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Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

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Page 1: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1

April 3, 2009

New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

                                         

                                   

                                         

Page 2: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Outline

• Environmental & Economic Challenges of the Status Quo

• Energy Efficiency• Renewable Energy Technologies• Policy Tools

Page 3: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

OVERPECK QUOTE

"The western United States, in particular the southwestern United States from Southern California to Texas, will probably be one of the hardest-hit and soonest-hit parts of the United States”

Jonathan Overpeck, Univ. of Arizona Scientist and a lead author of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, as quoted in the Albuquerque Journal, February 3, 2007.

Page 4: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Challenging and Evolving Environment:Getting Serious about Climate Change

Page 5: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Challenging and Evolving Environment:Getting Serious about Climate Change

Page 6: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Challenging and Evolving Environment – Fuel Price Volatility

Page 7: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

New Mexico Confronts Supply Challenges: Energy Efficiency

Pub Svc N.M. - Energy Efficiency Savingsas a % of Total Retail Sales

0.0%1.0%2.0%3.0%4.0%5.0%6.0%7.0%8.0%

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Pub Svc Co. NM - EE Savings

8,0008,5009,0009,500

10,00010,50011,00011,50012,00012,500

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

An

n. G

WH

s

2% load growth

Page 8: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Cost recovery for DSM

• Removing barriers to utility “investment” in DSM

• 2007: NMPRC Rejects PNM gas decoupling proposal as too broad

• 2008: EUE Act Amendments

• 2009: PRC Incentive Docket – Marks proposes electric decoupling

Page 9: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

New Mexico Confronts Supply Challenges: Natural Gas/Renewables

Delta-Person – PPA 132 MW CT 2000

Afton – RB 235 MW CC Nov 2007

Valencia – PPA 148 MW CT Summer 2008

Lea Power Prtnrs – PPA

500 MW CC July 2008

Newman Five 288 MW CC May ’09 (CT)

May ’10 (CC)

Lordsburg

Luna

80 MW CT

190 MW CC

RB pending

EPE/eSolar PPA 64 MW Solar Thermal

2011

Page 10: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Wind Energy – Prime Mover in R.E.

• Approx 17,000 MW installed capacity (2008)• 5000 MW added in 2007• Utility ownership has begun

• Cost $23 - $60/mwh after PTC• PTC = $18/mwh• Prices increasing due to materials, demand, Exchange Rate

Annual Report on U.S. Wind Power Installation, Cost, and Performance Trends: 2007. Wiser, R., and M. Bolinger. May 2008

Page 11: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Wind projects in NM or serving NM

Project Utility*Date

Online MWClovis Xcel 1999 0.66N.M. Wind Energy CtrPNM 2003 204White Deer - TX Xcel 2004 80Caprock Xcel 2004 60Caprock II Xcel 2005 20San Jon Xcel 2005 120Wildorado - TX Xcel 2007 160Aragonne Mesa APS 2007 90

*All projects are via PPAs.

Page 12: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Wind with Gas Backup: Good for Utilities, Good for Ratepayers.

Model of Revenue StreamsGas CC Alone vs. Wind w/ Gas Bkup

$0

$20,000,000

$40,000,000

$60,000,000

$80,000,000

$100,000,000

$120,000,000

Gas Only Wind/Gas Gas Only Wind/Gas

To

tal C

os

t to

Ra

tes

Depreciation

ROE (Profit)

Interest

Fuel Cost

200 MW Gas CC, 70% Cap, $7 gas + 4%/yr

200 MW Wind, 32% Cap. + Gas Backup

2010 (year 1) 2015 (year 5)

Page 13: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Wind with Gas Backup – Capacity + Reduced exposure to Gas Pricing Pressure

$0

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

$120

$140

$160

$180Y

ear

2011

2013

2015

2017

2019

2021

2023

2025

2027

2029

2031

2033

2035

2037

Co

st p

er M

wH

GasWind+Gas

Page 14: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Wind Typically Distant from Load

Page 15: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Potential Multi-stateTransmission Projects

ARIZONA

EnergyResource

Zones

Tucson

Phoenix

HolcombNEW MEXICO

COLORADO

WYOMING

DaveJohnston

LRS

Albuquerque

Limon

ComancheLamar

Pawnee/Story

Socorro

Gladstone

Midway

SunZia

HIGH PLAINS EXPRESS

15

Page 16: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Western Renewable Energy Zoneswww.westgov.org/wga/initiatives/wrez

Page 17: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Solar Technologies

Concentrated Solar Power (CSP)

• 10-15¢/kwh for 100MW+ projects• Thermal Storage/Backup Possible• Kramer Junction (1980s) 350 MW,

Nevada Solar One (2007) 64 MW, Spain

Photovoltaic (PV) Panels: •1 – 3 kw home systems common (~$18,000 installed home system = 25¢/kwh)

• Commercial (10 – 100 kw)

• Major projects - TriState/FirstSolar 30MW Colfax County

Page 18: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

• El Paso Electric – 64 MW solar thermal PPA w/ eSolar. Approved by PRC

• PNM-led consortium - ~100 MW solar thermal trough plant. Bids currently being evaluated. Possible load-side (Abq) site.

