Wednesday, March 27, 2013

NYISO Approves Comprehensive Reliability Plan

Identifies System Reliability Risks and Solutions through 2022
 
The Board of Directors of the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO) approved the 2012 (CRP) for New York’s power system, which concludes that additional transmission and generation resources will be needed during the study period (2013-2022) to meet system reliability criteria and that sufficient solutions have been proposed to meet those reliability needs.

The 2012 CRP is the product of the Comprehensive Reliability Planning Process conducted by the NYISO to provide a blueprint for meeting the reliability needs of the state’s bulk electricity grid over a 10-year planning horizon. The multi-phased process includes an assessment of reliability needs prior to the development of the reliability plan.

In September, the NYISO issued the 2012 Reliability Needs Assessment (RNA) identifying transmission security violations, which could manifest as soon as 2013, and resource adequacy violations, which could occur by 2020. To address these needs, the NYISO requested market-based, regulated backstop and alternative regulated solutions. Market-based solutions are the preferred means to meet future reliability needs with the other regulated solutions available for implementation if necessary.

The CRP reports that market-based, regulated backstop and alternative regulated solutions have been proposed to meet the reliability needs identified in the 2012 RNA. Based upon its updated study model the evaluation of the market-based solutions and the most recent Local Transmission Plans (LTPs) from the state’s transmission owners, the CRP made the following findings:

Transmission Security and Adequacy

The needs identified in the 2012 RNA for the Rochester and Syracuse areas will be resolved by 2017 with permanent solutions identified in Rochester Gas & Electric’s and National Grid’s LTPs.

Resource Adequacy

The market-based solutions, if constructed, are fully sufficient to meet the resource adequacy needs for 2021 and 2022 identified in the RNA. Market-based solutions to the resource adequacy needs include: NRG’s proposal to repower the Astoria plant and provide a net capacity increase of 405 megawatts (MW) of generating capacity in the New York City region (Zone J); Constellation NewEnergy, Inc.’s proposal to increase demand response by 30 MW in the New York City region (Zone J); and NRG’s proposal to repower the Dunkirk plant with 440 MW of capacity in the Western New York region (Zone A), which would replace existing generation at the site and could address reliability issues in the area.
 
Risk Factors

While solutions studied in the CRP will result in the system meeting reliability criteria, there are uncertainties and risk factors that could adversely affect the implementation of the plan and system reliability over the 10-year planning horizon. These include: the need for transmission owners’ LTPs to proceed on schedule; factors such as financing, future market conditions and interconnection requirements influencing the timely completion of market-based generation solutions; the retirement of additional generating units beyond those already considered in the 2012 RNA for either economic or environmental reasons could raise additional, adverse impacts on reliability beyond those identified in the CRP; and if the Indian Point Power Plant licenses are not renewed and the plant were to retire by the end of 2015 or thereafter, this would result in immediate transmission security and resource adequacy criteria violations unless sufficient replacement resources are in place prior to retirement.

The NYISO will continue to monitor, evaluate and report, on a quarterly basis, the viability and timeliness of all submitted market-based solutions and will be prepared to trigger a gap or regulated backstop solution, if necessary.

The
2012 Comprehensive Reliability Plan  

The New York Independent System Operator (NYISO) is a not-for-profit corporation responsible for operating the state’s bulk electricity grid, administering New York’s competitive wholesale electricity markets, conducting comprehensive long-term planning for the state’s electric power system, and advancing the technological infrastructure of the electric system serving the Empire State.

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For more information, please contact:

David Flanagan (518) 356-7325 [office]/(518) 727-1569 [mobile] / dflanagan@nyiso.com

Ken Klapp (518) 356-6253 [office]/(518) 461-3564 [mobile] / kklapp@nyiso.com   
 

Monday, March 18, 2013

NRC Assigns New Inspectors to Indian Point


The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has assigned three new resident inspectors to the Indian Point nuclear power plant in Buchanan.

James Scott Stewart was named as the senior resident inspector and Katrina Dunham and Ami Patel were named as the resident inspectors at the facilities.

Previously, Stewart, who joined the NRC in 1987, was the senior resident inspector at the Turkey Point nuclear plant in Homestead, FL, Crystal River 3 in Crystal River FL, and at Calvert Cliffs in Lusby, MD.

Dunham joined the agency in 2010 after graduating from the Maine maritime Academy and most recently was a reactor engineer in the Division of Reactor Projects.

Patel began her career with the NRC in 2008 as a project engineer in Atlanta. She transferred to Rhode Island in 2009 and worked in various positions in the Division of Reactor Projects.

Each commercial nuclear power plant in the U.S. has at least two NRC resident inspectors. They serve as the agency’s eyes and ears at the facility, conducting regular inspections, monitoring significant work projects and interacting with plant workers and the public. (MidHudsonNews, 3/13/2013)