficiencies and delayed implementation of the pilot,” the company said in its 2022 Annual Report.

 

Former President Picker Predicted Diminished Success

 

Former CPUC president, Michael Picker foresaw many of the difficulties the program experienced, particularly with its design.  In his dissenting opinion at the time it was approved in 2014. He wrote, “It raises community expectations for outcomes that the Commission is poorly situated to measure or achieve.” He alleged that the Commission has allowed individual, financially interested organizations to shape program designs.    

 

For example, Picker pointed out that one of the options the Legislature asked the CPUC to analyze it failed to seriously evaluate ”increasing subsidies such as direct payments or bill credits for electricity for residential customers in disadvantaged communities. [It] would seem to be the most straightforward, rapid, and transparent approach to increase access to affordable energy,” wrote Picker. He suggested that “the approved program funding could be used to equalize the cost of propane and natural gas for customers without access to gas for over thirty years.”

 

This story is based on CPUC’s decision, “D.18-12-015 plus a series of quarterly progress reports released through May 2023 by the utilities who were tasked to carry out the program plus an October 2022 report by Evergreen Economics. A final report is expected to be released after the program ends in December 2023. Former Commission President Michael Picker’s dissenting opinion can be found accompanying the same decision in Rulemaking 15-03-010.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Former California State Assembly member Henry T Perea (D) wanted to bring affordable energy to disadvantaged communities in his district in California’s San Joaquin Valley. The State Legislature passed Perea’s bill in 2014 with a budget of $56.4 million. But work had not yet been completed in mid-2023.

 

Acknowledged to be one of the poorest areas in the state, the San Joaquin Valley is considered to be one of the major food producing centers of the country. The population, which works in the valley’s agricultural fields, is largely Hispanic.

 

The bill required the California Public Utilities Commission to identify and analyze economically feasible options to increase access to cost-effective and affordable energy in 11 San Joaquin Valley communities.  It approved a pilot program in December 2018 (D18-12-015). Work was finally launched in January 2020.

 

The CPUC designed pilot project offered free electrical appliances to 1,914 households in the chosen communities who were currently burning wood or propane. The state’s investor-owned utilities ran the pilots along with an independent firm, Richard Heath and Associates, and offered the free electrical appliances such as stoves and water heaters to replace those which burned natural gas, propane or wood. Alternatively, new gas hookups were offered to those residences to allow new gas appliances to replace wood or propane burning appliances.

 

The eventual goal is to determine if the program could be extended to all disadvantaged residents in the central valley. A full analysis will be conducted in 2024, a full 10 years after the law was passed.

 

In a rare dissent of the 2018 decision, then CPUC President Michael Vickers wrote, “In a well-meaning desire to help people, the commission … has created an overly complicated program that is likely to disappoint both its sponsors and intended beneficiaries.” More on his criticism later.

 

Results of the Pilot

 

By May 2023, out of the 1,914 participants chosen for the pilot, 34% or 612 homes received new energy efficient appliances or natural gas service. Program administrators foresee more homes will receive new appliances by the time the pilot ends on December 31, 2023. However, another one-third – a full 36% of households contacted (636), did not move forward to submit applications.

 

Many problems led to the low success rate, the least of which was the pandemic which slowed down or postponed resident interviews and evaluations of homes where the new appliances would be installed. Reasons why residents chose not to participate in the pilot ranged from the conviction that in the end the appliances would not be free to fears of increased electric bills. Also, many of those contacted were in the process of moving or had already moved. Many were not interested and gave no reason.  A few preferred their propane appliances.

 

Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric ran their programs through designated program managers.  Richard Heath and Associates (RHA) was hired to conduct an independent pilot in five communities located in PG&E territory.

 

Another pilot operated by Southern California Gas offered new gas equipment to replace wood and propane-burning appliances and, when needed, to extend connections to gas lines. Further, two community solar projects are in the process of being designed with about 90 residents already signed up.

 

The Work Force Struggled

 

Synergy, which had already been operating related energy savings programs in the disadvantaged communities, was tasked with hiring experienced electrical, HVAC, plumbing and efficiency workers.  Most of the 20 employees came from Synergy’s programs and six were new hires. Richard Heath reported that 70% of its staff lived in disadvantaged communities, but not necessarily those included in the pilot projects. Problems over the three years of the pilot ranged from staff and participant exposure to COVID-19, to staffing inefficiencies, and to shortages of new appliances.

 

Furthermore, some of the experienced electricians and other tradespeople were lured away by higher salaries in the competitive construction industry which was not impacted by COVID-19 work stoppages according to Richard Heath’s reporting in its annual review. It reported this led to difficulty maintaining a full workforce.

