1 / 15

November 19, 2013 | Reliability Committee

November 19, 2013 | Reliability Committee. Steven A. Jones. Lead Business Analyst Market Operations Support Services. Order 755 Compliance And Generator vs. SOG. OP Effort to Define Assets. Jerry Elliott. Lead Analyst System Operations Support. Agenda. FERC Order 755

woody
Download Presentation

November 19, 2013 | Reliability Committee

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. November 19, 2013 | Reliability Committee Steven A. Jones Lead Business Analyst Market Operations Support Services Order 755 Compliance And Generator vs. SOG OP Effort to Define Assets Jerry Elliott Lead Analyst System Operations Support

  2. Agenda FERC Order 755 Operating Procedures to Change for Order 755 Revisit OP-14: Generator & SOG Definition Question and Answer

  3. FERC Order 755 Regulation Market & Alternative Technology Regulation Resources

  4. FERC Order 755 • Directs RTOs and ISOs to select and dispatch resources in an economically efficient manner to meet regulation requirements at least cost, subject to reliability requirements. • Enable Regulation Market participation beyond just Generators.

  5. ISO Implementation Objectives • Define new Asset, Alternative Technology Regulation Resource (ATRR), with Operational and Reliability requirements. • Update ISO Operating Procedure Documents to include the new ATRR asset where appropriate. • Enable participation of an ATRR in the Regulation Market

  6. OPs to Evaluate for Order 755

  7. OPs to Evaluate for Order 755 • OP-1: Central Dispatch Operating Responsibility and Authority of ISO New England, the Local Control Centers and Market Participants • OP-5: Generator and Dispatchable Asset Related Demand Maintenance and Outage Scheduling for Outages • OP-8: Operating Reserve and Regulation • OP-14: Technical Requirements for Generators, Demand Resources and Asset Related Demands • OP-18: Metering and Telemetering Criteria Redlines planned for Jan 2014 RC review

  8. OP-14 Revisit: Generator Defined Determining between a Generator and SOG

  9. Term Review: Generating Facility As defined in OATT: Schedule 22/23 Generating Facility shall mean Interconnection Customer’s device for the production of electricity identified in the Interconnection Request, but shall not include the Interconnection Customer’s Interconnection Facilities. Generator / SOG

  10. Term Review: Network Resource Capability As defined in OATT: Schedule 22/23 Network Resource Capability (“NR Capability”) – The maximum gross and net megawatt electrical output of the Generating Facility at the Point of Interconnection at an ambient temperature at or above 50 degrees F for Summer and at or above 0 degrees F for Winter. Where the Generating Facility includes multiple energy production devices, the NR Capability shall be the aggregate maximum gross and net megawatt electrical output of the Generating Facility at the Point of Interconnection at an ambient temperature at or above 50 degrees F for Summer and at or above 0 degrees F for Winter. The NR Capability shall be equal to or greater than the CNR Capability. Generator / SOG

  11. OP-14 Revisit: Determining Generator / SOG* A Generating Facility of less than five (5) MW and connected below 115kV that does not meet telemetering requirements per ISO New England Operating Procedure No. 18, Metering and Telemetering Criteria (OP-18), or is less than 1 MW will not be represented in the ISO Energy Management System (EMS) and is not a defined Generator for the purpose of this Procedure. A Generating Facility connected at 115kV and above will be represented in ISO EMS and is required to have OP-18 compliant metering. A Generating Facility’s MW output for this purposeis determined using its Winter net Network Resource Capability. * Intended to be draft language

  12. OP-14 Revisit: Determining Generator / SOG* (cont) A Generating Facility between 1MW - 5MW and without OP-18 compliant metering connected below 115kV: • May register as a “Settlement Only Generator” or • May elect to be treated as a load reducer A Generating Facility between 1MW - 5MW and has OP-18 compliant metering connected below 115kV: • Shall register as a modeled Generator A Generating Facility (of any size) connected at 115kV or above: • Shall register as a modeled Generator and have OP-18 compliant metering * Intended to be draft language

  13. Generator & SOG: Next Steps • Continue effort to clarify definitions of Generator and SOG. • Create transitional language and Effective Date for all new generators to be evaluated by. • Present redline version in January 2014 RC

  14. Existing OP-14 (Rev 20): Section II.A - Item #3 • A single generating unit of less than five (5) MW and that does not meet telemetering requirements per ISO New England Operating Procedure No. 18, Metering and Telemetering Criteria (OP-18), or is less than 1 MW will not be represented in the ISO Energy Management System (EMS). A generating unit meeting either criterion is not a defined Generator for the purpose of this Procedure. A generating unit is considered a less than five (5) MW unit if the annual average of its seasonal (summer or winter) ratings is less than 5 MW. A unit must be considered a less than one (1) MW unit if either its summer or winter rating is less than one (1) MW. • A generating unit meeting these criteria: • May register as a “Settlement Only Generator” or • May elect to be treated as a load reducer

More Related