Electric grid report by U.S. makes case to foster coal plants

The Energy Department, in a long-anticipated report on the security of the U.S. electric grid, makes the case for rescuing the nation's coal industry from widespread plant shutdowns but stops short of an assault on renewable power that environmentalists had feared.

The study, commissioned by Energy Secretary Rick Perry who has warned that policies favoring solar and wind may force plants to close and threaten the grid, recommends that the Environmental Protection Agency ease rules on coal plants. It also calls for changes to how wholesale electricity is traded and easier permitting for resources such as coal, nuclear and hydropower.

The report hands President Donald Trump a plan for fulfilling his campaign promise to revive America's ailing coal industry and put miners back to work. It paints a somewhat grimmer picture of grid security than an earlier draft that concluded the nation's power system is more reliable than ever, in spite of coal plant shutdowns. By contrast, the final report cautions that "market designs may be inadequate" to keep "traditional" power generation online.

"It is apparent that in today's competitive markets certain regulations and subsidies are having a large impact on the functioning of markets, and thereby challenging our power generation mix," Perry said in a statement. "Customers should know that a resilient electric grid does come with a price."

The U.S. power industry has been waiting for the Energy Department to release the study for months. Power generator FirstEnergy Corp. said in April that it wanted to see the results before pressing ahead with a plan to divest money-losing coal and nuclear plants. Rival Exelon Corp., the largest operator of reactors in the U.S., told investors this month that it expected the report to highlight the "critical role" that nuclear plays.

The 181-page report concludes that coal-fired and nuclear power plants are being forced out of business primarily because they can't compete against cheap and abundant natural gas, which is flowing out of U.S. shale formations at a record pace. Policies favoring solar and wind energy have also played a role, the study shows.

It stresses the critical need to preserve coal, nuclear and other "baseload" plants that continue to produce power when the wind isn't blowing and sun isn't shining. The report argues that even natural gas-fired generators, which rely on pipelines to receive fuel, may be less resilient.

"The more we rely on natural gas, the more we're relying on fuel that arrives just in time" at a power plant, said Joseph Dominguez, Exelon's vice president of governmental and regulatory affairs and public policy.

Federal regulators are "going to have to value these resilience attributes" of dependable resources, especially coal plants that can store enough fuel on-site to last months, said Paul Bailey, chief executive officer of American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity. "Coal stacks up really well. Natural gas does OK. Nuclear does pretty well. Renewables don't do well in some respects and do OK in others."

"You need a coal fleet in order to have a resilient and reliable grid," Bailey said.

John Shelk, president of the Washington-based Electric Power Supply Association, said ensuring the resilience of the U.S. power grid doesn't simply mean handing out subsidies for coal and nuclear plants.

"Coal and nuclear want resilience to be a code word to subsidize them when they can't compete," said Shelk, whose group represents power generators such as NRG Energy Inc. and Dynegy Inc. that sell their supplies into wholesale markets. "That's a warped view of resilience. All fuels, technologies and attributes should be considered together."

Advanced Energy Economy, a group that promotes solar and wind, said the report "seriously overstates" the challenges associated with new energy resources. The American Petroleum Institute meanwhile noted that natural gas is now the source of more electricity in the U.S. than any other fuel and has cut consumers' energy costs "without government mandates and subsidies."

One way that the federal government can assist uneconomic coal plants is to compensate baseload plants for the resilience they offer the power grid, according to the report. The authors recommend that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which oversees power markets, study ways in which those reliability attributes can be appropriately valued. That could include the creation of new pricing mechanisms or changing the agency's approach to energy price formation, the report says.

That recommendation echoes comments recently made by Neil Chatterjee, who was tapped by Trump to temporarily lead the energy commission. Chatterjee said last week that coal-fired plants are a crucial part of America's energy mix that needed to be "properly compensated to recognize the value they provide."

Information for this article was contributed by Tim Loh, Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Mark Chediak of Bloomberg News.

Business on 08/25/2017

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