 

Challenges that led to Diminished Results

 

Soon after staff began contacting the selected households in January 2020, COID-19 hit not only households but the crews contacting homes and managed the installations. The result led to cancelled appointments and a six-month slowdown in the work schedule.

 

Other delays occurred due to the management system which often led to participants receiving calls from staffers who did not make the initial contact to schedule home visits or installations. Participants often did not respond because they did not recognize phone numbers

 

Homeowners also held back submitting an application requesting an assessment for new appliances until they could see work completed in their community. Richard Heath found this to be a real challenge given the “scatter-shot” nature of the program design.  They were required to work in all communities at one time instead of serving each of the five communities they were assigned before moving on to the next.  This “created significant inefficiencies and delayed implementation of the pilot,” the company said in its 2022 Annual Report.

 

Former President Picker Predicted Diminished Success

 

Former CPUC president, Michael Picker foresaw many of the difficulties the program experienced, particularly with its design.  In his dissenting opinion at the time it was approved in 2014. He wrote, “It raises community expectations for outcomes that the Commission is poorly situated to measure or achieve.” He alleged that the Commission has allowed individual, financially interested organizations to shape program designs.    

 

For example, Picker pointed out that one of the options the Legislature asked the CPUC to analyze it failed to seriously evaluate ”increasing subsidies such as direct payments or bill credits for electricity for residential customers in disadvantaged communities. [It] would seem to be the most straightforward, rapid, and transparent approach to increase access to affordable energy,” wrote Picker. He suggested that “the approved program funding could be used to equalize the cost of propane and natural gas for customers without access to gas for over thirty years.”

 

This story is based on CPUC’s decision, “D.18-12-015 plus a series of quarterly progress reports released through May 2023 by the utilities who were tasked to carry out the program plus an October 2022 report by Evergreen Economics. A final report is expected to be released after the program ends in December 2023. Former Commission President Michael Picker’s dissenting opinion can be found accompanying the same decision in Rulemaking 15-03-010.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Peninsula Taps Inflation Reduction Act to Help Fund Solar/Storage in San Matao County https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/peninsula-taps-inflation-reduction-act-to-help-fund-solar-storage-in-san-matao-county/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/peninsula-taps-inflation-reduction-act-to-help-fund-solar-storage-in-san-matao-county/#respond Fri, 17 Nov 2023 23:20:39 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=975 Peninsula Taps Inflation Reduction Act to Help Fund Solar/Storage in San Matao County April 2023 Peninsula Clean Energy is embarking on an ambitious program to install solar and storage throughout its service territory, made possible by taking advantage of the direct pay benefits in the Inflation Reduction Act Congress passed last year. It will initially […]

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Peninsula Taps Inflation Reduction Act to Help Fund Solar/Storage in San Matao County

April 2023

Peninsula Clean Energy is embarking on an ambitious program to install solar and storage throughout its service territory, made possible by taking advantage of the direct pay benefits in the Inflation Reduction Act Congress passed last year. It will initially pay for the installations through self-financing.

Peninsula, a community Choice Aggregator, has executed 20-year power purchase agreements with the San Mateo County Human Services Agency Center in Redwood City plus nine cities (listed below). The project was approved by Peninsula’s Board of Directors in January, 2023, at a cost not to exceed $10 million.

Peninsula has contracted with Intermountain Electric Company, selected through a competitive process, to install and maintain 1.7 MW of solar power on 12 public buildings in the cities and county under an engineering, procurement and construction contract. These systems, to be completed by the first quarter 2024, are expected to deliver $17 million in lifetime energy savings to them.

The design and engineering firm, McCalmont Engineering is completing the initial solar and storage designs on the 12 public buildings already selected. Battery storage will be added at several sites that do not have existing backup generators, according to Darren Goode, Peninsula’s media manager.

Later, additional storage units will be deployed when and if they can be grandfathered into Net Energy Metering 2.0, the tariff which current customers use. NEM 3.0, which apply to new solar installations, would reduce the economic value of the solar systems being installed here.

Peninsula is paying for the construction of the project itself directly from its cash reserves. It will take advantage of direct pay benefits included in the federal Inflation Reduction Act. The investment tax credit contained in the IRA is currently at 30% of cost. Peninsula expects to recover 30% of the money spent via the tax credit.

Darren Goode said the remainder of the construction costs will be paid back through the power purchase payments from the cities and county over the 20-year lifetime of the PPAs.

The advantage for Peninsula and its customers is the arrangement lowers power purchase prices and increased energy savings for the cities’ and county facilities with the installed projects.

