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Paying wind generators not to produce power 

Credit:  By Liam Moriarty | Jefferson Public Radio | November 12, 2014 | ijpr.org ~~

The Bonneville Power Administration operates the federal hydropower dams in the Columbia Basin. In springtime, during snow melt, there can be so much water in the river that – combined with the output of the dozens of wind farms that have cropped up in Oregon and Washington – there’s more electricity in the system than anyone can use.

Dam operators could dump the extra water over the spillways. But as the BPA’s Doug Johnson explains, that causes problems for salmon and other fish.

“When there’s a lot of water coming down, what happens is you get a lot of dissolved gas in the water,” he said. “This can be harmful to those fish.”

To avoid that, the excess water gets run through the turbines. This leaves BPA with lots of electricity and nowhere to put it. So, Johnson says, there’s really only one solution.

“What’s left is our ability in an orderly fashion to take wind off the system and serve the load with hydro,” he said.

But, shutting down the wind generators has a cost. When the BPA takes them off line, it compensates the wind farms for the costs of not generating electricity when the wind is blowing.

Under the policy known as the Oversupply Management Protocol, so-called “oversupply events” mean the wind generators are entitled to compensation – not only for the value of the power they didn’t get to sell, but also for the tax credits and other income they would have received had they been allowed to make power. For the dozen oversupply events that happened in 2012, that compensation comes to about $2.7 million.

Because of a combination of weather, river flow conditions and better management of power, there haven’t been any oversupply events since then.

Still, that $2.7 million gets charged to BPA’s customers. And Scott Corwin says they’re not thrilled with that.

“Certainly, anytime you’ve got a new charge, that’s going to cause concern,” said Scott Corwin, who heads the Public Power Council, the Portland-based group that represents the Northwest’s public utilities, which buy their power from BPA. Corwin said when BPA charges public utilities, they turn around and pass those costs on to their ratepayers.

“All our members are consumer-owned utilities or public utilities, so their ratepayers are their owners, so there’s no other place for a charge to go,” Corwin said.

Several large investor-owned utilities – such as Pacific Power, PGE and Puget Sound Energy – are BPA customers, as well. So, the odds are good that one way or the other, you’re on the hook.

Now, you might think the wind generators would be tickled with this system that gives them money for not making power.

But you’d be wrong.

“The wind companies don’t support the Oversupply Management Protocol. They didn’t ask for it,” said Cameron Yourkowski with Renewable Northwest, a Portland-based non-profit that promotes clean energy. Wind power companies are among the group’s members. Yourkowski said wind generators would rather just be allowed to make power and sell it to their customers

“Wind companies, and us included, think BPA shouldn’t have these curtailment rights at all, and should look at other solutions to dealing with oversupply,” he said.

The wind companies legally challenged the BPA over the protocol. But the Federal Energy Management Agency issued a ruling last month giving it final approval. That approval extends through 2015. So, while there haven’t been any oversupply events for the past two years, if there were another, the same process would be used to compensate wind generators for getting bumped off the transmission lines.

That $2.7 million bill – spread out among dozens of Northwest utilities – is pretty much pocket change.

Still, officials with the BPA, utilities and wind companies are keeping fingers crossed that won’t happen again.

Source:  By Liam Moriarty | Jefferson Public Radio | November 12, 2014 | ijpr.org

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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