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1 Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective Jeff Bales June 2011

Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective. Jeff Bales June 2011. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

Jeff Bales

June 2011

Page 2: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Who are we?

Alliant Energy Corporation is a public utility holding company headquartered in Madison, Wisconsin. Alliant Energy's two regulated utilities include Interstate Power and Light Company (IPL) and Wisconsin Power and Light Company (WPL). In addition it has several other non regulated entities. Two of those are RMT and CRANDIC.

WPL generates, purchases and sells power in Wisconsin and has some ownership in the American Transmission Company who provides transmission service in Wisconsin

IPL generates, purchases and sells power in Iowa and Minnesota. Its service territory serves the southern part of Minnesota and also is scattered throughout the state of Iowa. IPL sold their transmission system to ITC (Iowa Transmission Company)

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Who are we ? Alliant Service Territory

The IPL service territory is scattered due to the merging of several smaller utilities in the past 20 years named Iowa Electric, Iowa Southern, and Interstate Power and Light.

Page 4: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Energy Delivery UpdateTechnology

Confidential

Page 5: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Alliant Strategic Plan

Alliant Energy Utilities Strategic Plan is built on three key elements:

Competitive Costs Reliable Service Balanced Generation

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Our sources of electric power in 2007 were 54% coal, 6 % natural gas and 39% Purchased Power.

The 39% purchased power leaves our customers to unpredictable fuel costs. These fuel cost can sometimes make up 50% of our customers bills.

Due to state and federal legislation it is important that we have a balance mix of generation.

Alliant now owns and operates a total of three wind farms Cedar Ridge (68 MW near Fon Du Lac Wisconsin) Whispering Willow (200MW near Iowa Falls Iowa) Bent Tree (200MW near Albert Lea Minnesota)

Thru second quarter of this year the owned wind farms and Purchase Power Agreements made up 6% of the generation in our service territory.

We have several locations under development such that if it makes sense to add more wind to our fleet we will do so.

Balanced Generation

Page 7: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind

Investor owned utilities are able to see the entire process from beginning to end. Have key roles in the paradigm shift as significant milestones occur.

Contracts for Purchase Power Agreements Owning Wind Farms Operating Wind Farms

Page 8: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Owning Wind Farms

Forecasting the output of wind farms Impact is to Production Tax Credits that are forecasted in our financials on a

quarterly basis. Impact to our fuels forecast Impact to the remaining fleet of generation in the area

Page 9: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Development Process – Long Term Forecast (LTF)

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Page 11: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Development Process (LTF)- Wind Source

The P50 number represents the probability of that level of generation being met.

Probability numbers are used for different circumstances relative to bank loans and in some instances negotiations around a purchase power agreement.

This number only takes into account the assumed losses and the statistics around long term data.

One forecasting vendor is presently challenging some of the historical information coming out of these reports (nationally) based on poor data sets from the different ways of collecting long term data and comparisons to actual data.

Part of due diligence is the comparison of a utility wind owned facility to a purchase power agreement.

Bottom Line- When comparing different alternatives understand which P value you are comparing to.

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Development Process (LTF)- Transmission Midwest Independent System Operations is the controlling entity for the state

of Iowa at the Regional level Two transmission utilities presently provide the majority of services for MISO Our two owned wind farms are located in the Iowa Transmission Company

footprint of service. Currently each of our 200MW wind farms are working within a provisional

Generator Interconnect Agreement. MISO continues to do studies to accommodate customer base however timing

of such studies and implementation seem to be in the 5-7 year time frame and not in the current two to three year cycle.

Optional Studies have been completed by MISO for Alliant under, at that time, current conditions and also with certain assumptions by the customer.

Under these conditions a Provisional Generator Interconnect Agreement can be pursued with implementation in the 14 month timeframe while larger studies continue.

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Example of Optional Study Result (LTF)

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Development (LTF)- Bringing them together Previous number represents the Provisional Limit and is posted by MISO

quarterly. In some instances this can change which will effect your forecasted outputs.

How do Purchase Power Agreements handle Provisional status ? Internally owned Wind farms

Page 15: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Page 16: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Power CurvesEAPC vs. Calculated

0.00

50.00

100.00

150.00

200.00

250.00

0 5 10 15 20 25

Wind Speed m/s

Pow

er M

W

EACP Power Curve

Calculated Power Curve

Page 17: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Development Process (LTF)-Internal

-20,000-10,000

010,00020,00030,00040,00050,00060,00070,000

MW

hxxxx - May 2011Variance Report

Forecast 47,925 0 0 47,925

Actual 60,920 -12,112 -1,163 47,645

Variance 12,995 -12,112 -1,163 -280

Wind CurtailmentsReduction due to 165 MW Op

LimitTotal

Page 18: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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xxxx Observed Power CurveMAY 2011

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18

Wind Speed m/s

MW Series1

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Development Process (LTF)

What makes up the other curtailments? Two buckets

Operations Curtailment Economic Curtailment

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Development Process(LTF)-Operations Curtailment (MISO document June 2010) Wind Farm that is registered Intermittent Resource or (IR) cannot be

dispatched as part of the real-time dispatch software at MISO Result of this necessitates manual curtailment by MISO to relieve transmission

constraints LMP node under this condition does not reflect congestion Results of these conditions were that until April of this year 90% of

curtailments were operational in nature and not economically based.

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Page 22: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Development Process(LTF)- Economic Curtailments Beginning in April Alliant Energy wind farms began seeing much more volatility

in LMP prices at the wind farms. Result of this necessitated manual curtailment by Alliant GDC to relieve

economic concerns over negative LMP prices Due to timing issues Alliant GDC could not keep up with the changing 5 minute

LMP pricing. Results of these conditions were that a large shift in curtailments between

operations and economic began to change on a percentage basis. As a result Alliant has signed up Wind Farms for Dispatchable Intermittent

Resource so it can take advantage of automatic control to maximize efficiency. Two of our Three wind farms will implement this feature in September.

Page 23: Role of Investor Owned Utility in Development of Wind Energy in Iowa from an Engineers perspective

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Forecasting- Economic Curtailments

April-11

DateGeneration

(Revenue) /Expense Volume1-Apr-11 ($28,514.55) -1,963,0002-Apr-11 $85,561.15 -1,040,0003-Apr-11 ($10,861.37) -977,0004-Apr-11 $13,299.28 -1,499,0005-Apr-11 ($10,103.95) -609,000

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Development Process (LTF)-Economic

Existing Purchase Power Agreements do not have language to address issues around negative LMP.

When new PPA are negotiated this will definitely be taken into account. Will have impact on developers ability to execute on loans and quality of their

forecast Present PPA did not have scrutiny around producing at negative rates. Impacts operations as well with most contract services being driven off

availability. Present take is on shoulder months where load vs generation has base units

backed off to minimum will be the months where forecasts will be impacted. No longer can assume the best wind months are the best for wind farm output

presently at Alliant.

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Summary Long Term Forecasting

Investor owned utilities are learning that the wind forecast is just one component of the forecast.

As wind generation continues to make penetration expect local congestion issues to continue. Investor own utilities will need to understand all conditions as the wind becomes more of a segment of the generation on how there fleet of generation will be dispatched.

Wind farms must develop a y=f(x) concept to ensure they manage each component of the forecast well to understand the dynamics moving forward and are able to report to their customer base.

Vendors and suppliers of forecasting services will need to get into the operation segment of wind farms to understand controls and maintenance to provide turn key services. Signals from turbines as it relates to local conditions will become next generation of improvement in short term forecasting