Peninsula Clean Energy CEO Jan Pepper was quoted in the April 18 press release saying “We want to do everything we can to bring more renewable power online. With this innovative program, we take the burden of solar and storage project development off of city and county staff and achieve cost reductions through scale,”

The cities which have signed power purchase agreements with Peninsula are Atherton Town Hall; Brisbane Mission Blue Center; Colma Community Center; Hillsborough Public Works Yard; Los Banos Community Center; and Wastewater Plant; Millbrae Town Center complex and Recreation Center; Pacifica Community Center; San Bruno Aquatics Center; and the San Carlos Youth Center.

Peninsula said a second round is already underway in which it has completed designs and interconnection applications for an additional 40 sites across its territory.  Approximately 15 MW of solar and potential battery storage systems will benefit additional customers.

Peninsula said it is on track to deliver 100% renewables by 2025.

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EBCE Wins Federal Funding to Develop Microgrids in its Territory https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/elementor-967/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/11/17/elementor-967/#respond Fri, 17 Nov 2023 19:53:34 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=967 EBCE Wins Federal Funding to Develop Microgrids in its Territory April 2023 East Bay Community Energy authorized its CEO in December to execute power purchase agreements with Sunwealth and Gridscape Solutions to develop and build solar systems with energy storage at four member cities – San Leandro, Berkeley, Hayward and Fremont. Work has already started, […]

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EBCE Wins Federal Funding to Develop Microgrids in its Territory

April 2023

East Bay Community Energy authorized its CEO in December to execute power purchase agreements with Sunwealth and Gridscape Solutions to develop and build solar systems with energy storage at four member cities – San Leandro, Berkeley, Hayward and Fremont. Work has already started, according to J.P. Ross, vice president of local development, electrification and Innovation.

EBCE secured $2 million in the earmarked FY 2023 Federal spending bill passed on December 23 2022.  This money will support procurement of the solar and energy storage systems in four cities. Funding came from the Community Project Funding process, with the help of U.S. Senator Alex Padilla, and U.S. representatives Ro Khanna (D-CA 17), and Eric Swalwell (D-CA 15).

This work is identified as Phase 1 of EBCE’s Resilient Critical Municipal Facilities Program. Work has already begun on Phase 2 according to EBCE. Another four cities, Emeryville, Livermore, Oakland and Pleasanton have already received permission from their city councils to participate in the Phase 2 procurement. They are now in the process of compiling a portfolio of facilities to include in the program.

The four cities, all members of EBCE, together identified 30 facilities, which will support 3.1 MW of solar photovoltaics and 6.2 MWh of battery storage. Ross said EBCE spent two years, starting in 2019, documenting the sites’ energy use with the help of independent engineering consultant ARUP to analyze the data. The goal is to reduce or remove project risks.

The energy systems will be installed, for example, on municipal buildings in Hayward and Fremont to support fire, safety and emergency operations in 13 facilities when grid outages occur. The cities will be able to eliminate diesel generators which provided emergency power during outages along with the resulting air pollution. Power will also be sold year-round to the local utilities. Ross said he expects overall energy use in the buildings to go down 70% to 80% once the microgrids are operating.

EBCE and the attorneys from the four cities developed a standardized power purchase agreement which EBCE could sign with both the cities and the selected contractors. It is designed to reduce transaction costs, expedite procurement and minimize ownership risk for EBCE. Called a “sleeve” this allows EBCE to buy the energy from the developer, Gridscape, at each site. Sunwealth will own the projects.

The PPA will have minimal budget impact on EBCE, it said in its staff report to its Board of Directors. EBCE is acting as a pass-through entity for city-signed PPAs, which will pay back project development costs over time while recovering EBCE’s Phase I development and administrative costs

The independent consultants, ARUP and EcoMotion also worked with EBCE to develop a Request for Offers with enough details to allow developers to respond with specificity to provide a firm PPA price without visiting the sites. The RFO was released in August 2022 and EBCE received three bids. It selected the development team of Fremont-based Gridscaope Solutions as the developer and Connecticut-based Sunwealth LLC as the asset owners.

Under a separate consulting agreement Gridspace will submit interconnection applications to Pacific Gas & Electric. The Phase 1 projects will fall under Net Energy Metering 2.0 since the applications were submitted by March 15.  Future projects to be included in Phase 2 will fall under NEM 3.0 interconnection agreements. EBCE recognizes that NEM 3.0 agreements will negatively impact already designed budgets.

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Peninsula Clean Energy Promises 100% Renewables by 2025. https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/05/08/peninsula-clean-energy-promises-100-renewables-by-2025/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/05/08/peninsula-clean-energy-promises-100-renewables-by-2025/#respond Mon, 08 May 2023 22:53:32 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=922 Peninsula Clean Energy Promises 100% Renewables by 2025. February 2023 Peninsula Clean Energy promised two years ago it would deliver a modeling tool in a White Paper announcing its plan (see story in Archives). True to its word, the Community Choice Aggregator recently published its 24/7 clean energy procurement modeling tool called MATCH (Matching Around […]

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February 2023

Peninsula Clean Energy promised two years ago it would deliver a modeling tool in a White Paper announcing its plan (see story in Archives). True to its word, the Community Choice Aggregator recently published its 24/7 clean energy procurement modeling tool called MATCH (Matching Around The Clock Hourly energy). It is available on peninsulacleanenergy.org.

