160 likes | 432 Views
Department of Water and Power City of Los Angeles Planning to Meet the Challenge “Greening LA” February 2007. CASTAIC. VALLEY. SCATTERGOOD. HAYNES. HARBOR. LADWP Generation Resources. 2007 POWER CONTENT LABEL.
E N D
Department of Water and Power City of Los AngelesPlanning to Meet the Challenge “Greening LA” February 2007
CASTAIC VALLEY SCATTERGOOD HAYNES HARBOR LADWP Generation Resources
2007 POWER CONTENT LABEL • Renewable Energy 2007 Projections, • Eligible Renewable Energy • in 2002 ~3% 3
LADWP RPS Master Plan • On December 13, 2005 LADWP management presented to the Board on how LADWP plan to meet the RPS goal of 20% by 2010 • Eight general areas that make up the Master Plan • Existing resources – Consisting of Aqueduct, Hyperion digestion, Lopez microturbines, solar rooftops, landfill gas contracts, Wyoming Wind project, and purchases • Planned resources – Consisting of Pine Tree Wind Project, Powerex Small Hydro, and the ongoing solar rooftops program • 2004 LADWP RFP – Resource acquisition consisting of originally seven projects • 2005 SCPPA RFP – Resource acquisition consisting of seven projects • 2006 SCPPA RFP – Resource acquisition consisting of twenty-eight projects. • LADWP 2007 RFP – Resource development on LADWP owned properties or near LADWP transmission system issued RFP on January 30, 2007. • Transmission Developments – Consisting of the Pine Tree Transmission Line, new Tehachapi Transmission System, Green Path Project, and Southern Transmission System upgrade • DSM Assumptions – Use the Maximum Achievable Level
DWP Renewable Energy Projection 2010+ by Type See LADWP RPS Master Project List for details Projection is for about 40% of 2010 DWP Sales; provides large margin of safety to meet 20% by 2010 Renewable target. 7
Location of Proposed Renewable Energy Projects and LADWP Transmission COB / NOB • Powerex • Potential Wind • Potential Wind • PPM SW WY STS • SCPPA3 / Wind • Potential Solar • LADWP3 • Pine Tree INYO-RINALDI Small Hydro Wind Biomass • SCPPA6 / Solar • LADWP5 / Wind • Potential Solar and Wind McCULLOUGH- VICTORVILLE Solar Geothermal GREEN PATH SP-15 • SCPPA4 / Wind • Potential Solar • Potential Geothermal • Solar Rooftops • BoS Waste Conversion • Small Hydro 8 8
Planned and Developed Renewable Resources • Pine Tree Wind Project (120 MW) • RFP issued for Balance of Plant work. • RFP issued for design build of the 230 kV transmission line . • Barren Ridge switching station under construction. • Waste to Energy Conversion – Proposed four 25 MW (total of 100 MW) Municipal Solid Waste to energy conversion technology developments with Los Angeles Bureau of Sanitation. The projects will be located in Los Angeles and the in-service dates are projects to be 2010 through 2013. • Concentrated Solar Power – Proposing one 125 MW CSPs for development by LADWP on owned lands with transmission access and tentative in-service dates of 2010 and another 85 MW’s in a joint project. • Geothermal – 100+ MW of geothermal development in the Salton Sea area on owned land with tentative in-service date of late 2010.
2006 SCPPA RFP Projects,after initial screening • SCPPA Renewable Energy Committee members are further analyzing proposals for individual City requirements. • Term sheets being negotiated for several projects noted above 10
Inyo - Rinaldi Line Upgrade Project To Cottonwood/Inyo Wind 2150+ MW2008 COD Barren Ridge Pine Tree120 MW2007 COD Pine Tree Wind 3100+ MW2009 COD Wind # 3 Substation To Castaic To Rinaldi
GREEN PATH (4) (7) (2) 13
Potential Impediments • Uncertainty in PTC’s and ITC’s • CEQA completion prior to Governing Authority approval of PPA • Manufacturing constraints – Wind Turbines & Solar tubes and glass • Intermittent nature of wind & solar requires cautious integration into grid, more costly • regulation • California environmental process for new projects is lengthy, 12 to 24 months and appears to promote development out of state • Renewables aren’t perfect – impacts to Birds, bats, visual blight, aviation - FAA & • military aircraft, noise, tourism & recreation, etc. • Lack of trained labor pool to operate and maintain renewable facilities • Environmental Justice issues and NIMBY lawsuits in urban settings – MSW, landfill, • biomass, etc.