A new study for California’s largest investor-owned and public
utilities is the latest in a series of influential reports identifying
the range of measures needed to add large amounts of renewable power to
the grid quickly.
The analysis, Investigating a Higher Renewables Portfolio Standard in California,
conducted by the consulting firm Energy and Environmental Economics,
Inc. (E3), focuses on the challenges to a single state, California, and
affirms what many have been saying for a long time: cost-effective
renewable integration requires coordination among states, diverse
geographies and technologies and access to new markets and market tools.
Previous studies such as the Western Governors’ Association report Meeting Renewable Energy Targets in the West at Least Cost: The Integration Challenge; the Western Grid Group’s Western Grid 2050; NREL’s Renewable Electricity Futures Report; Energy Foundation’s America’s Power Plan; and, NREL’s Western Wind and Solar Integration Study to
name a few have plowed similar ground from a regional and national
perspective and all have found similar tactics are required to make
renewable integration happen on a grand scale.
These include:
- Regional planning
- Better coordination, utilization and operation of the existing grid
- Strategic transmission upgrades
- Faster scheduling of generation onto the grid
- Energy Imbalance Markets based on rapid (five minute) resource dispatch
- Diverse portfolios of renewable technologies
- Exploiting geographic diversity and the inherent uncorrelated variability it provides
- Repurposing gas generation for flexibility and repowering gas plants with fast ramping technologies
- Improved resource and weather forecasting
- Reserve management
- Taking advantage of electricity storage
- Distribution- side energy efficiency and demand response tools
E3 touches upon the need for combining these measures in California
with the largest portion (a third) of all western electricity demand,
and which has designs on even deeper penetrations of renewable energy
than have ever been added to a single system before. California is
expected to meet its goal of providing 33% of its electricity energy
from renewable power sources by 2020. The E3 study explores what the
next likely steps may be if California shoots for 40-50 percent of its
load being met by renewable generation by 2030. But California, like
many states, has suffered from a sort of renewable xenophobia, the
determination to meet all renewable generation development and
integration needs from sources largely within its own borders. This
report shows that going it alone will cost more, be technically much
more difficult, and be likely to create overgeneration challenges when
renewable power plants — mainly solar — cause a glut of generation into
the system when demand for power is low.
In contrast, taking a more coordinated approach helps avoid or
softens many of these problems and saves money; lots of it, while
increasing the reliability of the grid and rapidly ramping down
greenhouse gases and conventional air pollution. This is because
coordination improves the efficiency of the grid, provides access to
cheaper geographically diverse renewable resources that complement
California’s own, and allows California to share (and sell) reserves and
surplus renewable generation with neighboring balancing authorities and
states. In combination these benefits mean fewer gas-fired power plants
will be needed for balancing renewables and providing peaking power.
The gas plants we will operate in the future will start and reach full
power rapidly, use less fuel, emit less pollution and will be used
principally to back up renewable power sources.
The E3 report takes a poke at quantifying the cost of renewable integration at 40 and 50 percent levels using a go-it-alone approach
(9-23 percent increases), and this is likely to get most of the
attention. But this analysis will likely be misinterpreted and
misunderstood. Some may say the report shows renewable integration will
come at too steep a price. But the report repeatedly points out that the
costs will be lower if a coordinated and diversified approach
is used. Utility rates will increase no matter what between now and
2030, making the cost of renewable power, which comes with no fuel cost
volatility, a safer economic as well as environmental bet.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/01/coordination-is-californias-least-cost-path-to-a-clean-energy-future
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