Peninsula promises to deliver 100% renewable energy to its 310,000 customers 99% of the time using MATCH by overbuilding its portfolio of renewable energy.  And they want to do this by 2025.

The report’s authors said the modeling tool, “finds that providing energy on an approximately 99% time-coincident basis” is cost competitive, reduces portfolio risk and reduces emissions.  Instead of the current practice of calculating renewable energy in its portfolio to be delivered on a monthly basis, this model will match customer demand with renewable supply in the same hour.

The best resource mix to meet this schedule requires a diverse portfolio of all available renewables, said the report. But the best resource mix for a 24/7 renewable portfolio “depends on hourly matching at higher levels with more storage and geothermal resources.”

The cost to provide renewable energy to customers 99% of the time, the model revealed, would increase costs just 2% relative to Peninsula’s baseline. But there are diminishing returns in trying to match the final 1%, according to the report – Portfolio costs would jump 10% on a time-coincident basis. And the authors report there are wider grid benefits – the system net peak demand would be reduced and system ramp would be improved.

Peninsula’s portfolio as of January 2023 totals 1,268 MW. Solar dominates at 502 MW, with onshore wind contributing 358 MW. Storage totals 116 MW and short-term renewables capacity adds 196 MW.  Geothermal trails at 84 MW. The current annual portfolio is not 100% renewable on a 24/7 basis and is supplemented with short-term renewable contracts to reach 100% renewables on an annual basis.

Peninsula Clean Energy is projecting its load in 2025 to be about 3,700 gigawatt hours (GWh) and it has already signed renewable and storage contracts for over 1 gigawatt (GW) of capacity. Based on these contracts Peninsula said it is on track to be 71% renewable on a 24/7 basis by 2025. It is actively working to procure the remaining 29% by that year.

The Peninsula authors said that demand-side resources will help load shaping and shifting as they become more prevalent over the next decade and “will become a critical part of our24/7 renewable portfolio.”  Offshore wind and non-lithium storage will also be included in its portfolio in in future years, they wrote.

Going forward Peninsula, as it explores how to operate a 24/7 portfolio, will need to optimize cost, grid impacts, and emissions reductions.  It also hopes to inspire other California CCAs, load serving entities and clean energy buyers to achieve the same 100% goal of round-the-clock clean energy.

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BlocPower Partners with City of Menlo Park to Electrify Residences https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/04/10/blocpower-partners-with-city-of-menlo-park-to-electrify-residences/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/04/10/blocpower-partners-with-city-of-menlo-park-to-electrify-residences/#respond Mon, 10 Apr 2023 23:14:21 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=865 July 2022 Menlo Park’s Climate Action Plan calls for reducing natural gas emissions 95% in its residential community by 2030. Menlo Park, California has signed a public-private partnership agreement with BlocPower to electrify city households and reduce their natural gas consumption. The city’s Climate Action Plan has a goal of carbon neutrality by 2030. The […]

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July 2022

Menlo Park’s Climate Action Plan calls for reducing natural gas emissions 95% in its residential community by 2030.

Menlo Park, California has signed a public-private partnership agreement with BlocPower to electrify city households and reduce their natural gas consumption. The city’s Climate Action Plan has a goal of carbon neutrality by 2030.

The State of California requires emissions to be cut 40% below 1990 levels by 2030 and all retail electricity to be carbon-free by 2045 but Menlo Park plans to get there first.

 The city claims “to be the first city on the West Coast to establish a public/private partnership of this kind,” said Angela Sherry Evans, Environmental Quality Commissioner, for the city, in a press release. “We aim to electrify 95% of our existing buildings, dramatically reducing our city’s dependence on natural gas [which is] responsible for almost half our greenhouse gas emissions.”

In the press release dated June 14, 2022, the city reports that fuel consumption in buildings accounted for 41% of Menlo Park’s greenhouse gas emissions. With BlocPower’s help, the city’s goal is to electrify 15 buildings in 2022, 100 in 2023 and 1,000 more per year in 2024 and beyond. 

In a voluntary program, residents will be given opportunities to install heat pumps for heating, cooling and water heaters, electric vehicle charging stations, solar, battery storage and other efficiency measures.

BlocPower, based in Brooklyn, New York, intends to lower the costs for accomplishing these goals by using data models to improve project design efficiency and by using equipment supplier relationships. It will focus initially on the Belle Haven district and provide affordable and accessible project financing there for low-to-moderate income households.