• TriState/FirstSolar 30 MW PV in Colfax Cty

Potential Utility Scale Solar Projects in New Mexico

Page 19: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

• Dairy & Feedlot Waste

•Wood Waste

•Landfill Gas

Geothermal Plant in Valles Caldera

Biomass & Geothermal

Page 20: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

State Renewable Portfolio Standards

State Goal

☼ PA: 18%¹ by 2020

☼ NJ: 22.5% by 2021

CT: 23% by 2020

MA: 4% by 2009 + 1% annual increase

WI: requirement varies by utility; 10% by 2015 goal

IA: 105 MW

MN: 25% by 2025(Xcel: 30% by 2020)

TX: 5,880 MW by 2015

☼ AZ: 15% by 2025

CA: 20% by 2010

☼ *NV: 20% by 2015

ME: 30% by 200010% by 2017 - new RE

State RPSHI: 20% by 2020

RI: 16% by 2020

☼ CO: 20% by 2020 (IOUs)

*10% by 2020 (co-ops & large munis)

☼ DC: 11% by 2022

☼ NY: 24% by 2013

MT: 15% by 2015

IL: 25% by 2025

VT: RE meets load growth by 2012

Solar water heating eligible

*WA: 15% by 2020

☼ MD: 9.5% in 2022

☼ NH: 23.8% in 2025

OR: 25% by 2025 (large utilities)5% - 10% by 2025 (smaller utilities)

*VA: 12% by 2022

MO: 11% by 2020

☼ *DE: 20% by 2019

☼ NM: 20% by 2020 (IOUs) 10% by 2020 (co-ops)

☼ NC: 12.5% by 2021 (IOUs)10% by 2018 (co-ops & munis)

ND: 10% by 2015

Source: dsireusa.org/Sept 2007

Page 21: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

New Mexico Renewable Energy Act: NMSA § 62-16-1A Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) Law

• R.E.: solar, wind, biomass, geothermal• Scope: IOUs, Co-ops (lower reqmts) • RPS 5% of retail sales in 2006

10% of retail sales in 201115% in 2015, 20% in 2020

• Reasonable Cost Thresholds• Annual Procurement Plans• PRC’s Diversity Rules – 20% Solar Target

Page 22: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

NM: Aggressive Targets / Small State

2007 2011 2015 2020

RPS 6% 10% 15% 20%Total IOU MWh 15,000,000 15,900,000 17,000,000 18,300,000

R.E. MWh Req'd 898,000 1,586,000 2,557,000 3,665,000

Solar Target 2% 3% 4%Solar MWh 317,000 511,000 733,000Solar Need 100 170 240

Biomass Need 40 70 100

Wind as Fill-In 6% 9% 12%Wind Mwh 898,000 951,000 1,534,000 2,199,000Wind Need 320 340 550 780

Page 23: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Net Metering

NMPRC Orders:

PNM Incentive Program: 13¢/kwh for resid RECs 15¢/kwh for comm’l RECs

SPS/EPE Incentive Pgms

NMPRC Rule: Utilities must interconnect customer-owned generation via net-metering up to 80 MW

Page 24: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

PV Incentive Programs

Utility Program

Incentive payment per kwh

Duration of

payments

PNM Residential (<=10kw) $0.13 12 yearsCommercial (10kw - 1 MW $0.15 20 years

EPE Residential (<10kw) $0.13 12 years

SPS Small (<=10 kw) $0.20 14 yearsMedium (10 kw - 100 kw) $0.20 10 yearsLarge (100kw - 2MW)

            Small Biomass (10 – 50kw) $0.08 14 years

            Med Biomass (50kw – 1MW) $0.08 10 years

By bid

Page 25: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Voluntary Programs

Dec 2009:

PRC effectively exempts Sky Blue use from fuel surcharge

Page 26: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

New Mexico R.E. Tax Incentives

• Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit – Reduces consumer cost by 1¢ to 4¢ per kwh

– One of the best in nation.

• Advanced Energy Tax Credit – “Clean coal” bill, also applies to solar!

– 6% of eligible plant costs

• Other Tax Credits– Homeowner Solar Tax Credit – 30%, $9,000– Gross Receipts (Sales) Tax exemptions– Bio-diesel PTC

Page 27: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Integrated Resource Planning (IRP)

• All utilities required to submit

• Public process required

• PNM IRP prioritizes energy efficiency

Page 28: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Next Steps: PRC Regulatory Dockets

• Spring ’09: Net-Metered/Customer Owned Systems– Annual True-Up rulemaking– Permissibility of Third-Party Ownership

• Fall ’09: Submission/Review of 2010 Renewable Procurement Plans

Page 29: Jason Marks Commissioner, District 1 April 3, 2009 New Mexico’s Path to a Sustainable Energy Future

Resources

• PRC Website on Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy in New Mexico – www.nmprc.state.nm.us

• www.cleanenergynm.org - ENMRD website• www.jasonmarks.com