A local non-profit, Menlo Spark, will work with the city to raise up to $35 million to also reduce project costs for low-to-moderate income households. Belle Haven is located along the Bay Front which is most impacted by climate change.

BlocPower intends to establish community advisory boards which would work with the company to identify program designs that fit with stakeholder needs. JobTrain, a local enterprise, will assist with establishing a job training program to create the jobs needed to scale up the program.

Menlo Park has a population of 34,780 according to the 2020 US Census. It reports there are 12,174 households. Neither the US Census nor the City of Menlo Park lists the number of housing units in the city.

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CCAs Look to the Future https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/02/24/ccas-look-to-the-future-2/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2023/02/24/ccas-look-to-the-future-2/#respond Fri, 24 Feb 2023 22:51:50 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=819 CCAs Look to the Future January 12 2021 A major portion of California’s distribution system is not meeting today’s electrical grid needs and goals, according to Lorenzo Kristov, a former executive at the California Independent System Operator, in a November 2019 webinar sponsored by the San Diego Energy District. Technology. Technology is circumventing regulation, he […]

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CCAs Look to the Future

January 12 2021

A major portion of California’s distribution system is not meeting today’s electrical grid needs and goals, according to Lorenzo Kristov, a former executive at the California Independent System Operator, in a November 2019 webinar sponsored by the San Diego Energy District. Technology. Technology is circumventing regulation, he argued, and community choice aggregators could take vital roles in that transformation.

A series of webinars organized by the San Diego Energy District described the history and rapid formation of CCAs and the roles they can play in the future as communities and utilities face major environmental catastrophes which wipe out major utility transmission lines that utilities an CCAs depend on to get power to their ratepayers.

New technologies are slowly reshaping California’s power industry. Emblematic of this reshaping is the formation of CCAs (community choice aggregators) throughout the state in which they are supplying power for residents the three major utilities are delivering. There are now close to 30 CCAs scattered throughout the state.

Homeowners buying backup gas-burning generators to prepare for blackouts will do more harm than good for the environment. Enter CCAs who can work with the communities to create microgrids. Microgrids strategically located throughout the service territories CCAs serve would be able to provide the power during the blackout periods independent of the blacked out transmission system.

Kristov said at the webinar, “The things happening in San Diego and elsewhere will have an impact (on the industry). “The distribution system does not meet today’s needs and goals,” he said. And the CCAs will have a large role in shifting the distribution system. Technological changes are being driven from the bottom up, he argued.

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Sunrun Building Solar/Storge for Three Bay Area CCAs https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/13/sunrun-building-solar-storge-for-three-bay-area-ccas/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/13/sunrun-building-solar-storge-for-three-bay-area-ccas/#respond Mon, 13 Jun 2022 18:14:01 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=488 Sunrun Building Residential Solar/Storage for Three Bay Area CCAs February 2022 The solar/storage installations are designed to meet resource adequacy requirements Three community choice aggregators (CCAs) in the San Francisco Bay area signed contracts with San Francisco-based Sunrun in 2020 and have already seen 850 solar plus storage systems under contract or installed in their […]

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Sunrun Building Residential Solar/Storage for Three Bay Area CCAs

February 2022

The solar/storage installations are designed to meet resource adequacy requirements

Three community choice aggregators (CCAs) in the San Francisco Bay area signed contracts with San Francisco-based Sunrun in 2020 and have already seen 850 solar plus storage systems under contract or installed in their residential service territories. The agreements are designed to meet state-mandated resource adequacy requirements imposed on CCAs and utilities by the California Public Utilities Commission.

Sunrun will do this by moving power daily from solar plus storage systems installed on residential roofs to transmission lines to satisfy the CCAs’ resource adequacy requirement.

Sunrun is paying residential owners who agree to give up a portion of their stored power. Customers are offered the incentive of $1,250 to sign contracts with Sunrun. The solar/storage systems will also provide power to residences on a daily basis and in case of utility power shutoffs.

Sunrun signed the resiliency contracts with Peninsula Clean Energy, East Bay Community Energy and Silicon Valley Clean Energy Authority. Silicon Valley Power, the City of Santa Clara’s municipal utility, was part of the 2019 solicitation in which Sunrun was chosen, but it ultimately decided to opt out of a contract with the company. It is now developing its own DER resiliency program as well as a separate microgrid. (See story below.)

After fires raged through Northern and Central California in the summer of 2018 the CCAs became motivated to protect residential power in future natural disasters, and particularly during wildfire seasons when utility power is shut off either intentionally by the serving utility or unintentionally due to fire damage.

Resource adequacy requires utilities and CCAs to have additional generation resources during high peak demand periods to provide stability such as in a heat wave. As the Silicon Valley Energy Authority (SVCE) staff report informed its Board, “The negotiated contract is an innovative alternative approach to meeting RA obligations through reducing peak demand through the coordinated dispatch of BTM (behind the meter) resources.”

SVCE signed its contract worth $7.4 million in November 2020 with Sunrun. Details were laid out in a staff report presented to the CCA’s Board of Directors that same month. The company agreed to install between 1 MW and 7.5 MW of solar systems and battery storage ranging from 4 to 30 MWh in SVCE’s service territory. Individual solar systems vary from 1 kW to 5 kW.

The SVCE Board reported at its January 12, 2022 Board meeting 300 families had signed contracts. The goal under this contract is to sign up 750 single family projects along with five multi-family buildings. However, no multi-family properties had stepped up by the end of 2021 when these numbers were tallied.

According to a Sunrun fact sheet, storage systems are designed to supply 8 to 12 hours of backup power, depending on how much is used. According to the report Sunrun will start moving power to transmission lines beginning December 31 2022 and continue through December 31, 2032.

Sunrun did not respond when asked for comments, in particular to these numbers.

The innovative arrangement between the CCAs and Sunrun to deliver power to the grid to satisfy CCA resiliency obligations was worked out with the California Energy Commission, led by East Bay Community Energy (EBCE) according to SVCA’s staff report. They developed the load modification approach. Each year, CCAs will submit peak demand forecasts to the CEC which uses it to set the annual RA procurement obligation for each CCA.  The energy storage systems will then be dispatched on a daily basis during the highest peak hours. That decreases the CCA’s peak load and reduces its RA obligation and “thereby also reduces the wholesale energy procurement volumes usually sourced from natural gas power plants.

JP Ross, vice president of local development, electrification and Innovation at EBCE, said having the residential battery resources reduces the amount of resource adequacy we have to buy. The contract with Sunrun requires the dispatch of power from the batteries between 4:00 p.m. and 8 p.m. every week day.  When the power is out – as in the case of a public safety power shutoff (PSPS) – the solar and battery power will be available to run their essential operations at individual residences.” Ross said Sunrun always leaves 20% of the battery power as a reserve margin for residents.

At EBCE’s Resilient Home program with Sunrun, in addition to the $1,250 incentive payment, customers are also offered no-cost consultations and project quotes according to Dan Lieberman, director of marketing. He said marketing and outreach is shared between Sunrun and EBCE. As of January, Sunrun has executed contracts with 400 customers, with 1.4 MW in commercial operation according to Lieberman. He said, in a February 3 email, “The associated PV capacity installed with the residential battery systems is over 6 MW since program launch.”

Lieberman expressed concern that the CPUC’s proposed changes to Net Energy Metering “may significantly reduce program enrollments going forward.” As of this writing, the CPUC is considering modifications to its proposal and it may be months before it makes a decision.

In an email exchange, Darren Goode at Peninsula Clean Energy in San Mateo County said Sunrun will install at least 1 MW by January 1 2022 on both single family and multi-family dwellings. By mid-April 2021, the company had installed over 150 systems. He explained that Peninsula began by targeting customers who were either in a high fire threat district or who were affected by utilities shutting down transmission lines as a measure to limit wildfires from starting or spreading.  First to be targeted were customers who are on utility discount programs such as CARE, FERA or Medical Baseline rates. Goode said they are now starting to target all homeowners. As of February he had no update on new contract signings or installations.

An earlier version of this story appeared in Microgrid Knowledge in July 2021.

 

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Peninsula Clean Energy Lays Plans https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/10/peninsula-clean-energy-lays-plans/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/10/peninsula-clean-energy-lays-plans/#respond Fri, 10 Jun 2022 23:27:06 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=466 June 2021 Peninsula, located in coastal Northern California, plans to take a phased approach to meeting its 24/7 goal, and will begin by procuring 24/7 renewable energy from proven technologies based on forecasted hourly load and generation. It will rely on a centralized balancing authority to make up for load misalignment due to forecasting errors.

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Peninsula Clean Energy Lays Plans for 24/7 Renewables by 2025

The Community Choice Aggregator has published its aggressive strategy in a White Paper on website, peninsularcleanenergy.org,

Peninsula, located in coastal Northern California, plans to take a phased approach to meeting its 24/7 goal, and will begin by procuring 24/7 renewable energy from proven technologies based on forecasted hourly load and generation. It will rely on a centralized balancing authority to make up for load misalignment due to forecasting errors.

In the second phase Peninsula will evaluate costs and benefits of more closely matching load and generation on a real-time basis and will do so by developing more sophisticated portfolio management and dispatch tools. It will also look to adopting emerging technologies that may better match its load shape than currently available resources.

Peninsula Clean Energy started delivering 50% renewable energy to its first customers in 2016. It believes that it can demonstrate that 24/7 procurement can be achieved practically and cost-effectively and create a blueprint for the state and beyond to follow.

As of 2020 Peninsula delivered 47% of its hourly coincident load which was slightly lower than its annual renewable rate of 52%. Its contracted generators produced more renewable energy than customers consumed which it did not count toward meeting its goal. It also delivered 47% large hydro power to customers.

Based on the contracts Peninsula has signed to date, it is on track to be 64% renewable on a time-coincident basis in 2025. It is now actively working to plan and procure the remaining 36% by 2025.

The majority of Peninsula’s load is in coastal San Mateo County with mild summers. Its load seasonally peaks in the winter but starting this year (2022) it will start serving the city of Los Banos, located in the central valley which will add summer peaking load. Its daily load generally follows the pattern of system-wide load in California that peaks between 4:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. Thus, Peninsula must deal with the daily power slump when the sun sets.

After reviewing the characteristics of wind, solar, geothermal power, small hydropower and energy storage, Peninsula authors, primarily staff members, concluded that to meet its 24/7 renewable energy target the CCA must create a combination of supply-side and demand-side strategies that will match load requirements around the clock.

On the supply side this means procuring a diverse portfolio of resources that produces energy at different times of the day, in different geographic locations and in different seasons and which mostly matches the customer load. Energy storage can be used to shift excess generation to the times when it is needed. Operators will need to match net load but also to wholesale electricity price signals. The authors admit this will be a challenge and in some hours of seasons they will have more supply than is needed, and in others they will have less than needed.

Demand side strategies include matching load to the available supply of renewable energy by load shaping and load shifting to better manage the loads to the times when renewables are more available. Examples cited include setting high commercial rates during peak hours of the day and encouraging customers with smart thermostats to shift their heating and cooling to match the availability of renewable resources each day.

The white paper also reviews the challenges Peninsula faces. There will likely be mismatches in supply and demand usually seasonal in nature. This is where a diverse menu of renewable resources come into play. And storage technologies are still immature enough or not widely available to fill the supply gaps.

Forecasting limitations will likely create mismatches between load and supply due to errors in forecasts. Peninsula does prepare forecasts on an hourly basis for customer consumption and generation availability, but often the forecasts differ from actual demand. It also produces long-term forecasts but the authors point out that climate change is making long-term forecasting more difficult.

Another challenge Peninsula faces is uncertainty surrounding demand-side resources and how big a role they might play in the strategy laid out in the White Paper. Information on how to plan for and understand how they would perform and the costs to deploy them will determine the success of their use and modeling demand-side resources in Peninsula’s 24/7 strategy.

Peninsula intends to follow up on this paper in the next few months with a report containing the results of its modeling, including details about the costs and resource mix required to achieve its goal.

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EBCE Advances Plan https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/07/ebce-advances-plan/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/07/ebce-advances-plan/#respond Tue, 07 Jun 2022 21:28:34 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=413 EBCE Advances Plans to be 100% Green by 2030 June 2022https://ebce.gov EBCE has been in acquisition mode this year, signing a power contract plus a contract to electrify low income homes. Another two projects achieved commercial operation recently. It intends to beat the state renewables mandate by 15 years. East Bay Community Energy, headquartered in […]

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EBCE Advances Plans to be 100% Green by 2030

June 2022https://ebce.gov

EBCE has been in acquisition mode this year, signing a power contract plus a contract to electrify low income homes. Another two projects achieved commercial operation recently. It intends to beat the state renewables mandate by 15 years.

East Bay Community Energy, headquartered in Oakland, announced on May 24 it is partnering with Fervo Geothermal Energy which will dispatch 40 MW of firm, 24/7 geothermal power starting in the fourth quarter of 2026 from Churchill County Nevada to California’s grid. This deployment will, in part, satisfy the state’s mandate for EBCE to purchase 1,000 MW of non-weather dependent, zero-emission energy by 2026.

EBCE serves more than 1.7 million residential and commercial customers in Alameda and San Joaquin Counties in Northern California. It signed seven energy storage contracts in 2019 totaling more than 350 MW. Many are in conjunction with solar systems.  Two additional contracts were also signed for solar and wind projects without storage.

Fervo said in the press release, it is a next-generation geothermal company applying new geothermal technology, including horizontal drilling and distributed optic sensing, “that makes geothermal power accessible in far more places than before and drastically increases its potential as a widespread energy source.”

Bloc Power is partnering with EBCE to upgrade and electrify 60 homes in EBCE’s service territory according to an April 12 announcement. This new work follows an initial pilot upgrading and electrifying 12 Oakland homes.  EBCE is providing $1 million in project financing and $400,000 in incentives through its Local Development program to fund this “first-of-its-kind project, according to EBCE, for low- to moderate income single family households.

Brooklyn-based Bloc Power will use EBCE’ financing to install affordable and clean heating, cooling and hot water systems and electric appliances alongside EBCE and community partners. They will also deliver weatherization and remediation to help reduce indoor air pollution, improve health outcomes and increase home values. Furthermore, upgraded infrastructure will improve resiliency during extreme weather events.

The two companies predict saving these EBCE Oakland customers an average of nearly $1,000 in annual energy bills, an estimated 40% savings. It will also cut EBCE’s delivery load.

EBCE and Bloc Power will work with independent community partners, including Revalue.io and local minority and women-owned businesses to provide installations and “safeguard customer interests.”

Convergent Energy+Power confirmed in January the 10MW/40MWh energy storage system it financed and developed for EBCE is now operational. The system, which EBCE will control, will be maintained by Convergence

This contract is one of the seven EBCE signed in 2019. Nick Chaset, CEO of EBCE, said in the January announcement, “Renewable energy is critical to our clean energy future and wind and solar alone will not keep the lights on,”

The latest project to begin commercial operation is EBCE’s 73-MW Luciana Solar Project in Ducor, Tulare County, CA.  Built by Idemitsu Renewables the two companies made the joint announcement May 31 and said it will provide power equivalent to 20,000 homes through a 15-year power purchase agreement EBCE signed with Idemitsu Renewables.

Cary Vandenberg, CEO of Idemitsu Renewables, said in the announcement, the company faced  unprecedented supply chain challenges in the past year while still achieving commercial operation on schedule to provide significant investment in Tulare County through jobs, fees and tax revenues.

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California Community Power Buys Storage https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/06/california-community-power-buys-storage/ https://californiaenergynews.com/2022/06/06/california-community-power-buys-storage/#respond Mon, 06 Jun 2022 22:46:06 +0000 https://californiaenergynews.com/?p=382 June 2022 New agency creates procurement services for Community Choice Aggregators California Community Power (CC Power) signed contracts with two companies earlier this year to build long duration energy storage for seven community choice aggregators (CCAs).  REV Renewables will build the 69-MW (552 MWh) Tumbleweed Project near Rosamond in Kern County.  Onward Energy will develop […]

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June 2022

New agency creates procurement services for Community Choice Aggregators

California Community Power (CC Power) signed contracts with two companies earlier this year to build long duration energy storage for seven community choice aggregators (CCAs).  REV Renewables will build the 69-MW (552 MWh) Tumbleweed Project near Rosamond in Kern County.  Onward Energy will develop a 50-MW (400-MWh) Goal Line project in Escondido.

CC Power was formed in 2021 by eight CCAs as a joint powers agency, to provide procurement services to the CCAs. The organization modeled itself after the Southern California Public Power Authority and the Northern California Power Agency which have been procuring energy resources for municipal utilities up and down the state for many years.

CC Power requested offers in October 2021 for 200 MW of firm clean resources with proposals due in December 2021. By March 2022, most of the eight CCAs had signed two contracts for long duration energy storage – 69 MW in January with 7 CCAs and 50 MW with 6 CCAs in late February.

The first procurement by CC Power was approved at its board meeting in January 2022 with REV Renewables. The 69-MW Tumbleweed Project will be connected to the grid operated California Independent System Operator, It is expected to come online in 2026.

The participating CCAs for this project are CleanPowerSF, Peninsula Clean Energy, Redwood Coast Energy Authority, San Jose Clean Energy, Silicon Valley Clean Energy, Sonoma Clean Power Authority and Valley Clean Energy.

The second agreement was approved by CC Power in February 2022 with Onward Energy which will develop the 50-MW Goal Line project. It is projected to come online in 2025.  It will have eight hours of discharge duration and will be located in Escondido, California.

Six CCAs signed on to this agreement except for Peninsula Clean Energy. Its website reports that, as of 2021, its power portfolio is comprised entirely of carbon-free or renewable resources.

The procurements are in compliance with an order from the California Public Utilities Commission to all utilities, CCAs and other load serving entities under CPUC jurisdiction (D21-06-035). They must procure power resources to cover their required loads when responding to extreme weather events, including fire and earthquakes allowing them.

The utilities and CCAs are not allowed, for the most part, to procure fossil fuels since they must meet the state’s greenhouse gas emission reduction goals “in a cost-effective manner.”  The additional goal of procuring clean energy resources is to help meet greenhouse gas emissions reductions. SB100 requires emissions to be cut 40% below 1990 levels by 2030 and all retail electricity to be carbon-free by 2045.

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